Potatoes: South America's Gift to the World

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  • Опубликовано: 30 май 2022
  • Potatoes are a vegetable beloved by all. See how the potato emerged from obscurity into a vital food crop that feeds the world population and came to grace culinary traditions all over the world.
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    Sources and Bibliography:
    docs.google.com/document/d/12...

Комментарии • 1,3 тыс.

  • @jonathanwilliams1065
    @jonathanwilliams1065 2 года назад +1290

    The potato is so engrained in European cuisine that fantasy always has the potato as a crop despite other new world vegetables not being featured

    • @AncientAmericas
      @AncientAmericas  2 года назад +528

      Great observation. In my first draft of this script, I pointed out how when JRR Tolkien imagined his mythological Britain in Middle Earth, he included the potato as a crop even though in reality the potato is as British as a coconut (assuming the swallow can't carry it). I personally suspect that Tolkien, being a scholar and a highly educated guy must have been aware of this but could not imagine a beautiful world without the potato. I think that speaks to how deeply the potato has worked its way into the hearts of people.

    • @arthurbarros5189
      @arthurbarros5189 2 года назад +66

      I think only Dwarf Fortress has fantasy worlds with truly varied crops, as the game creator populated the world with lots of real life plants and animals according to their biomes.
      In a light research using the game wiki and Wikipedia, I'm reminded of how many crops the modern agriculture models crushed: millets, amaranths, dozens types of wheat, all Left in favor of the "white wheat", soy and corn.
      Some crops, like quinoa, are making a modest reappearance in the quest for heathier diets. The kind of thing you'll see your aunt buying to help her intestines.

    • @jonathanwilliams1065
      @jonathanwilliams1065 2 года назад +24

      @@arthurbarros5189 millet is still a big deal in Africa isn’t it?
      As for amaranth isn’t that a vegetable?

    • @tzinacanK
      @tzinacanK 2 года назад +75

      @@AncientAmericas i seriously doubt Tolkien wouldve acknowledged the potato came from southamerica, back then and a lot of evidence was swept under the rug to keep the colonialist and imperialist discourse, especially in academic circles which were/are pretty eurocentric. I mean, i'm from Chile and a lot of people still think potatoes and other great inventions came from Europe

    • @billweirdo9657
      @billweirdo9657 2 года назад +18

      @@jonathanwilliams1065 no its an grain. Mostly grown as an ornamental because they are an gorgeous plant. But the seeds are an " cereal grain "

  • @AlejandroFlores-vi8tl
    @AlejandroFlores-vi8tl 2 года назад +464

    "The Potato doesn't care it just adapts" truly the food of humanity

  • @TheUncleRuckus
    @TheUncleRuckus Год назад +122

    Not just Potatoes we have to thank South America for there's Tomatoes, Peppers, Green Beans, Lima Beans, Pineapples, Strawberries, Pumpkins, Squash, Avocados and probably more that I'm missing.

    • @kindofsimplereally
      @kindofsimplereally 8 месяцев назад +21

      Quinoa, Amaranth, and last but not at all least, Maize (corn), though that might be more from Central America vs South. Oh and Chocolate from Central America also!

    • @Facu_Roldan
      @Facu_Roldan 6 месяцев назад +18

      @@kindofsimplereally the origin of the cacao tree is the amazon jungle.

    • @esquilax5563
      @esquilax5563 6 месяцев назад +5

      Not strawberries, those were around in ancient Europe

    • @RonneWesley
      @RonneWesley 5 месяцев назад +2

      @@esquilax5563it came from Chile

    • @esquilax5563
      @esquilax5563 5 месяцев назад +5

      @@RonneWesley the Anglo-Saxons had them, their word for them was streáwbergean

  • @thecaveofthedead
    @thecaveofthedead Год назад +293

    The food security enjoyed by the Inca was yet another mind-blowing paradigm shift for me. I'd simply assumed that, from the dawn of agriculture to Borlaugh's Green Revolution, famine was a constant in human life. Now I learn that that wasn't the case for some significant chunk of South American history. This channel is really amazing.

    • @janegarner6739
      @janegarner6739 Год назад +32

      It wasn't only the Inca & their predecessors, other native peoples had domesticated plants that were stored for years as surplus in case of shortage. In mid-15th c. Mexico/Tenochtitlan there were foods stored for 7 yrs in case needed, for example.

    • @mdj.6179
      @mdj.6179 Год назад +16

      I'm half Polish. There was a huge increase in the population of Eastern Europe after the potato and the food security it brought.

    • @thecaveofthedead
      @thecaveofthedead Год назад +5

      @@mdj.6179 and Ireland too, of course, before the blight caused mass starvation and exodus. The Irish population vastly expanded thanks to the potato. But clearly due to it being novel, they didn't have the varieties that would have allowed them to avoid the blight. Well, that and the fact that the English refused to give up enough of the wheat grown on English-owned Irish estates to maintain the population.

    • @aronzimas5660
      @aronzimas5660 Год назад +9

      The Inca were devastated by Smallpox, had no steel, horses, gunpowder and where highly superstitious thinking the world was going to end anytime soon. But they were superior to Europeans in some regards. Agriculture and irrigation was one of them. They literally grew food in mountains.

    • @user-fi3cj2kj6f
      @user-fi3cj2kj6f 11 месяцев назад

      You were that dumb?

  • @GringoLoco
    @GringoLoco 2 года назад +517

    Excellent video! In Peru, potatoes are still with a seven -year fallow period, a period which parasitic nematode worms' eggs cannot survive, a practice that dates backs millennia. Another tactic is the planting of "sacrificial perimeter crops" on the edge of the fields, which lured pests like moths away from where they could do damage. Yet another method, introduced following the Conquest, is to wrap seed potatoes in banana leaves when planting which also protects them from worms.

    • @AncientAmericas
      @AncientAmericas  2 года назад +92

      I always enjoy your comments because I always learn something.

    • @thefisherking78
      @thefisherking78 2 года назад +13

      Fascinating!

    • @xerk2945
      @xerk2945 2 года назад +10

      I've never seen a reason to grow bananas(I'm allergic and I don't find the tree attractive), but that comment just won me over.

    • @blenderbanana
      @blenderbanana Год назад +10

      @@xerk2945 i never heard of someone allergic to Bananas. There so mild and supple.

    • @torianholt2752
      @torianholt2752 Год назад +9

      @@blenderbanana Many people with latex allergies are also allergic to bananas.

  • @Derlaid
    @Derlaid 2 года назад +241

    Hard to imagine the modern world being what it is without New World crops like potatoes, corn, and squash. We owe a lot to the people who spent the centuries domesticating these plants.

    • @gregb6469
      @gregb6469 2 года назад +43

      There are three other New World crops that have had huge impacts upon the rest of the world-- cacao, tomatoes, and tobacco.

