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Is
it a Yam or a Sweet
Potato?
While they are often mistaken for one another, yams and sweet potatoes
are two totally different plants. The yam includes various species of
the genus Dioscorea that are native to Africa. The Sweet Potato,
Ipomoea batatas, is native to tropical portions of Central and South
America, including the Caribbean.
Botanically, yams and sweet potatoes are not very close relatives. The
yam is more closely related to lilies than the sweet potato, and the
sweet potato is more closely related to morning glories than potatoes.
Yams are monocots and sweet potatoes are dicots. In the plant world,
this is a fundamental difference not only in how certain structures
appear, but also includes differences in the biochemical reactions that
occur in plants from each group.
Columbus was reportedly responsible for spreading the sweet potato
throughout the New World, including the present-day United States.
Spanish explorers carried the sweet potato everywhere, even as far as
Asia. The Portuguese carried sweet potatoes even farther, into India.
Columbus and other Spanish explorers also took the sweet potato to
Europe, but the tropical plant never caught on as a basic food crop as
it did in warmer parts of the world. In regions where the sweet potato
could be grown easily and successfully, it rapidly became a staple food
crop, both for humans and livestock.
Given the necessary mild temperatures, sweet potatoes will produce a
crop even on very poor soils. They have few pests, the fast-spreading
vines usually shade out any weeds that emerge, and the crop stores well
after harvest.
A 1992 study by the Center for Science in the Public Interest compared
the nutritional value of the sweet potato to other vegetables. It
ranked highest, with Irish or white potatoes a very distant second.
The confusion between yams and sweet potatoes may be traced back to the
days when sweet potatoes were a staple in plantation diets. African
slaves called the sweet potato "nyami" from a Fulani word meaning "to
eat," or from the Twi word "anyinam" referring a root crop common to
Africa and Asia. Over time, many markets began to advertise sweet
potatoes as yams, and the name stuck.
"What we traditionally eat on our Thanksgiving tables is most likely
the sweet potato," said University of Illinois Extension horticulture
educator Jennifer Schultz Nelson. "The names yam and sweet potato used
to be used interchangeably in stores, but in recent years the USDA has
tried to regulate use of the name. Any use of the word 'yam'
to describe sweet potatoes must be accompanied by the name 'sweet
potato.'"
There are over 600 different species of true yam, and probably just as
many uses for them. They grow underground from a vine and
vaguely resemble sweet potatoes, but tend to be more cylindrical, and
often have "toes" sprouting from them.
"Many of them grow to astounding sizes, up to seven feet long and
weighing 150 pounds," Nelson said. "Their flesh can be white to bright
yellow, and the tuber is covered in a very tough skin that is difficult
to remove.
"Many yams contain more sugar than sweet potatoes, but they must be
prepared properly before they are safe to eat. Yams contain chemicals
including oxalates that can have adverse health effects if eaten.
Typically, yams go through cycles of boiling, pounding, and otherwise
leeching out these harmful compounds before they are eaten."
Particularly in ethnic markets, yams are becoming much more commonly
available in the United States. They grow much like a sweet potato, but
need up to a year of frost-free weather before harvest. A sweet potato,
by contrast, will take 100 to 150 days to harvest.
Sweet potatoes are grown from small sprouts taken from the eyes of the
potato called "slips. They will tolerate a wide range of soil
conditions, but produce the best quality tubers in loose soils amended
with sand and organic matter such as compost. Fertilizers should
contain low levels of nitrogen and high levels of phosphorus to
encourage tuber formation. 'Beauregard' and 'Georgia Jet' are two
cultivars commonly grown in the United States."
Source: University
of Illinois Cooperative
Extension.
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Sweet
Potatoes

Yams
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