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Favourite potatoes - Yetholm Gypsy



Rather floury in texture; have to be cooked very carefully or they disintegrate. Skin colour fades on cooking; flesh cream.

The tubers can be difficult to grow because they are reluctant to chit. Flowers usually drop at bud stage. When seen they are pale purple with very small greenish yellow centres. Medium height haulms; considerable blight/rot susceptibility; yield about 1.25 lb per pot; some tubers very striking in appearance, with red, white and purple patches, but the majority resemble Shetland Black.

Yetholm Gypsy had not been placed in the National Collection prior to its discovery in 1998, when one cut tuber was passed to Alan Romans by a retired gentleman, Mr Little of Kelso. Mr Little had known of it all his life. The first disease-free plants were grown in 1999 producing fairly numerous oval blue/purple tubers. The blue/purple layer of pigment overlays a red layer, which in turn gives way to non-pigmented skin. Some of the tubers show random flashes of all three colours.

Alan Fairweather tells me that the DNA of Yetholm Gypsy has been tested by S.A.S.A. (Scottish Agricultural Science Agency) where it is held in their collection. It is a variant of the variety King Edward.

S.A.S.A has the major European collection of potato types.



Flowers



Tubers

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