How to Plant, Grow, and Harvest Sweet Potatoes
Relatively low in calories, sweet potatoes are very nutritious, a top source of beta-carotene, and also contain some protein, calcium, iron, vitamins A and C and other minerals. They can be stored longer than winter squash.
To the cook, sweet potatoes are easier than pie (or sweet potato pie!).
- They can simply be scrubbed, poked with a fork in a few places, and baked at 400°F for 35 minutes to one hour, until they give a bit when you squeeze them in your pot-holder-protected hand.
- In the microwave, a whole sweet potato baked on high should be ready in 4 to 6 minutes. It may still feel firm when done; let it stand about 5 minutes to soften.
- Sweet potatoes can also be steamed whole (cleaned and unpeeled) for about 40 minutes or until tender, or cooked whole (cleaned and unpeeled) in boiling salted water for about 35 minutes. (Boiling reduces the flavor considerably.)
- Immerse cut raw sweet potatoes in water until you’re ready to cook them; they will darken otherwise.
As a general rule, don’t substitute sweet potatoes for regular potatoes in recipes; the two aren’t related. Sweet potatoes don’t hold together the way potatoes do, and their strong flavor can overwhelm a dish meant for a milder potato taste. Sweet potatoes are also not related to yams. But they make a fine substitute for pumpkin, especially in desserts.
Check out our ten best sweet potato recipes!
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Hello, this is the first time I have ever planted sweet potatoes. I wish I could show the picture I took but I have in a galvanized type large round metal planter, I have planted a sweet potato that grew lots of leaves and I planted it in the dirt with the greens and top of the sweet potato above ground and then in another metal planter, I have a red potato, much smaller one.. for some reason I thought they could handle cold. I still need to read about red potatoes but I was thinking about taking these two large metal tub containers and putting them on a wood table I have by the back sliding glass door off my dining room and putting a heat lamp over them. I have two heat lamps from when I had rabbits recently... Do you think a heat lamp might work well as our temperatures have dropped into the 30s and 40s now in October...? Or if I put a tarp or possibly a weed block felted piece and a tarp over them to keep them warm enough -Or should I just forget about it? There are so many green leaves. I hate to just see it die. I don't think there's any potatoes in the pot yet because it's only been 2 to 3 months... Ty for any info!
at the end of the season, do I dig them up? If they're in pots, do I just leave them in the pots until the next year?
Sweet potatoes can survive in the ground over the winter in warmer locations, but they do not tolerate cold weather, so it is mostly treated as an annual planting. Starting each growing season with a new slip (either purchased from a local garden center or nursery, or you can start your own) will likely give you a better result and hopefully a crop that will last well into the winter.
Sweet Potatos are a good way to get plenty of Beta-Carotene.
Are the leaves of the sweet potato edible? While we were in the military, we were stationed in Japan for 8 years. It appeared that the ate and sold the vines/ leaves in the grocery stores. Was it a different kind of sweet potato? They had a really good flavor. Thank you, Jody
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