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[Food] Cyprus Potatoes



Cowfold Seagull

Fan of the 17 bus
Apr 22, 2009
22,119
Cowfold
Sell them in our little shop. And love them ourselves for roast or chips. Jersey Royals are just coming in now but very expensive and they sold out in a couple of days.
What about new potatoes from the Scilly Isles? do you sell those after the Jersey's are finished, and before those from the mainland are ready?
 




Couldn't Be Hyypia

We've come a long long way together
NSC Patron
Nov 12, 2006
16,736
Near Dorchester, Dorset
I once worked for the guys that grow Jersey Royals (which is a marketing name, the variety is International Kidney). It's a gang of about 14 rich farmers. They manage to contort the rules about pesticides and fertilizers etc because they grow over such a short period so they can pump them full of crap. Nothing great or healthy about them other than they used to be the first of the season. These days we get new potatoes year round, so I wouldn't bother going for Jerseys. The myth of their great flavour does not hold up in taste tests.

Sorry to be the Grinch.

Cyprus spuds sound interesting though.
 


Cowfold Seagull

Fan of the 17 bus
Apr 22, 2009
22,119
Cowfold
I once worked for the guys that grow Jersey Royals (which is a marketing name, the variety is International Kidney). It's a gang of about 14 rich farmers. They manage to contort the rules about pesticides and fertilizers etc because they grow over such a short period so they can pump them full of crap. Nothing great or healthy about them other than they used to be the first of the season. These days we get new potatoes year round, so I wouldn't bother going for Jerseys. The myth of their great flavour does not hold up in taste tests.

Sorry to be the Grinch.

Cyprus spuds sound interesting though.
Well these guys that you used to work for, have most of the country fooled then!
 




clapham_gull

Legacy Fan
Aug 20, 2003
25,878
Cyprus produce always seems to be available in areas such as Tooting, which is where I bought my potatoes.

I actually bought them in a Turkish shop, but could equally always buy them an Indian, Pakistani, Bangladeshi shop / market.

As well as Halloumi.
 




Rodney Thomas

Well-known member
May 2, 2012
1,596
Ελλάδα
20 years ago or so archaeologists working on an area that was to be developed for the tourist industry discovered artefacts that showed the (then) oldest evidence of wine production in the world. CY wine is either toenail or pretty good. Some of the indigenous grape varieties, produced by wineries like Tsiakkas using Vamvakada/Maratheftiko grapes make really good wines, IMO.
I believe I also read somewhere that the majority of wines in the Bordeaux region come from vine stems taken from Cyprus.

As for Cyprus potatoes, there is a reason they used to be sold under the brand "Champions" in the UK
 


Machiavelli

Well-known member
Oct 11, 2013
17,782
Fiveways
Left there years ago, I was there before it was trendy, when it got trendy it never really improved and now parts of the High Street resemble the arse end of Oxford Street.

I liked living there, but never got the trendy posh label ever.

Balham, particularly the area between it and "Clapham Junction" is far posher than Clapham (infinitely so) but we like to keep very quiet about it.

We have a garden centre for instance albeit next to the prison.

When did it get trendy?
Only asking because I used to live and work there.
 






Machiavelli

Well-known member
Oct 11, 2013
17,782
Fiveways
I lived there for 6 years or so in the 1970s, and have visited for holidays dozens of time since. When we lived there, the suggestion was that Cyprus didn't import anything fresh, and that it could produce (grow) anything they needed, they even planted bananas so as to avoid importing. There was always an enormous sense of pride in their own produce, and the potatoes are stunning. When spuds are being harvested you see convoys of trucks taking them for processing, especially in the areas to the east of Larnaca, north of Ayia Napa where the soil is a deep red colour. IIRC they have always exported them.

20 years ago or so archaeologists working on an area that was to be developed for the tourist industry discovered artefacts that showed the (then) oldest evidence of wine production in the world. CY wine is either toenail or pretty good. Some of the indigenous grape varieties, produced by wineries like Tsiakkas using Vamvakada/Maratheftiko grapes make really good wines, IMO.
Greek wines are a best kept secret. There are a few suppliers that have emerged punting them out in the UK. The Wine Society has a cracking range.
 




clapham_gull

Legacy Fan
Aug 20, 2003
25,878
When did it get trendy?
Only asking because I used to live and work there.

I moved there in the late 90s and don't remember it being particularly desirable.

Progressively over ten years, the useful local shops began to close to replaced by bars with late licences or restaurents who applied for them.

NOT organic baker and coffee shops. Rather than gentrify it became somewhere to get pissed at the weekend if you couldn't be bothered to venture in the West End.

But Clapham has always been bit rough around the edges. It never "gentrified" in the way Balham did. The posh bits were always posh, the rough bits always rough.

In actual fact gun and knife crime got worse.

Clapham High Street is far more tatty now from when I lived there especially The Clapham North end.
 








Machiavelli

Well-known member
Oct 11, 2013
17,782
Fiveways
I moved there in the late 90s and don't remember it being particularly desirable.

Progressively over ten years, the useful local shops began to close to replaced by bars with late licences or restaurents who applied for them.

NOT organic baker and coffee shops. Rather than gentrify it became somewhere to get pissed at the weekend if you couldn't be bothered to venture in the West End.

But Clapham has always been bit rough around the edges. It never "gentrified" in the way Balham did. The posh bits were always posh, the rough bits always rough.

In actual fact gun and knife crime got worse.

Clapham High Street is far more tatty now from when I lived there especially The Clapham North end.
I lived Clapham North 94-97, Landor Road 97-02, and ran the Oddbins on Clapham High St 97-99. It was buzzing then or, another way of putting it was really turning into a place of hedonism around then.
Mind you, Brighton is hedonistic.
 




pure_white

Well-known member
Dec 8, 2021
1,216
Cant beat a Jersey Potato in fact definitely don't beat them or mash them eat them boiled and enjoy the earthy taste.
 


Albion in the north

Well-known member
Jul 13, 2012
1,557
Ooop North
Cyprus produce always seems to be available in areas such as Tooting, which is where I bought my potatoes.

I actually bought them in a Turkish shop, but could equally always buy them an Indian, Pakistani, Bangladeshi shop / market.

As well as Halloumi.
Id be interested to know how much you paid for them. I assume London prices are painful.
 








vegster

Sanity Clause
May 5, 2008
28,274
It's merely a seasonal thing. As Spring and Summer slowly heads North the countries closer to the Equator harvest the first New Potatoes of the season. As I recall the sequence is...Egyptian, Cypriot, Spanish, French, Jersey Royals ( International Kidney )then Scilly/Cornish....had a holiday in Paphos 2 weeks back and had some of the local tatties, very nice.
 


clapham_gull

Legacy Fan
Aug 20, 2003
25,878
Id be interested to know how much you paid for them. I assume London prices are painful.
Not in independent shops and markets set up by an originally immigrant community.

I pay less for veg locally than I do in the Sussex village I am tonight.

I bought some poppadoms in Tooting last week. Easily twice then price in a supermarket.

That's one of the small benefits of living in an expensive capital city. You can always find cheap produce and whilst the supermarkets run out, amazing tomatoes.
 
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