Nibbles: Gastronomy edition

  • Gastronomy comes to the Amazon.
  • Maybe it should come to Tikal too.
  • You know it’s already in Mexico.
  • Not to mention Peru.
  • Preparing decent coffee counts as gastronomy, I guess. But SL28 is not genetically engineered. Not in the usual sense, anyway.
  • Not sure that eels have much of a future in gastronomy.
  • Into Africa: Indian seeds. And Indian gastronomy along with them?
  • Feralization is not domestication in reverse. Lots of gastronomic potential, though.
  • Meanwhile

Brainfood: Barley landrace evaluation, Aceh cattle, Zizania diversity, French apple cores, Vanuatu food security, Tomato genomics, Cacao fermentation, Wild foods, Activist anthropologists, Ancient wheats

Nibbles: Svalbard, Fish tissue, Homegardens, Mothers’ seeds double, Citrus diversity, Paul Smith, Pulses, Hohokam, Nutrition profiles, Zulu cattle poetry, Cereals & CC, Soil biodiversity

Brainfood: In situ & CC, Rare livestock phenotypes, SSR & wheat seeds, Kelp genebank, Recognizing pig landraces, Indian pigs, Benin yams, Colombian Manihot, Enset seed, Okra transgenes

Not so sweet potatoes

And speaking of Facebook, which has somehow become the go-to place for fun agrobiodiversity stuff, get a load of this recent photo of “bush potato” from the Waltja Tjutangku Palyapayi Aboriginal Corporation.

bushpotato

Impressive, isn’t it? It’s Ipomoea costata, according to a commenter. And it reminded me of another recent Facebook post of a sweet potato wild relative, Ipomoea bolusiana, this time from southern Africa.

bolusiana

Thinking back to our earlier post today on domesticating promising wild plants, I wonder if anyone has actually tasted these tubers?