Gardening Magazine

First Early Potato "Foremost"

By Mwillis
Last Autumn, when I took over the garden at Courtmoor Avenue and started digging I saved a few very small potato tubers that I found. The owners of the garden told me that they were "Foremost" ones, which they used to grow every year. I planted these tubers in my own garden in the Spring (I described it HERE).
First Early potato
Last week I lifted the first of the crop they produced.
First Early potato
That first batch was from the least promising of the three pots I had planted-up. They weren't brilliant, but considering their origin I don't think they were too bad. This week I harvested the second of the three pots, and they seemed a lot better.
First Early potato
The yield from this one pot (I think it must hold about 25 litres of compost) was 1046g, which I think was quite respectable, since they came from 3 very tiny seed-tubers. The batch included 10 nice big tubers, along with about the same number of smaller ones.
First Early potato
These potatoes are quite "blocky" - almost rectangular in shape - and have white skins and flesh. They have a pleasantly light texture when cooked. Some people say that "Foremost" are poorly-flavoured, but we didn't find them to be so. To be perfectly honest, I struggle to differentiate between potato varieties in terms of flavour!
I take pride in growing potatoes that have smooth, clean skins and I judge their quality at least partly by the presence or absence of the blemishes caused by the disease "Scab", to which "Foremost" is allegedly quite susceptible. These ones have a little Scab, but nothing too serious. [By the way, one way of reducing the likelihood of Scab is to include lots of organic matter in the growing-medium.]
First Early potato
My plan with these is to eat the small ones, but to keep the biggest ones and use them as my seed-tubers for next year, thereby "ensuring the succession" of this variety. Yes, I know I could just go and buy some new seed-tubers, but for me there is something special about being independent and keeping the local seed-saving tradition going. I know that the owners of the Courtmoor Avenue plot will be pleased with this too, and that is reason enough for me.
Next up will be these 2 pots each of "Charlotte" and "Nicola" (Second Earlies), which look ready for harvesting with their foliage flopped over and going brown.
First Early potato
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P.S. since I drafted this post, I have lifted the last of my pots of "Foremost". The quality of the tubers was similar to those from the previous pot, but at 865g the yield was less good.
First Early potato
First Early potato
The final tally of "Foremost" then, from 9 tiny seed-tubers planted in 3 x 25L pots comes to about 2.7kgs.

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