Monday, September 13, 2010

TMI Tuesday...



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A Mr. Seamus Flanagan of Chicago Illinois asks..."Dear Mr. Knowitall, I LOVE Potatoes! And I Love all things Irish. Could you please give me some Info about the relationship between the two"?
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Dear Seamus, Of Course I can!!
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1.) No one in Ireland or most of Europe even heard of potatoes before the 1600's. Spuds, which originated in South America, arrived via The Spanish and English explorers.
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2.) Potatoes grew prolifically in the rocky craggy Irish soil. You could grow enough spuds on a half acre to feed a family of 6 for a year!
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3.) You can live on potatoes! All you need is to add a little Butter-Milk or fish, or maybe some cabbage, for fat and some vitamin A.
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4.) Although very nutricious, a working man needs about 14 pounds a day to stay healthy and active if they are all you are eating.
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5.) By the 1840's, about 3 Million people were eating potatoes for breakfast, lunch, and dinner!
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6.) Spuds kept people so healthy, that the poor produced more babies than ever before. 50 years after the potato was introduced, Ireland's population DOUBLED!
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7.) By 1845, one third of all the tilled soil in Ireland was devoted to the potato.
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8.) In 1845, a fungus named PHYTOPHTHORA INFESTANS, attacked the potato crop. Leaves turned black, new growths withered, and those already full grown, turned soft, black, and smelly. Those 3 Million poor folks depending on just spuds to eat...Suddenly had nothing! Other crops grew just fine, but the poor could not afford them!
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9.) The Irish Potato Famine lasted to about 1851.
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10.) No one knows for sure how many Irish died as a result of The Famine, but historians put the figure as high as 1.1 Million people. Another 1 million or so left the country. Many for the United States.
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Good Question Seamus, I hoped that I gave you some useful information.
But all this Spud Talk has made Mr. Knowitall grow weary...
I bid you Adieu.....

17 comments:

  1. A spudkini!! I love it!!

    Dear Mr. Knowitall,

    I'm curious...Why do they call it a Spelling Bee?

    Your adorning fan,

    --snow

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  2. Many also headed to Canada and planted potatoes here. Then had babies that grew up to eat potatoes and have babies, etc. etc...until: ME!

    Yep. And I do love me some potatoes. :)

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  3. The spud said to the stud, "Whip me, man...whip me to a pulp."

    And the stud replied, "OK, I'm gonna whip your potato."

    Oh well, I tried..........

    I'd better stick to reading you--and learning, Mr G.

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  4. Well now I don't feel like Mr. Potato or is it Potatoe Head. LOL. Say Mr. Know-It-All can you tell me how the suds and bubbles get in laundry detergent and dish washing soap? Mahalo

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  5. I like spuds. Wouldn't want to eat them every day, though. Mashed potatoes here, potato chips there, a few french fries in between -- WAY too many calories.:)

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  6. wow. that is some interesting history g-man...

    i do like my spuds...

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  7. Spud on!!!!

    Have a nice day, Boonie

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  8. It also made some of them color blind..... or so I was told by my welsh Irish father, but his favorite food, was pickled pigs knuckles, and corn beef hash, UGH.... is it no wonder I am a vegan.

    Interesting lecture, just don't give us a test tomorrow on what we learned here today.

    Joanny

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  9. My great, great grandparents came to England from Ireland during the potato famine, to survive. They arrived on the pigboats. It was cheaper to travel as a pig (threepence)than a human being - this is how the Irish became known as Irish Pigs.

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  10. my grandmother's people came from ireland in the 19th century.

    thanks for the great lesson on the humble spud.

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  11. Ah, I remember The Great Potato Famine of 1845. Wait a minute... No I don't! That happened long before I was born!

    I was thinking of The Great MISTER POTATO HEAD Famine of 1985 - there was a shortage that Christmas.

    Entertaining and educational as usual, G-Man!

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  12. 14 pounds a day? That's a lot of potatoes!

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  13. Is it the Irish in me that makes me crave potatoes in all their forms. Not quite 14 lbs a day, tho. Only 13.5 for Jannie.

    xo

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  14. these things I did not know! interesting, from the perspective of this Scotsman!

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  15. Well, mash my taters and call me a leprechaun, you are a regular history book. I learned lots.

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