Woman discovers heart-shaped potato (AP) Updated: 2006-05-15 17:31
The president of the Idaho Potato Commission says there's no way a
heart-shaped potato should have made it through the state's inspection system
without being pulled aside and turned into french fries. And yet, it did -
during Potato Lover's Month.
In this
March 2006 photo taken in Moon Township, Pa., provided by the Idaho Potato
Commission, and taken by the family of Linda Greene, Linda Greene is shown
holding a heart-shaped potato. The president of the Idaho Potato
Commission says there's no way a heart-shaped potato should have made it
through the state's inspection system without being pulled aside and
turned into french fries. And yet, it did - during Potato Lover's
Month. Greene discovered the potato in February 2006 but only recently
alerted the Idaho Potato Commission to the Valentine-shaped tuber. She is
storing the potato in a cupboard in her basement. [AP
Photo] |
"I would guarantee someone saw it
and thought, 'This is cool, we'll let this go through,'" said commission
president Frank Muir. "Typically, unique shapes will go into processing ¡ª
dehydrated or cut up into french fries."
The spud wound up in the kitchen of someone with a receptive eye.
"I love hearts," said Linda Greene of Moon Township, Pa., who discovered the
potato in February but only recently alerted the potato commission to the
Valentine-shaped tuber. "My engagement ring is actually a heart shape. Anything
heart-shaped I go crazy for."
She is storing the potato in a cupboard in her basement.
"I don't have the heart to cut it," she said.
February was designated Potato Lover's Month by Congress after growers
lobbied for a way to sell more potatoes during a slow month. It's also the month
of Mr. Potato Head's recognized birthday, Feb. 5.
Idaho is the nation's largest potato producer and grows about one-third of
all the potatoes in the United States. Last year, the state produced 12.5
billion pounds.
Greene said she had never heard of the commission until she searched the
Internet to share her find with someone capable of appreciating its
significance. She then e-mailed a picture of herself holding the potato over her
own heart to the commission.
Muir said his office received her e-mail in March and got confirmation photos
last month. He said the special spud was not a public relations ploy.
"We didn't plant it," said Muir. "We'll have to start sorting for
heart-shaped potatoes."
He'd have a customer in Pennsylvania.
"It's a shame they can't grow them and market them," Greene said. "I wonder
if I planted mine if I would get heart-shaped potatoes?"
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