    • @gzer0x
      @gzer0x 2 года назад +45

      Peppers too! The ancient food scientists of the Americas literally revolutionized our modern world

    • @juanfranciscolizarralde
      @juanfranciscolizarralde 2 года назад +2

      @@gregb6469 corn

    • @gregb6469
      @gregb6469 2 года назад +1

      @@juanfranciscolizarralde -- Corn is listed in the OP.

    • @Ggyhhggtyyy
      @Ggyhhggtyyy Год назад +8

      My tier list of new world fruit and veg mentioned:
      S+: Potato
      S: Tomato
      A: Paprika, Cacao
      B: Squash
      C:
      D: Corn
      F: Tobacco

  • @KTo288
    @KTo288 2 года назад +176

    The adoption of the potato in Europe wasn't helped by the fact that they initially tried eating the leaves and not the tubers.

    • @AncientAmericas
      @AncientAmericas  2 года назад +62

      Yikes. That would have ended poorly.

    • @rosiehawtrey
      @rosiehawtrey 2 года назад +37

      Nothing like a dose of supercharged pseudonorovirus to brighten your day.. I'm reminded of a certain family guy scene just at both ends...
      "I don't wanna, I don't wanna..." 🤮
      Edit: Oh, and alkaloid poisoning, which might explain the hallucinations and tremors mentioned.

    • @TheWastelander86
      @TheWastelander86 2 года назад +26

      YIKES. Direct nightshade consumption.

    • @irena4545
      @irena4545 2 года назад +18

      I don't think it was leaves but rather the berries... oops, a really bad idea.

    • @rashidisw
      @rashidisw Год назад +1

      Thats remind me of weird story where someone uses the potato's leaves as substitutes because they unable to procure tobacco leaves.

  • @sarahwatts7152
    @sarahwatts7152 2 года назад +74

    Every taxi driver in Peru knows that there are (at least) 4,000 varieties of Peruvian potatoes. It's a huge part of Peru's national identity.

  • @El.Duder-ino
    @El.Duder-ino Год назад +19

    We who were not native to Americas will never repay back the gift of potatoes and corn, which revived and healed our already diseased and corrupted worlds. Thank you all our America ancestors, we are grateful for your gifts!

  • @rdreher7380
    @rdreher7380 2 года назад +224

    In Russian, the sweet potato is called батат (batat), which is from that Spanish term "batata." Potatoes though are called картошка (kartoshka) originally a diminutive of картофель (kartofyel') from German "Kartoffel," which is a corruption of "Tartuffel" from Italian "tartufolo" dim. of "tartufo," from Latin "terrae tūber." As you may guess "tuber" comes from the second of these two words, and the term "truffle" comes from this expression as well, from a path it took through French instead of Italian.

    • @irena4545
      @irena4545 2 года назад +5

      And in Czech we have "brambory", which supposedly comes from "(crop from) Brandenburg/Bramburg", for potatoes, and batát for sweet potatoes.

    • @michaireneuszjakubowski5289
      @michaireneuszjakubowski5289 2 года назад +14

      In Polish, sweet potato is "batat" as well. Ordinary taters are called "ziemniaki" (literally: "earthlings", which is, uh, weird).

    • @irena4545
      @irena4545 2 года назад +6

      @@michaireneuszjakubowski5289 It's "zemáky" or "zemčata" in certain dialects, as well, or "erteple" (from "Erdapfel").

    • @ab9840
      @ab9840 2 года назад +12

      The Quechua natives of Peru call the potato "Papa". That is the name used in the majority of the Americas. Today in Spain, they tend to call it "Patata". In the Caribbean, the Taino natives use to call the sweet potatoe "Batata". So the Spaniards not having a name for it took the Taino name "Batata" for the sweet potato. When they discovered the Andean potato the Spaniards knew what the native name was for the potato (Papa) but it seems some Spaniards either in the Americas or back in Spain decided to call it "Patata" since it resembled the "Batata" (sweet potato) which was decades first known to the Spaniards before the regular potato.

    • @thefisherking78
      @thefisherking78 2 года назад +3

      Woweee, that was an epic demonstration of etymological nerdery. I bow before thee.

  • @RAJAT6555
    @RAJAT6555 Год назад +23

    I'm from India. One of the signature dishes of the ethnic community I belong to is a potato curry called 'Batatya Saung'. Potatoes came to India in the 16th-17th centuries with the Portuguese. Of course, other Indian communities have also enthusiastically adopted it, thus giving rise to iconic dishes like the Mutton Dum Biryani, and the Aloo Pyaaz gravy, not to mention breads like the Aloo Paratha. Believe it or not, potato dishes are even prepared on festival days, as well as fasting days!

  • @eric1scooby
    @eric1scooby 2 года назад +169

    Very cool! I sometimes think the New World doesn't get the credit they deserve from their agriculture and domestic vegetable technology. Truly one of the biggest impacts in existence

    • @greenmachine5600
      @greenmachine5600 2 года назад +10

      Agreed. It's unfortunate

    • @redstarling5171
      @redstarling5171 Год назад

      They did some good developing potatoes and corn, cocoa but in comparison to what the western cultures brought to them with food, textiles, engineering, medicine and Christian law they definitely got the better end of the trade.

    • @metalnordeste8998
      @metalnordeste8998 Год назад

      @@redstarling5171 What do you mean by christian law? I thought it is the Roman law. Christians brought the Inquisition to certain parts of South America too, besides it helped wipe out many Amerindian cultures due to forceful conversion of many tribes. Pedophilia is another crime well covered by christian churches.

    • @greenmachine5600
      @greenmachine5600 Год назад +24

      @@redstarling5171 definitely not. Especially with how many people died.

    • @L.P.1987
      @L.P.1987 Год назад +13

      @@redstarling5171 Christian law? Textiles?

  • @TropicalCyclone9
    @TropicalCyclone9 Год назад +63

    I'm from California but my mom's Bolivian. Often times she tells me that one of the things she misses most from home is Chuño, because she would grow up eating it and my grandma would always make it for dinner. It was awesome finally hearing a video talking about this part of Bolivian culture. Makes me feel happy to see :) Thanks for making this video!

    • @notyourbusiness8672
      @notyourbusiness8672 Год назад +2

      potatoes aren't bolivian 🙄

    • @sanexpreso2944
      @sanexpreso2944 Год назад +18

      @@notyourbusiness8672 Potatoes are from the Andes and Bolivia is in the Andes

    • @notyourbusiness8672
      @notyourbusiness8672 Год назад +3

      @@sanexpreso2944 humans are from the world, and the Marianas trench is in the world so... same logic 🤷‍♂️

    • @jaimexcas
      @jaimexcas Год назад +3

      ​@@notyourbusiness8672 he never said potatoes are from Bolivia.

