If you answered PPD-free carotene-rich cassava roots, then you obviously got to the CIAT blog before we did. There’s a great story about the kind of serendipitous result that makes scientific research so exciting. CIAT has been developing a yellow cassava, which they call an “egg-yolk” variety, in the hope that the extra carotenes would help to rectify the vitamin A deficiencies that plague so many poor people. Roots were sent off for analysis (the results are very promising) but some of those roots were forgotten in a store-room for two months.
They should have been “totally spoiled and rotten,” because cassava roots are prone to something called post-harvest physiological degradation (PPD) that destroys them within a couple of days of harvest. It seems that the anti-oxidant activity of the carotenes — which had faded away in the stored specimens — had somehow protected them from PPD.
This is a huge breakthough for cassava breeders, growers and processors. Read more at CIAT.