Native Potatoes: From Forgotten Crop to Culinary Boom and Market Innovation

Once neglected by urban consumers, Andean native potatoes are now essential ingredients for some of the most sophisticated gastronomy of the world. From colored chips to delicacy vegetables and even liquors, new products are making their way into high-income market niches. At the same time, native p...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Devaux, A., Hareau, Guy, Ordinola, M., Andrade-Piedra, J.L., Thiele, Graham
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Agricultural and Applied Economics Association 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/110932
_version_ 1855519753799467008
author Devaux, A.
Hareau, Guy
Ordinola, M.
Andrade-Piedra, J.L.
Thiele, Graham
author_browse Andrade-Piedra, J.L.
Devaux, A.
Hareau, Guy
Ordinola, M.
Thiele, Graham
author_facet Devaux, A.
Hareau, Guy
Ordinola, M.
Andrade-Piedra, J.L.
Thiele, Graham
author_sort Devaux, A.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Once neglected by urban consumers, Andean native potatoes are now essential ingredients for some of the most sophisticated gastronomy of the world. From colored chips to delicacy vegetables and even liquors, new products are making their way into high-income market niches. At the same time, native potatoes continue to fulfill their basic role of providing food security for many rural households in the Andes, who were responsible for domesticating them. Today, these families continue to plant native potatoes in diverse varietal mixtures which could contribute to longer term adaptation to climate change. The International Potato Center (CIP) found an opportunity for repositioning potato as an added-value cash crop. CIP has accomplished this by expanding its use for processing and by encouraging sales of improved and native potatoes to satisfy preferences of consumers in emerging markets in small and large cities and export markets. In this article, we examine how potatoes—particularly native potatoes—can improve livelihoods among poor farmers in Peru, highlighting the role of biodiversity as a resource to link small producers with markets. We offer examples with an approach to foster pro-poor innovation in value chains, the Participatory Market Chain Approach (PMCA), which was originally developed to increase the competitiveness of small-scale potato producers by taking advantage of the diversity of native potatoes. These native potato varieties have been successfully marketed to consumers who link them with Peru’s cultural heritage and who wish to support traditional, small-scale farming with relatively low external inputs
format Journal Article
id CGSpace110932
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2021
publishDateRange 2021
publishDateSort 2021
publisher Agricultural and Applied Economics Association
publisherStr Agricultural and Applied Economics Association
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1109322025-12-08T10:29:22Z Native Potatoes: From Forgotten Crop to Culinary Boom and Market Innovation Devaux, A. Hareau, Guy Ordinola, M. Andrade-Piedra, J.L. Thiele, Graham agricultural research agriculture markets development Once neglected by urban consumers, Andean native potatoes are now essential ingredients for some of the most sophisticated gastronomy of the world. From colored chips to delicacy vegetables and even liquors, new products are making their way into high-income market niches. At the same time, native potatoes continue to fulfill their basic role of providing food security for many rural households in the Andes, who were responsible for domesticating them. Today, these families continue to plant native potatoes in diverse varietal mixtures which could contribute to longer term adaptation to climate change. The International Potato Center (CIP) found an opportunity for repositioning potato as an added-value cash crop. CIP has accomplished this by expanding its use for processing and by encouraging sales of improved and native potatoes to satisfy preferences of consumers in emerging markets in small and large cities and export markets. In this article, we examine how potatoes—particularly native potatoes—can improve livelihoods among poor farmers in Peru, highlighting the role of biodiversity as a resource to link small producers with markets. We offer examples with an approach to foster pro-poor innovation in value chains, the Participatory Market Chain Approach (PMCA), which was originally developed to increase the competitiveness of small-scale potato producers by taking advantage of the diversity of native potatoes. These native potato varieties have been successfully marketed to consumers who link them with Peru’s cultural heritage and who wish to support traditional, small-scale farming with relatively low external inputs 2021-01 2021-01-21T22:51:05Z 2021-01-21T22:51:05Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/110932 en Open Access Agricultural and Applied Economics Association Devaux, A., Hareau, G., Ordinola, M., Andrade-Piedra, J., Thiele, G. (2021). Native Potatoes: From Forgotten Crop to Culinary Boom and Market Innovation. Choices: The Magazine of Food, Farm, and Resource Issues, Agricultural and Applied Economics Association, vol. 35(4).
spellingShingle agricultural research
agriculture
markets
development
Devaux, A.
Hareau, Guy
Ordinola, M.
Andrade-Piedra, J.L.
Thiele, Graham
Native Potatoes: From Forgotten Crop to Culinary Boom and Market Innovation
title Native Potatoes: From Forgotten Crop to Culinary Boom and Market Innovation
title_full Native Potatoes: From Forgotten Crop to Culinary Boom and Market Innovation
title_fullStr Native Potatoes: From Forgotten Crop to Culinary Boom and Market Innovation
title_full_unstemmed Native Potatoes: From Forgotten Crop to Culinary Boom and Market Innovation
title_short Native Potatoes: From Forgotten Crop to Culinary Boom and Market Innovation
title_sort native potatoes from forgotten crop to culinary boom and market innovation
topic agricultural research
agriculture
markets
development
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/110932
work_keys_str_mv AT devauxa nativepotatoesfromforgottencroptoculinaryboomandmarketinnovation
AT hareauguy nativepotatoesfromforgottencroptoculinaryboomandmarketinnovation
AT ordinolam nativepotatoesfromforgottencroptoculinaryboomandmarketinnovation
AT andradepiedrajl nativepotatoesfromforgottencroptoculinaryboomandmarketinnovation
AT thielegraham nativepotatoesfromforgottencroptoculinaryboomandmarketinnovation