    • @estebanmorales6487
      @estebanmorales6487 Год назад +2

      @@notyourbusiness8672 🤦‍♂

  • @TheoEvian
    @TheoEvian Год назад +4

    From a 1848 Czech botanical encyclopedia: "We have uncountable varieties as to their shape, colour and quality. This plant is the biggest boon of the discovery of America for the human kind. Thanks to it it is not possible anymore for general famine to pester human species which have ample descriptions in the chronicles when all our hope was spent on grain, so delicate to the climate and so failing; at such times the ground berries (potatoes) bring great harvests and cause that the unfortunate people from the clutches of famine is saved. (...) They are also used to make alcohol."
    It is much more lovely in the archaic sounding 19th century Czech.

  • @moss_quartz
    @moss_quartz 2 года назад +129

    For people who are interested in topics similar to this, there's an excellent book by Bill Laws called "Fifty Plants that Changed the Course of History". It's wonderfully written and illustrated, and tells a bunch of stories like (and including!) this one!

  • @Biophile23
    @Biophile23 Год назад +10

    Botanist here, I've been fascinated by all of the topics about the ancient American peoples that you have made videos on (plus more). This one on the potato was quite good. I had often wondered how people dealt with the cardiac glycosides in wild potatoes. My one quibble is that technically potatoe tubers are a kind of specialized stem. You can tell because of the "eyes" on the surface that are buds to produce new shoots. In contrast Sweet Potatoes are actually true fleshy roots, though they can produce adventitious buds on the roots to make new stems after storage. No new world crop remade the old world as much as the potato and you really brought that out. :)

    • @AncientAmericas
      @AncientAmericas  Год назад +3

      Thank you! Looking at your channel, you definitely know your stuff. I've had a few people point out that the potato is actually the stem instead of the root. That's my mistake.

    • @Biophile23
      @Biophile23 Год назад +1

      @@AncientAmericas I've had the good/misfortune to actually ride on a potato harvester (research scale) during graduate school. Very dirty and nasty when we got potatoes with Erwinia rot! I got to see the selection process from modern potato breeding and it is super exacting. Lots of not good enough potato varieties ended up at the food bank. :) My uncle, who is also a professor has been looking into another species of wild potato possibly utilized in the southwest by the ancient cultures there. Though I'm also a big fan of the American pseudograins, quinoa and Amaranth, super nutritive! Anyway I am enjoying your channel during my summer off, hope you can keep up the good work. :)

  • @rayray9865
    @rayray9865 2 года назад +40

    You should definitely do a video on tomatoes and corn because I feel like those two also impacted the world in a huge way as well

    • @AncientAmericas
      @AncientAmericas  2 года назад +13

      Well lucky for you, I already have a corn video! Check out the maize episode.

  • @dracomadness792
    @dracomadness792 2 года назад +203

    You should definitely do a video about medicine in the Americas. My aunt is our tribes medicine women and it’s interesting to hear about the different uses plants have

    • @AncientAmericas
      @AncientAmericas  2 года назад +50

      That does sound like a really cool topic!

    • @92bagder
      @92bagder 2 года назад

      so many medical answers found in nature. For tribes they were shamans; in the west it was alchemy.

    • @sherryherran8546
      @sherryherran8546 Год назад

      Look into tocosh is a type of rotten potateo it is being study as not lactic antibiotic.

    • @mrbaab5932
      @mrbaab5932 Год назад +6

      You should file patents on those medicines.

    • @ryanh3635
      @ryanh3635 Год назад +4

      @@mrbaab5932 "medicine"

  • @parsaledm
    @parsaledm Год назад +21

    It blew my mind the first time I came across my first wild potato. It was in my backyard in Colorado and growing in a somewhat forested area. They were SUPER small. Push comes to shove after doing some research, it was a species of wild potato native to that area called a Four Corners Potato, or Solanum Jamesii (scientific name). It has ties that go way back and is a lesser known staple food of Native American's.

    • @daharos
      @daharos Год назад +8

      yeah those are toxic unless you cook them properly and leach out the bad stuff

  • @InssiAjaton
    @InssiAjaton Год назад +16

    My grandmother described what a blessing the potato was. The previous mainstay turnip generally was spoiled well before spring, but the potatoes were good all the way to next summer, if stored well. I personally have minimized my use of fries, maybe just twice per month, and potato chips never. But baked potatoes and mashed potatoes I could eat daily.

  • @markhughes7927
    @markhughes7927 2 года назад +73

    Thank you South America - I can’t say it enough - mashed potato and butter has always been behind my greatest inspirations - such as they are.

    • @stargatis
      @stargatis 2 года назад +2

      I always ask my mom to make mashed potatoes, no gravy needed!

    • @victorhugofranciscon7899
      @victorhugofranciscon7899 Год назад +6

      No problem friend, the New Worlds crops are the gift of south america to the world

    • @entoropy
      @entoropy Год назад +8

      Thank you Peru* 🙂

    • @L.P.1987
      @L.P.1987 Год назад +1

      @@entoropy ¿Gracias a un país criollo? Gracias a la zona andina.

    • @Jimmydb
      @Jimmydb Год назад +3

      @@L.P.1987 sigue la tradición de las papas y el Perú es el centro de miles de variedades de papas así que sí gracias al Perú por dar papas al mundo!

  • @mvsuguino
    @mvsuguino Год назад +12

    Potatoes, Tomatoes, Cocoa, Pineapple, Cassava are from South America. Corn and vanilla is from Central/North America. Those are used around the world.

  • @teucer915
    @teucer915 Год назад +9

    As a teenager, I was put on a medically mandated high-potassium diet. This led directly to my whole family learning a lot of potato and sweet potato recipes, and I have to thank the ancient people who domesticated those two wonderfully healthy crops.

  • @iainballas
    @iainballas Год назад +26

    Ah yes, Potatoes.
    They can be cooked and eaten now, or distilled and drank later. Truly, a wonder vegetable.

  • @jakestrauss2776
    @jakestrauss2776 2 года назад +33

    Hey, I love your channel. I graduated in 2020 with a degree in anthropology so watching all these videos brings back memories from North American and South American archaeology. Its honestly my favorite region to learn about.

  • @tzinacanK
    @tzinacanK 2 года назад +51

    Great video. Also, sweet potatoes found in the Pacific and Southeast Asia help theorize (with other ethnobotanical findings) there was contact or even an exchange complex between these cultures way before europeans arrived

  • @adroaldoribeiro4529
    @adroaldoribeiro4529 2 года назад +15

    I love this channel. Seeing my beautiful and beloved South America being shown to people is really nice

  • @CatFish107
    @CatFish107 Месяц назад +1

    The bit where you explain the root of our word "jerky" elicited a spontaneous vocal cuss from me. Very cool!

