And the Winner Is...

Best Potato Contest draws interest from across Oregon

Published online: Feb 10, 2020 Articles Gary Roth, Executive Director, Oregon Potato Commission
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This column appears in the January 2020 issue of Potato Grower.

Farmers from across Oregon, along with retailers, researchers, professional chefs and culinary students gathered at the Tod & Maxine McClaskey Culinary Institute at Clark Community College in Vancouver, Wash., Dec. 6 for the 10th annual Goodness Unearthed Best Oregon Potato Award contest.

“This is an exciting day for Oregon potatoes and a multifaceted opportunity to help tell the story that Oregon growers produce some of the best potatoes in the world,” said Gary Roth, executive director of the Oregon Potato Commission, which sponsors the contest.

In the contest, potato growers and breeders enter potatoes into one of four categories: red, yellow, russet or specialty. About a dozen chefs and culinary students prepare the potatoes and judge them on appearance, aroma, taste and texture.

“When we started this, the chefs didn’t realize there was that much difference between a russet potato or a red potato or a yellow potato,” said Dan Chin, a potato grower from the Klamath Basin and a member of the Oregon Potato Commission. “They thought, ‘A potato is a potato.’ Once they started this, they realized there is a big difference in varieties.”

The contest is the brainchild of chef Leif Benson, who pitched the event to the commission 11 years ago as a way to educate chefs on the multiple flavors available in potatoes.

“In the culinary world, you learn two things about potatoes,” Benson said. “You learn that potatoes are either waxy or mealy. And in the practical world, you bought a box of russet potatoes, you cooked them, and that was it.

“This takes it to a whole other level,” Benson continued. “When you taste these potatoes side by side, you find there are dramatic differences in the flavor, the texture, the moisture, the appearance of potatoes, depending on where they are grown, how they are grown, the variety and so on.”

“When you taste these potatoes side by side, you find there are dramatic differences in the flavor, the texture, the moisture, the appearance.”

Chin, who has entered several winning potatoes over the years, said the contest provides multiple benefits for growers as well.

“As a grower, we want to produce the best potatoes we can for the consumer,” Chin said. “So, as these tests roll out, you can say, ‘Well, this variety here met the high specs. It looks good, tastes good and cooks well.’ So, if it grows well in my field, it is a variety I will probably produce.”

Brian Charlton, interim director of the Klamath Basin Research & Extension Center in Klamath Falls, Ore., was on hand Dec. 6 and said the contest helps Oregon State University screen varieties in its potato breeding program.

“If at an early stage we know we have something that is off-flavor, then we can discard that instead of wasting research dollars and time to move something through the system that we know is not going to have much success,” Charlton said. “Secondly, once we understand some of these (taste) profiles biochemically, then we can perhaps understand how those traits are passed on genetically with crosses, which can help us further refine that system.”

OSU potato breeder Vidyasagar Sathuvalli added that the university utilizes blind tasting in its breeding program, but the blind tasting doesn’t provide nearly the depth or sophistication of analysis of the commission’s contest.

“In our blind tasting, people say, ‘This tastes good and this doesn’t taste good,’” said Sathuvalli. “But this contest actually breaks down quality into different categories, and chefs are the most qualified to understand flavor.”

OSU varieties, incidentally, have done quite well in recent years, winning last year with one of its russet varieties, considered the most important category, and in the specialty potato category.

“The benefits of this contest are multifaceted,” Roth said. “There are scientific benefits. There is information-sharing and consumer education about the health and wellness of potatoes. And there are the promotional aspects, where more people learn about the high quality of Oregon-grown potatoes.”