He sure knows his spuds
But do you.
As part of my photo-blogging for Pink For October I have to be me. And well Irish. For some reason potatoes are always associated with being Irish (which if you think about it is odd for a South American plant).
Anyway, these pink potatoes are perfect for combining these to things (and sunburn isn't that common this time of year). So name the breed of spuds. The winner will get a marvellous Knott "no prize".
take care,
Will
p.s. For the record, they aren't "Pinks". The breed called "Pinks" are actually white skinned, with a pink tinge to the inside.
As part of my photo-blogging for Pink For October I have to be me. And well Irish. For some reason potatoes are always associated with being Irish (which if you think about it is odd for a South American plant).
Anyway, these pink potatoes are perfect for combining these to things (and sunburn isn't that common this time of year). So name the breed of spuds. The winner will get a marvellous Knott "no prize".
take care,
Will
p.s. For the record, they aren't "Pinks". The breed called "Pinks" are actually white skinned, with a pink tinge to the inside.
5 Comments:
They look a bit like Desiree, but darker than normal...
Are they Romano?
They are Roosters. My favourite potato, actually! Use them for everything.
I'll go with roosters. lovely oven baked after par-boiling and sliced into crescents along with some sweet potatoes or yams and served with meatballs in nice tomato sauce
Gary is the first one to get it right. E-mail me and I'll see if I can arrange a "no prize"
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