  • @aldurin
    @aldurin 2 года назад +17

    The extent of our debt to indigenous people is enormous. Potatoes, manioc/cassava: all poisonous in the beggining, becoming safe after domestication.

  • @salt-emoji
    @salt-emoji 2 года назад +5

    I dated a Peruvian person, and their grandmas recipes 🤤🤤🤤🤤🤤 oh my god

  • @jollyjohnthepirate3168
    @jollyjohnthepirate3168 2 года назад +17

    Potato monoculture was the doom of Ireland. Peruvian farmers knew this about the Potato for centuries. Multiple fields at various altit altitudes growing various types of potatoes made these people immune to any one crop disease.

    • @ebbeb9827
      @ebbeb9827 Год назад +5

      true but the active role of the British empire in the famine also cannot be overstated. Forced exports were continued for a long time as it worsened

  • @atlasaltera
    @atlasaltera 2 года назад +73

    One other thing, potatoes went up the Pacific in a very interesting way. The Spanish that mapped the Pacific Northwest in the late 18th century had some Peruvian connections (Quimper expedition I think) even though they sailed from San Blas and introduced potatoes there accidentally when they made gardens for their fortifications, but then abandoned the gardens. The Haida, Makah, Nuuchahnulth etc. took over these gardens and enjoyed the tuber before Europeans were ready to embrace it. This actually resulted in one of the oldest heirloom varieties of potatoes in North America, one that never went across the Atlantic to Europe before being brought over to the eastern U.S. and prairies...
    Also, I didn't know about potato having a large role in population growth in East Asia! I'll have to dig into this. Did you read about potatoes specifically in relation to this or was it in reference to general Dutch-introduced crops? I mean cassava/tapioca, sweet potato/kumara, maize seem to feature more readily in the Chinese regional cuisines that I'm familiar with, and I remember seeing this piece on how the contemporary Chinese government trying to get Chinese people to more readily embrace potato as a starch source. In my grandma's generation, people seemed to think of potato as more a vegetable than a starch, and you can see that in also the way potato is used in northern Chinese cuisine (often cooked al dente and stir fried or combined with vegetables...), which is where it is more commonly used.

    • @AncientAmericas
      @AncientAmericas  2 года назад +8

      Yes, I believe it's from the history of the potato book if you check the bibliography.

    • @earthknight60
      @earthknight60 2 года назад +8

      Charles C Mann has a chapter on the importance of the potato in China in his book *1493*. It was pretty important for people in the SE mountains, not just in the north.
      The vegetable vs starch thing regarding potatoes is something that you see in a lot of China, and in Vietnam too. Some of my friends here tell Vietnamese folks, "Potatoes are Western people's rice," when they are offering us end of the meal rice to go with a set of dishes that already included a bunch of potatoes.

    • @chrissonnenschein6634
      @chrissonnenschein6634 2 года назад +3

      The potato is known as Gai-Imo “foreign tuber” in Japanese - The Japanese would have acquired along with tobacco by the Spanish by trading their silver (i have heard that much , if not the majority, of the world’s silver used as currency in middle ages was actually from Japan)

    • @chrissonnenschein6634
      @chrissonnenschein6634 2 года назад

      @UC520BcBVEICW_I8Z3j4cUKw They would not have to necessarily come directly from Peru. Much was done with collecting guano with blackbirded tribals from around the Pacfic Rim fir example.. or of transfer of cargo in Tahiti or Hawai’i then onto Puget or Alaska. Just saying. less likely but possible as well over time and successive trading from tribe to tribe up along the coast...

    • @chrissonnenschein6634
      @chrissonnenschein6634 2 года назад

      like the trade between shells, tobacco & corn on the east coast to Caribbean or MesoAmerica..

  • @rodrigochiberio5472
    @rodrigochiberio5472 2 года назад +22

    Great video. Here in Brasil, especially in Northeast, we have CHARQUE (jerkey) meat. The word too derive from the quechua word for dried meat. But here we use a ton of salt too.

    • @rodrigochiberio5472
      @rodrigochiberio5472 2 года назад +11

      And adding another fact. The word CHARQUE,used in Northeast of Brasil, actually came from the south, where the native people already called the dried meat, CHARQUE. And this people, like the charruas, learned this word, probably by the Andean people's.

    • @angryatheist
      @angryatheist 2 года назад +8

      @@rodrigochiberio5472 there was trade up and down the Amazon, the Inca would eat fruit and fish from the Amazon basin and shellfish from the Brazilian coast have been found in burials , so I’d say your right I’d also say the cultural exchange was probably two way

    • @EddieRF_33
      @EddieRF_33 2 года назад +3

      Charque is the southern counterpart, the northeastern one is Sun meat, carne de sol

    • @rodrigochiberio5472
      @rodrigochiberio5472 2 года назад +6

      @@EddieRF_33 oi Eddie. Existe charque, existe carne de sol e carne seca. São três produtos com três formas diferentes de se fazer. Embora claro, similares.

    • @rodrigochiberio5472
      @rodrigochiberio5472 2 года назад +2

      @@angryatheist absolutely right 💪🏽

  • @atlasaltera
    @atlasaltera 2 года назад +57

    Starch rules everything around me... By the way, I've had white chuno too, but very simply prepared in a stew! Did you taste hay/funkiness in your dish? Very un-potato like in taste, was a bit of an acquired taste for me haha. Also, I didn't think to look into comparing how well potatoes store compared to other tubers! What's most interesting to me, however, is that potatoes, even if they can be stored longer than other tubers in terms of months, are stored/prepared to allow them to be stored at time lengths comparable to GRAIN, which are stored for years on end. Jerky aside, why isn't the process of making chuno done for any other tuber varieties, I wonder? Or maybe I need to do some digging...

    • @AncientAmericas
      @AncientAmericas  2 года назад +8

      That's a good question. I'm not sure. Let me know if you find an answer!

    • @GringoLoco
      @GringoLoco 2 года назад +19

      In ancient times, sweet potato and other crops like avocado were dried as a form of preservation, because their remains have been unearthed at archaeological sites like Pachacamac, Cueva Tres Ventanas and Ocucaje, to name a few. See the online pdf article "Archaeological Remains of Potato and Sweet Potato in Peru" - (Ugent & Petersen 1988)

    • @atlasaltera
      @atlasaltera 2 года назад +11

      @@GringoLoco Dried avocado! That's something I didn't know about. I'll have to look into this...

    • @atlasaltera
      @atlasaltera 2 года назад +7

      Also I'm guessing with this video, Ancient Americas must now do a video on kumara/sweet potato too. That's too juicy a topic to pass up, especially the linguistics element to it.

