
New
potatoes, new markets
Basin
growers, researchers work on specialty potato varieties
By
TY BEAVER
H&N
Staff Writer
December
14, 2006
New
potato varieties are displayed at the Klamath Basin Research and
Extension Center campus on Washburn Way. The campus is the initial
screening site for new potato varieties in the Pacific Northwest
Tri-State Program. Photo
courtesy of Brian Charlton
It never hurts to look ahead.
Even with local fields empty of crops and the potato sheds full of
this year’s harvest, growers and agricultural researchers in the
Klamath Basin are working to develop and improve business. The
specialty market for potatoes — which includes a variety of colors,
textures and tastes — is attracting a lot of interest.
“I think it has the potential to generate some good revenues,”
said Brian Charlton, extension and cropping systems agent.
The Klamath Basin Research and Extension Center campus on Washburn Way
is the initial screening site for potato varieties
within the Pacific Northwest Tri-State Group. The group includes
researchers from Washington State University, Oregon State University
and the University of Idaho.
10,000 varieties
As the initial screening site, Charlton said, the research campus has
screened about 10,000 varieties for the past four out of five years.
Researchers and growers help select the best varieties after this
stage, and those continue through more screenings and trials. Several
varieties are in regional
trials that could land them on the market in the next few years.
The varieties getting attention from local growers, though, are the
specialty ones, Charlton said. These potatoes don’t look like a
russet or small red and often have a visual characteristic that makes
them stand out.
A reason for the interest can be tied to the Atkins diet and other
low-carbohydrate diet fads that have occupied health-conscious people
for the past several years. By offering a uniquelooking
product, those in the industry hope to bring people back to eating
potatoes, Charlton said.
Dan Chin, owner of Wong Potatoes, said he has watched the screening
efforts at the research center with interest. His company searches for
fresh products with a different color, taste or texture to attract
consumers.
“We are always looking for some niches,” he said.
Appearance is the first thing that a consumer encounters in a product,
so a unique look can help lure more potential consumers. Cooking
requirements and taste can further ensure a regular buyer, Chin said.
Charlton said he has also seen interest in specialty potatoes from
processors and growers of chip varieties. Processors are experimenting
with specialty potato chips with unusual colors such as deep blues and
purples or patterns such as red and pink bands.
Dealing
with challenges
New varieties do present challenges, Chin said. When a new product
comes on the market, it must either replace another, or find new shelf
space, competing against many other items grocery stores already have.
Despite the challenges, Chin said, he is seeing genuine interest in
developing specialty varieties.
Charlton said that one benefit of developing the varieties is that they
often reach the market faster after development than others and products
could be showing up on shelves in the next few years.
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