Curing sweet potatoes?
On Wednesday, October 8, 2014 3:01:48 PM UTC-4, IGot2P wrote:
On 10/8/2014 11:00 AM, Steve Peek wrote:
On Wednesday, October 8, 2014 12:23:33 AM UTC-4, IGot2P wrote:
This year we planted sweet potatoes in our garden in SE Iowa. Had a bit
of frost a couple of nights ago so I dug them today and Googled on how
to store them. To my surprise they need to be cured before storing.
Most of the instructions that I found said that they should first be
kept in an area of 80 to 90 degrees F with approximately 80 to 90
percent humidity for 7 to 10 days. I can no doubt use a small half bath
in our shop for the area and I could keep it at 80 to 90 degrees F with
a small space heater but the humidity would be only around 55 percent.
OTOH, I could put a small humidifier in the area and no space heater to
get the humidity up to around 85 percent but the temperature would only
be around 65 degrees F.
I definitely do NOT want to put both the space heater and the humidifier
in this small 4' by 6' area at the same time so which is more important
heat or humidity?
Maybe the space heater and a bucket of water????
Thanks for reading my looooong first post.
Don
They will cure just fine at a lower temperature for a longer time. Pile them where they were dug and throw a tarp over them, weight the edges and leave them for a couple of weeks. Bake one and try it, should be sweet and delicious.
HTH,
Steve (who needs to dig his sweet potatos)
Steve, thanks for your response, it was appreciated and reassuring that
the planting, weeding, and digging was not a wastes of time and effort.
Everything that I had read basically stated that if I didn't do exactly
as they suggested that I just as well toss them out.
Late last night I did put a small space heater (turned on low) and a
bucket of water in the small area that I mentioned. I just checked it
and the temperature is 85 degrees F and the humidity is 65%. Not exactly
what they suggested but after your response I think that it is close enough.
Don
SE Iowa is pretty far north for sweet potatoes, did you make a decent crop?
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