Otago Daily Times

Health benefits of purple potatoes prove extraordin­ary

Purple tatties not only look good — they could help ward off strokes and heart disease, writes

- James Wong.

IN the past I haven’t been resounding­ly positive about growing potatoes.

That’s because on my tiny plot I have found growing the commercial white varieties delivers crops with taste and nutrition much like those in the shops, just in exchange for a whole lot more time and effort.

Compare this to the almost nightandda­y difference between the knockout flavour of homegrown tomatoes and the sad shopbought offerings, and in my limited space the choice is clear.

However, there are some caveats. New potatoes and the quirkycolo­ured ‘‘heritage’’ types can be far tastier fresh from the ground than what you’ll find at supermarke­ts. But perhaps the biggest difference is when it comes to the potential health benefits of the more leftfield varieties. And if it’s these you are after, a growing body of scientific research suggests it doesn’t get any better than the dazzling hues of purple spuds.

Packed full of the same pigments that give red wine and blueberrie­s their potential health benefits, burgundyhu­ed spuds can boast a whopping threetimes the polyphenol­s of the regular white kind. In fact, some varieties can contain gramforgra­m as much good stuff as the berries themselves, according to Colorado State University. My own growing trials found they produced yields up to 10times that of blueberrie­s per unit of space, all for a fraction of the cost of a blueberry bush.

According to the Journal of Agricultur­al and Food Technology, adding a 140g serving of purple potatoes twice a day to the diet of overweight, middleaged subjects caused their blood pressure to drop almost five points within just a month; despite the fact that almost 80% of them were already on antihypote­nsive drugs. Such a fall could ‘‘decrease the risk of stroke by 34% and of heart disease by 21%’’ according to The London School of Medicine. These potatoes added 280 calories to their daily diet, but the subjects in this trial didn’t gain weight either.

OK, this may be just one study and we need a lot more research before solid conclusion­s can be drawn, but these results do contribute to a growing weight of evidence behind the benefits of going for purple. As these varieties are sold online yet are a rare find in the shops, to me it makes the case for picking them over the ubiquitous white ones a pretty strong one.

Considerin­g that they are also just as easy to grow, taste great and provide truly hypnotic colour, it is hard to see a clear downside. — Guardian News and Media

 ?? PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES ??
PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES

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