Do you ever wonder if you are eating yams or sweet potatoes for holiday meals? They are known by both, but horticulturally there are differences. Officially a sweet potato is never a yam, but sweet potatoes are often referred to as yams.
Sweet
potatoes (Ipomoea batatas) are yellow
or orange tubers that elongate into ends that taper to a point. There are two
types of sweet potatoes, which creates the confusion over yam versus sweet
potato. The paler-skinned sweet potato
has a thin, light yellow skin with pale yellow flesh which is not sweet and has
a dry, crumbly texture similar to a white baking potato. The darker-skinned
variety (which is most often called "yam") has a thicker, dark orange
to reddish skin with a vivid orange, sweet flesh and a moist texture.
Another root vegetable commonly used in Central America is called cassava or yuca (Manihot esculenta). It differs from the yucca plant we grow here. When we were in Costa Rica several years ago, the starchy cassava root was peeled and boiled like potatoes. I really liked eating yuca, especially when paired with beans and rice covered in Lizano Sauce. Interestingly enough, when yuca root is dried to a powdery (or pearly) extract it makes tapioca.
Here
we grow a couple different types of sweet potato vines in Central Illinois.
Ornamental sweet potato vines are popular for their ornamental value as ground
covers, hanging baskets, in planters, and even in bottles of water in the
kitchen. The ornamental vine’s tubers are edible but are reported to have a
bland taste. Ornamental Sweet Potato Vine
Sweet Potato Vines in Garden |
In the end it doesn’t really matter what you call it. Regardless of whether you call them yams or sweet potatoes, enjoy them often – they are a healthy and tasty choice for your kitchen table.
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