    • @GringoLoco
      @GringoLoco 2 года назад +5

      @@atlasaltera the linguistics connected to the sweet potato's voyage across the Pacific isnt restricted just to its name, a Peruvian historian called José Antonio del Busto wrote a book about a purported voyage by Inca ruler Tupac Yupanqui to Polynesia, where he documented dozens of Quechua words were still in use on one island.

  • @reneeroche6328
    @reneeroche6328 Год назад

    Absolutely AMAZING. The best video on your channels. All I can say is, "More, Please..."

  • @blue5standingby684
    @blue5standingby684 2 года назад

    Always a joy to see a new upload from this channel

  • @kilderken7401
    @kilderken7401 Год назад +2

    Love the content. This reminds me of Jack Rutherford's book "Indian Givers." It talks about a lot of common staples that were original to the Americas. Not only different foods, but medicines, forms of government...the list goes on. Well done!

  • @Carloshache
    @Carloshache 2 года назад +52

    There's a dark side to it all too: the World Wars would probably not be possible without potatoes. In the Old World before the potato there were no effective war-time supply lines of food for the armies. Armies instead had to plunder the granaries of occupied enemy land, which lead to widespread starvation, often among the occupiers themselves as they ran out of food.
    After the adaption of potatoes however the armies of Europe got their food steadily supplied from the home country, and thus making armies more effective which prolonged and made wars much worse. Which you can see as early as in the Napoleonic wars. Maybe the potatoes lead to the agressive warring European empires of the 19th and 20 centuries, as well as they lead to the war-prone Inca state. The Inca state also featured the same planned economy such as 20th century empires. So this is maybe the kind of world the potato gives us!

  • @RAUFBEDAR
    @RAUFBEDAR Год назад

    Love this episode thank you so very much for sharing so now I’m subscribing to you

  • @pimpompoom93726
    @pimpompoom93726 Год назад

    Eagerly awaiting your next video, AA. I really enjoy them.

    • @AncientAmericas
      @AncientAmericas  Год назад +1

      Thank you! There will be a new one this week so stay tuned!

  • @thedisgruntleddyslexic7806
    @thedisgruntleddyslexic7806 Год назад +4

    You should do an episode strictly on this food preservation in South America

  • @BalancedEarth
    @BalancedEarth 2 года назад +8

    I never get tired of videos like this one. I've watched so many videos about the food that came from the Americas. and I'm about to enjoy another!
    You should look into making a video on sunflowers I've seen a few videos on them but rarely any really well put together ones. There's one from a woman who was outside for the most part and while informative I wish she had done the audio inside as I could hear the wind constantly cover her voice. There's so many cool videos online but I really enjoy this channel covering all the cool historical lore of the Americas. 😊

    • @AncientAmericas
      @AncientAmericas  2 года назад +3

      Thank you. I don't think I'd do an entire episode to the sunflower because I'd probably lump it into a video about the entire Eastern Agricultural Complex.

    • @BalancedEarth
      @BalancedEarth 2 года назад

      @@AncientAmericas That sounds awesome! I'd totally watch it! There's probably so much more even I don't know about the entire eastern agricultural system.

  • @stacie1595
    @stacie1595 2 месяца назад +1

    Oh man, south and central americam food culture and archeology is my favorite niche history topic! I could give an hour long ted talk on potatoes, tomatoes, corn, and pepers without any prep!

  • @xxxencryptacion
    @xxxencryptacion 6 месяцев назад +1

    Another grear video by Ancient Amaricas ! We also love potatoes, what a remarkable background 😮

  • @TheNachoOne
    @TheNachoOne Год назад +13

    I remember reading that a study showed that most varieties of potatoes cultivated nowadays come from the Chilean island of Chiloé.

  • @alexandrejosedacostaneto381
    @alexandrejosedacostaneto381 2 года назад +19

    Do you ever plan on doing a video on the Cassava plant? It's a incredibly important plant here in Brazil, and it was spread by the Portuguese to Africa and Asia. It's a extremely important crop in many tropical country

    • @AncientAmericas
      @AncientAmericas  2 года назад +5

      It's on my list so hopefully I'll get to it someday.

  • @kawaiikittylee
    @kawaiikittylee Год назад +1

    Thank you! What a fascinating episode :)

  • @anempanada2260
    @anempanada2260 2 года назад +1

    what a fantastic channel. thank you

  • @arthurbarros5189
    @arthurbarros5189 2 года назад +7

    this is a terrible thing to watch half hour before lunch, as I'm now terribly hungry for potatoes.

  • @xiKUDx
    @xiKUDx 2 года назад +4

    I love potatoes. I write haikus about them. Here's a couple:
    Hammurusset:
    An eye for an eye
    Isn’t a valid justice at all
    When you have many
    Platato:
    Object of my dreams
    Perfectly round potato
    Only a figment

  • @FunsongsCoUkaction_songs
    @FunsongsCoUkaction_songs 4 месяца назад

    Excellently put together video which I use in my online English courses. Thank you!

  • @witchflowers6942
    @witchflowers6942 9 месяцев назад

    i love your channel so much. You’re a great resource for english speakers who are trying to learn.

  • @Flint_Ironstag
    @Flint_Ironstag 2 года назад +5

    Boil 'em, smash 'em, stick 'em in a stew

  • @americameinyourmouth9964
    @americameinyourmouth9964 2 года назад +23

    The potato along with the development of the rule of law and property rights are thought to be major reasons why the Industrial Revolution happened in Europe and the US first. The potato as a highly nutritious plant supplementing diets saw the European population balloon in the 1700 and 1800s which caused rapid urbanization. Urbanization is the most dynamic force in industrialization as people interact and collaborate allowing ideas and innovation to flourish. We always remember individual inventors but forgot how much they learned and collaborated with other innovators and geniuses of their time.

    • @rosiehawtrey
      @rosiehawtrey 2 года назад +1

      The term you're looking for is "nicked other peoples ideas".

    • @americameinyourmouth9964
      @americameinyourmouth9964 2 года назад +3

      Keep the specifics of your inventions close to the chest. Then patent them, which is the “property rights” that incentivized the Industrial Revolution.

    • @jaegrant6441
      @jaegrant6441 2 года назад

      The closing off of land to common people, stripping them of their ancient rights to access land for grazing and growing crops is the reason rapid urbanisation occurred, because people were starving in the country due to the fact they had no way to get their own food anymore and we have been dependent on the teats of elites ever since

    • @roan2288
      @roan2288 2 года назад

      @@rosiehawtrey spiteful mutant detected

    • @blenderbanana
      @blenderbanana Год назад

      Potatoes make us horny?

  • @nromk
    @nromk 2 года назад +2

    I'm excited for the Americas and food series

    • @AncientAmericas
      @AncientAmericas  2 года назад +1

      Just being transparent here but the next food episode probably isn't coming for awhile.

