Ready to Pick: New Potatoes

Taste the Local Difference is produced in Northwest Michigan and promotes local farm foods, helps schools serve them, links new farmers to land and other resources, and supports food and farm business networks. They have all kinds of articles and resources for local food that you'll appreciate even if your growing season is a little ahead or behind theirs!

Potatoes by rdmeg
Potatoes by rdmeg

by Jeannine Taylor, Community Outreach Coordinator, Grand Traverse County Health Department

One potato. Two potato. Three potato. New potato? What in the world is a new potato?

No, they're not a strange new breed of alien-like vegetables with spirally nodules protruding from their fluorescent green skin. They are actually any variety of young, immature potato that is harvested not long after the plant flowers, usually in the spring or summer.

fingerlings by redmudball
fingerlings by redmudball

So what's the fuss all about? New potatoes have very thin skin that can sometimes be rubbed off with your fingers. They are high in moisture content and have a particularly creamy texture. Often cooked whole with the skin left on, they are well suited for boiling, steaming and roasting.

The downside is that they have a very short shelf life and should be used within a few days of harvesting. They typically cannot be stored, so you won’t find “true" new potatoes on your grocery store shelf. Baby red skinned potatoes are often confused for new potatoes, but in actuality, they have to go through a hardening process in order to be stored properly and to survive the long journey to grocery stores.

Regardless, these sweet and tasty morsels are so tender and delicately flavored they’ll melt in your mouth.

Potato Particulars

  • The potato is more universally grown than any other food crop.
  • At one time, the Scots refused to eat potatoes because they weren't mentioned in the Bible.
  • Potatoes were often eaten aboard ships to prevent scurvy, a disease caused by a deficiency of Vitamin C.
  • Eighteenth-century agronomist Antoine-August Parmentier used reverse psychology to convince the French to accept the potato as a safe food. He posted guards around potato fields during the day to prevent people from stealing them – but left those same fields unguarded at night. Every night, thieves would sneak into the fields and leave with sacks of potatoes.
  • Potatoes are one of the world's most nutrient-dense foods, low in fat and calories, have zero cholesterol, and are rich in carbohydrates.
  • Packed with essential vitamins and minerals, potatoes are loaded with Vitamin C, Vitamins B1 and B6, fiber, potassium, iron, magnesium, zinc, copper, and they're a great source of folic acid.
  • A serving of boiled new potatoes in their skins has more iron than a serving of steamed spinach.
More recipes from New Potatoes from Taste the Local Difference

French Bakes

1 lb. new potatoes
1-2 Tbsp olive oil
Salt to taste
Fresh dill, dried basil, rosemary, Italian spice, sage, or thyme)

Preheat oven to 400°F. Wash potatoes and slice into thin strips (1/3"). Place them in a bowl, drizzle olive oil over and add salt. Stir to coat. Spread single layer on a cookie sheet or glass baking dish. Bake in center of oven for 35-40 minutes. They turn out better if you do not stir them. Once the bottom is a little crispy or turning light brown, take them out and scrape them off the pan gently with an upside down spatula.

Submitted by: Capay Valley Farm Shop



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