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Food

How the humble spud saved our skins

In the 19th century, potatoes were the salvation of the Jews.

December 30, 2008 16:47
Potatoes

By

Ruth Joseph

2 min read

What a fascinating role the potato plays in Jewish social history. Contrary to the Tudor legend, it was first introduced to Spain in 1570 by the Spanish conquistadors, who discovered it while hunting Peruvian gold. But the Spanish distrusted and ostracised the new tuber. As it was not mentioned in the Bible and originated from a heathen culture, it was frowned on by the Catholic Church.

The potato was thought to carry diseases and, being part of the deadly nightshade family, was considered to be the devil’s food. Nevertheless, its cultivation and use spread slowly to Italy, France and the rest of Europe, where it was regarded as a botanical curiosity.

The upper classes tried to encourage the peasants to grow the vegetable: for example, Frederick the Great of Prussia issued an order for his subjects to eat potatoes, but this met with huge opposition. So, using reverse psychology, he planted fields of royal potatoes and had guards watch the fields. Now that the crops were considered valuable, the peasants started to steal them.

Up until then, the populations of Russia, Poland, the Ukraine and Lithuania relied on rice, buckwheat, millet and pulses. These crops were unreliable and vast numbers of Jewish inhabitants perished when their meagre stores of food ran out. After the severe harvests of 1839 and 1840, the potato was introduced as an alternative crop.

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