  • @spacebunny4335
    @spacebunny4335 2 года назад +2

    Great video

  • @baptistamercado1380
    @baptistamercado1380 Год назад +6

    2:57 “The Botany of Desire” writer spoke about potatoes being packed with almost all the nutrients needed to survive… it’s just missing vitamin D; making mashed potatoes (with milk) is the ultimate comfort and survival food.

    • @katiem.3109
      @katiem.3109 22 дня назад

      They also don't have vitamin B12 (unsurprising, as the only natural sources of vitamin B12 are animal-source foods), and only have negligible amounts of some other nutrients like calcium. Still, a remarkably healthy tuber.

  • @sanexpreso2944
    @sanexpreso2944 Год назад +3

    The popular belief is that the Incas domesticated potatoes but it was not so, the Incas were only the culmination of the Andean civilizations, before the Incas there were many civilizations and cultures that domesticated and improved the use of all types of potatoes such as the Chavin, the Moche, the Nazca, the Wari etc ...

  • @thebenefactor6744
    @thebenefactor6744 6 месяцев назад +2

    I guess.... I haven't said it as.....as often as I should have, and, uh, well.....thanks South America. You gave me some pretty awesome meals over the years with that spud. Especially with the garlic, and the sour cream 'n' dill. You're pretty amazing South America.

  • @420Travesty
    @420Travesty 2 года назад +2

    "What is a potato?"
    DUDE how you gonna just start the video with a philosophical bombshell like that?

  • @IntiNikelaos
    @IntiNikelaos Год назад +4

    I didn’t expect someone not socialized to chuños to like them. Most people unfamiliar with the flavor don’t like it once they taste it.
    Fun fact: we call ‘sweet potatoes’ ‘camote’ in Bolivia. I don’t know exactly where that name comes from, but ‘batata’ sounds so weird to me, and I think in all of Spanish-speaking America we call ‘potatoes’ ‘papa’ and it’s only called ‘patata’ in Spain :P

    • @waytakaq
      @waytakaq Год назад +2

      Camote is a Nahuatl word but in Quechua and Aymara it was called kumara or misk’y papa

    • @IntiNikelaos
      @IntiNikelaos Год назад

      @@waytakaq qué locura que el nombre camote llegara hasta el centro de Sudamérica y sea su nombre más común. Gracias por la información

    • @slwrabbits
      @slwrabbits 5 месяцев назад

      What does chuño taste like? I'm really curious, and don't know of any way to get hold of some to try.

    • @IntiNikelaos
      @IntiNikelaos 5 месяцев назад

      @@slwrabbits sadly, it’s difficult to describe, as it has a really particular taste. I could say that it kind of has the texture of a soft carrot, and a taste that maybe some people could classify as closer to the taste of some medicine than to that of any food they have ever eaten(?)

  • @richm368
    @richm368 2 года назад +3

    You could have shown me that picture of Alta Plano and told me it was Idaho. No wonder they're famous for potatoes, it's like being home for them. Lol

  • @DanielALeary
    @DanielALeary 2 года назад

    Thanks again. Great episode.

  • @cholos17
    @cholos17 2 года назад

    Amazing video! Gracias 🙏

  • @fernanps
    @fernanps Год назад +2

    Here, in Peru, when going to the local market choosing the correct variety of potatoe is difficult. I have to ask my mom which is the appropriate; for example, yesterday my girlfriend and I prepared causa and my mom said we could use whether papa amarilla or papa wayro. When in the market I didn't know which were wayro and amarilla

    • @VonRibbitt
      @VonRibbitt 8 месяцев назад

      La papa amarilla normalente es mas redonda que la "comun", igual le preguntas a tu casera por papa amarilla y altoque sabe cual es

  • @splitman1129
    @splitman1129 2 года назад +2

    I literally just sat down to eat French fries because I have had a craving! skal!!

  • @Pitocodascavernas
    @Pitocodascavernas 2 года назад +1

    wonderful video, please talk about kuhikugu civilization.

    • @AncientAmericas
      @AncientAmericas  2 года назад +1

      They are on my list but I have no clue when I'll get to it.

  • @portalthefella
    @portalthefella 2 года назад

    awesome stuff like always!

  • @Lala-io9gn
    @Lala-io9gn 2 года назад +9

    Normally I don't consider genetic heritage as a worthwhile category for non-medical purposes, favoring cultural and societal identity and status, however I make an exception now (A joking exception of course):
    My grandmother's family is quechua (an Andean cultural-linguistic-ethno group,) and I feel that I deserve praise for my people's hand in the domestication and proliferation of potatoes. Cue the applause!

    • @AncientAmericas
      @AncientAmericas  2 года назад +7

      Today, all the applause is yours!

    • @DoctorProph3t
      @DoctorProph3t Год назад

      Thanking your ancestors for potato, both the vegetable and the funny word for them.

  • @gnostic268
    @gnostic268 2 года назад +6

    Yes! I love the history of all the food indigenous to North and South America. Potatoes, corn, tomatoes, chocolate, etc

  • @guillermodavila5128
    @guillermodavila5128 2 года назад +1

    Niiice video!
    You should also make one about Tomato and Cacao 👍👍👍

  • @AkoaGenesis
    @AkoaGenesis 2 года назад

    Fantastic episode.

  • @CaucAsianSasquatch
    @CaucAsianSasquatch 2 года назад +7

    I hosted a guest.. who explained that.. "The potato is not in the bible and therefore is not food." He claims that.. "Since the potato is not food, then consuming it leads to corruption and failure like in Ireland."
    But who am I to judge? I like mine baked and loaded ..with pulled pork barbecue.

    • @AncientAmericas
      @AncientAmericas  2 года назад +4

      That's a pretty bizarre way to approach food but whatever floats the proverbial boat I suppose.

    • @rosiehawtrey
      @rosiehawtrey 2 года назад

      The best way to deal with that kind of person involves a Gatling cannon in 37x95mm Hotchkiss ranged and zeroed to 300yds. Its also the approved method for Christian Missionaries, Jehovahs Witnesses and Prohibitionists..
      Alternatively you could send him to Belfast and tell him they all want to hear his manifesto down the local pub that doesn't have carpets .. He'd have the life expectancy of a chocolate fireguard...

    • @maiqtheliar789
      @maiqtheliar789 2 года назад +2

      There are a ton of foods not mentioned in the Bible. If you ate only foods found in the bible you are limited to pretty much pork, beef, mutton, venison, bread, milk, honey, fish and misc grains. Those grains don't include rice or maize either because those aren't mentioned in the Bible either. If you are REALLY going biblical then pork should be off the menu as well and you would keep kosher. Yes I know later on it was decided that Christians didn't have to keep kosher. But if you a fanatic enough to base your diet only to what is found in the bible then might as well keep kosher as it is the ONLY dietary restrictions found in the Bible.

    • @CaucAsianSasquatch
      @CaucAsianSasquatch 2 года назад

      @@maiqtheliar789 I dont.

    • @maiqtheliar789
      @maiqtheliar789 2 года назад +1

      Yeah I know. I was talking about your guest. Just seems like an odd thing to base a diet on.

  • @itacom2199
    @itacom2199 2 года назад +9

    You can even make pasta with potatoes, that's so cool

  • @NORTH02
    @NORTH02 2 года назад

    Great channel

  • @kazemizu
    @kazemizu Год назад +2

    The potato skin is the healthiest part of a potato.

  • @modularsamples
    @modularsamples 2 года назад +10

    How about an episode on one of the continents less universally loved exports, tobacco, coca or psychedelics?
    Love the channel BTW, keep up the good work!

    • @AncientAmericas
      @AncientAmericas  2 года назад +8

      I got plenty of plants on the list so don't you worry. And thank you!

    • @eingrobernerzustand3741
      @eingrobernerzustand3741 2 года назад +2

      @@AncientAmericas Did you read the book
      "Lost Crops of the Incas: Little-Known Plants of the Andes with Promise for Worldwide Cultivation" from 1989?
      Also, are any videos on agriculture systems of pre-Columbian america, like on waffle gardens or Chinampa

    • @spicyalpastor3310
      @spicyalpastor3310 Год назад

      psychedelics as you say we're not used recreationally, they were used medicinally. Also none of these were exported, they were exploited by the colonial powers.

  • @henrimourant9855
    @henrimourant9855 2 года назад +40

    As a vegan I am incredibly grateful that potatos exist lol. It became my meat replacement haha. They're amazing.

    • @rosiehawtrey
      @rosiehawtrey 2 года назад +6

      You can take color photos with them too.. Technology connections.

    • @scintillam_dei
      @scintillam_dei Год назад

      As a microbe I am upset that you murder my kin in your acidic gut. See a video of a microbe fleeing a white blood cell. They don't want to die.

    • @anon-iraq2655
      @anon-iraq2655 Год назад +5

      Yeah they dont have protein boss

    • @gg3675
      @gg3675 Год назад +1

      @@anon-iraq2655 They most definitely do have protein.

    • @anon-iraq2655
      @anon-iraq2655 Год назад +5

      @@gg3675 negligeble amounts

  • @anovice7572
    @anovice7572 Год назад +2

    I remember visiting parque de la papa in Peru and seeing so many different types of potatoes that I didn’t know existed. Like the potatoes were all sorts of colors and some were even purple in the inside. Most importantly they were delicious I ate so many types of potatoes that day until I could no longer eat. I think I ate a 11 1/2 whole potatoes. If any of you visit or are from Peru I recommend trying all the potatoes

  • @waytakaq
    @waytakaq Год назад +2

    Any type of Andean potatoes and variations are great. Interesting fact is the the Inka Thupaq Yupanqi brought potatoes to Polynesia.

  • @chrissonnenschein6634
    @chrissonnenschein6634 2 года назад +39

    The issue is at least in modern times the “domestic potato” is not really grown in Peru :: In some portuguese/spanish texts the domestic potato came from island/tribe in southern Chile, this island was also known/used for much hardwood lumber to repair the ships and galleons thus also acquiring the potato .... As for geophagy this is very commonly employed by far eastern asian tribes like Ainu or Nivkh using various clays and and/or ashes. Also in modern japan some wild foods are first parboiled in water with lime or baking soda before properly boiling/cooking with normal water, etc (various bracken ferns for example)...

    • @ernesttorres4059
      @ernesttorres4059 2 года назад +5

      That is true. Potatoes are from Chile and domesticated in Chile, then the Incas took them to Cuzco.

    • @AncientAmericas
      @AncientAmericas  2 года назад +20

      The books I had pointed to Peru but people in Chile were definitely enjoying it early on as well.

    • @saintluisito
      @saintluisito 2 года назад +25

      @@ernesttorres4059 “The Incas” appeared in South America in the XII/XIII century … Potatoes have been cultivated in Peru thousands of years B.C. … conclusion: The Incas were not the people that first cultivated potatoes in Peru, let alone “took them” from Chile to be cultivated somewhere else …

    • @Androbott
      @Androbott 2 года назад +15

      @@ernesttorres4059 no existía chile en ese tiempo, ni peru

    • @pedrosampaio7349
      @pedrosampaio7349 2 года назад

      It's also apparently practiced in America:
      ruclips.net/video/hQD9-FBs2qQ/видео.html

  • @jhoxha
    @jhoxha 2 года назад +3

    When I was writing my BA thesis on the rise of Prussia , I came across some economic studies that had some very interesting data on the impact potato farming had. It was very suited to the harsh weather and the marshy land of especially Pomerania and in general the whole of the Baltic coast.

  • @dso4594
    @dso4594 2 года назад

    Very interesting content. Thank you:) new subscriber

  • @ecuadorexpat8558
    @ecuadorexpat8558 Год назад

    I live in Ecuador..our potatoes are fabulous !!!! My favorite is the small Chaucha

  • @comettamer
    @comettamer Год назад +4

    Interestingly, the French peasantry really took to the potato as well because they discovered it to be an excellent food source during times of invasion. Since the edible part grew underground, potato crops were difficult to trample and no invading army in their right mind would dare stop to dig them up and risk leaving themselves vulnerable to attack.

    • @DoctorProph3t
      @DoctorProph3t Год назад

      The nightshade leaves hid them from thieves and scavengers too, folks wouldn’t dare touch the poison plant when there’s onions and carrots to pinch.

  • @jefemiller
    @jefemiller 2 года назад +3

    Amazing! I love this kind of video! Avocado, tomato or pawpaw (might be to obscure) would be cool in the future. Someone probably said this but the intro reminded me of Bubba from forest gump talking about shrimp. Also it's great to see stuff about Andean agriculture and a video about Inca food storage and maybe terrraced farming would be awesome.

    • @AncientAmericas
      @AncientAmericas  2 года назад +1

      Thank you! There will definitely be other food/plant topics in the future so fear not.

  • @JPJ432
    @JPJ432 Год назад +1

    Hey Ancient Americas I think you would really like the channels Robert Sepehr and Universe Inside You. They talk about a lot of things but Ancient Civz in the Americas is a big one. Really enjoy your videos btw, keep up the great work!

  • @CYI3ERPUNK
    @CYI3ERPUNK Год назад

    wonderful video dude ; thanks =]

  • @krov.
    @krov. 2 года назад +20

    Peruvian Potatos, love my country, i hate the politicans of my country, i love my potatos 🇵🇪❤️

    • @msergio0293
      @msergio0293 Год назад

      Y las palomas?

    • @krov.
      @krov. Год назад +2

      @@msergio0293 Tambien mano, con su papas, uff aun mas rico

    • @L.P.1987
      @L.P.1987 Год назад

      Tu país fue creado por y para esos políticos que odias. ¿Crees que realmente las poblaciones que hoy son Perú se habrían unido para formar un país voluntariamente?

    • @krov.
      @krov. Год назад +1

      @@L.P.1987 Es culpa de la gente y la incapacidad del pueblo y los gobernantes por lo que este pais esta asi, al igual que media Hispanoamerica, lo de los pueblos originarios es la historia que se repite en varias de las actuales naciones en el mundo

    • @L.P.1987
      @L.P.1987 Год назад

      @@krov. Es culpa del país en sí, ya que fue diseñado con ciertos intereses, motivo por el cual le cuesta tanto "cambiar" no solo a nivel económico, sino también social, cultural y claro, político.
      La mayoría de peruanos actuales tienen abuelos o padres inmigrantes andinos que ni siquiera eran tan patriotas del Perú, debido a que fue un país que se diseño sin ellos y que encima les afectó negativamente.
      Si ahora las zonas populosas abrazan con más pasión al Perú no es porque los ricos sean pecho-fríos, sino es una consecuencia subconsciente del clientelismo político propio del periodo de la "cholificación" contra las clases populares: tú me brindas tu apoyo para mi proyecto político y yo te permito ocupar (a.k.a. invadir) estos territorios circundantes de la ciudad.
      Y mejor ni hablemos de los selváticos que ninguno de los símbolos patrios los representa realmente o siquiera los visibiliza, a pesar de que su territorio conforma la mayoría territorial e incluso sufrieron DOS genocidios: el del Putumayo y el matsé.
      A mi me gusta mucho la cultura andina y considero como complemento enriquecedor todo lo demás: lo afrodescendiente, asiático, europeo y de la Luna también si quieres, pero no soy patriota de una farsa. Mucho le echan la culpa a los españoles o a los ingleses, pero con el mero hecho de conocer que los quechuas pasaron del 60% de la población al 15% entre los siglos XX y XXI ya te hace suponer que la culpa está en manos de otros...

  • @donguadalucio1405
    @donguadalucio1405 2 года назад +8

    Thank you Chile for giving potatoes to the world.

  • @gebert87
    @gebert87 Год назад

    Loved it! Thank you

  • @santiagomolinatorresarpi8554
    @santiagomolinatorresarpi8554 Год назад

    I just love you so much man. Whenever your videos come in I'm just so excited. The quality is always amazing, but I just really admire the type of subjects you choose to cover. Thank you so much for lifting my day up

    • @AncientAmericas
      @AncientAmericas  Год назад

      Thank you for the lovely comment and for lifting my day up!

  • @the_chosen_one5642
    @the_chosen_one5642 2 года назад +3

    ALGORITHM LETS GOOOOO

  • @pimpompoom93726
    @pimpompoom93726 2 года назад +6

    Great video. As exciting as it is to find hidden artifacts and treasure, the real important contribution of the new world to the old world is foodstuffs like potatoes, tomatoes, peanuts, beans, yams, peanuts and maize.

    • @ernesttorres4059
      @ernesttorres4059 2 года назад +4

      ...and avocado, pumpkin, chocolate, and vanilla.

    • @pimpompoom93726
      @pimpompoom93726 2 года назад +1

      @@ernesttorres4059 I knew about Avocado, pumpkin and chocolate-but Vanilla as well?? I did not know that, Thanks!

    • @davidjoelsson4929
      @davidjoelsson4929 2 года назад +3

      @@pimpompoom93726 chilis also

    • @ernesttorres4059
      @ernesttorres4059 2 года назад +1

      @@davidjoelsson4929 Don't forget the chili beans.

    • @pimpompoom93726
      @pimpompoom93726 2 года назад +2

      @@ernesttorres4059 Yeah, we can't forget the chili peppers and chili beans! European food was bland until they started importing Mesoamerican spices. I can't imagine life without my salsa! The Spanish concentrated mainly on precious metals, but the impact of all these foodstuffs on European history post-Columbian is infinitely greater than all the gold/silver wealth brought back in the Galleons. Man always focuses on the wrong things, throughout our history.

  • @samuelmaucaille702
    @samuelmaucaille702 Год назад +1

    I'm from Peru and here we have over 3000 differents types of potatoes. They're used in different preparations from Papa Rellena to Papa con Queso.

  • @steveclark5357
    @steveclark5357 4 месяца назад

    very well done, thank you

  • @akigreus9424
    @akigreus9424 2 года назад +3

    Let me get on my knees and thank the south americans for the wonderful gift of Taters, only having noodles to fry would be a runny end.

  • @angryatheist
    @angryatheist 2 года назад +5

    in Chile ( my neighbouring cousins too ) we still call potatoes papas our babies are wawas etc most the native terms are still preserved in our versions of Spanish

    • @Intisohnx
      @Intisohnx Год назад +1

      Yes Quechua terms, as the inca introduced this terms.

    • @angryatheist
      @angryatheist Год назад

      @@Intisohnx so while true they were Quechua, it’s false that they were introduced words , Quechua while widely spoken north of Chile the root languages for all tongues spoken in the region was not Quechua I’m unsure of which but the fact that these words were ubiquitous throughout all tribes of southern Chile not just the Mapuche which by the way stopped Inca progress and were never a subject people indicates it was not introduced but a root word from all our ancestors

    • @Intisohnx
      @Intisohnx Год назад

      @@angryatheist Maybe you mean Aymara, which indeed was widely spoken north of chile and north of argentina. Also the atacama region had it's own language like the diaguita. Mapuche lived further south of Santiago. The incas did not introduce quechua but made it oficial as the "lingua franca" of all the tawantinsuyo empire

    • @RebeccaOre
      @RebeccaOre Год назад

      Nicaragua also calls them papas.

  • @aronzimas5660
    @aronzimas5660 Год назад +2

    Say what you will about the Inca, theymay no have had steel, horses, gunpowder, where suceptible to old world deceases but one thing they did have was a lot of food. I've seen the remnants of their old irrigation and food storage with my own eyes, it's a thing of beauty. As a Peruvian, you're welcome. Specially to the Irish. Their mistake was growing only one crop.

    • @billyd7628
      @billyd7628 9 месяцев назад

      if the irish grew potatoes from seed they could have kept eating just potatoes. they're not true to seed. so offspring would get resistance. their error was just using tubers and using the same cultivar. if the irish had grown a blight tolerant potato they would have been fine.

  • @tselone
    @tselone 2 года назад +2

    Great info on the potato…now, I’m going to bake me one for lunch 😋