How long will potatoes & onions last in storage?

Started by Alex133, January 25, 2012, 06:44:14

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Alex133

I'd like mine to last until next lot start cropping - do you think there's any hope, what's the longest any of you manage?

Alex133


pumkinlover

In a good year we often keep potatoes till the new crop is ready.
When we had blight a few years ago we were throwing away the new potatoes in August, and still eating the last years which were ok.
Onions are  more of a problem for me though.

antipodes

Garlic lasts the longest, sometimes I am still eating the last lot when the new ones are harvested!  I don't grow enough spuds to keep huge quantities, but we ate the last ones in December which I thought was good going - they were starting to sprout though. I am still eating my onions, and still have a few kilos left so I might be able to make it, but usually I have to buy them for the last month or so. Echalotes keep very well, and I usually make it through the year with my harvest.
2012 - Snow in February, non-stop rain till July. Blight and rot are rife. Thieving voles cause strife. But first runner beans and lots of greens. Follow an English allotment in urban France: http://roos-and-camembert.blogspot.com

flitwickone

i keep mine for a year till i harvest new my spuds have run out but i have a large family otherwise i would never run out

cornykev

Parsnips are the the only veg that lasts me all year round, although I have plenty of spuds left and a few Shallots and the moment.   :D
MAY THE CORN BE WITH YOU.

BarriedaleNick

Garlic and chilis are the only thing I dont have to buy at some point - my plot is not big.  I get a good 8-10 months of spuds and onions.
Moved to Portugal - ain't going back!

Pescador

Alex,
Depends a lot on variety. I've got PFA potatoes and Desiree lasting well, but Kerrs Pink have all gone soft and started sprouting
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realfood

For potatoes, it depends on the variety and the storage conditions. Store them in a cool, frost free place. Choose varieties that have long dormancy, ie are very slow to sprout. One of the best long dormancy potatoes is Axona, still good in April.
For a quick guide for the Growing, Storing and Cooking of your own Fruit and Vegetables, go to www.growyourown.info

pumkinlover

Quote from: cornykev on January 25, 2012, 14:43:43
Parsnips are the the only veg that lasts me all year round, although I have plenty of spuds left and a few Shallots and the moment.   :D
Is that frozen? I cannot keep them much past February as they sprout :-\

winecap

If you keep them cool enough, the potatoes should last through to the new ones without a problem (so long as you have grown enough). Of the ones I grow, Desiree keeps best. The problem is they all start sprouting if they start warming up.
Onions also last right through to the next, but I find I need to grow both autumn and spring planting onions. Some of last years autumn sown onions are already going a little soft, so I shall get them used up as soon as possible, but the spring sown onions will easily last until this years autumn sown onions are ready.
Shallots keep much longer usually.

kt.

We have 2 plots and run out of spuds by end of December.  I have enough onions to last until around late march but will then be out until harvest in August.  It all depends on what variety you grow and more to the point how much of your plot is  given to grow what you want to store and how much of it you eat.
All you do and all you see is all your life will ever be

manicscousers

We still have 2 bags of desiree left and they are still firm and un-shooted  ;D

green lily

My PFAs are just beginning to sprout. They aren't soft but unusually dry this year. perhaps growing them in a raised bed with the dryness caused it. However they're are keeping better than usual probably because of that. I've masses of garlic still on the go and chillies- we use quite a lot. I rarely get past Dec/Jan with onions. Christmas is usually the limit. I'm still digging carrots which is a new success. I usually plan to move onto other winter crops and to bring on pasta and rice in the potato gap! ;)

grawrc

I still have some in the ground, digging them up as and when. They are in pretty good condition too. Fortyfold main crop.
I don't normally do this but ran out of time for lifting in the autumn because of stuff I was doing in the house and garden.

pumkinlover

Quote from: grawrc on January 25, 2012, 21:36:45
I still have some in the ground, digging them up as and when. They are in pretty good condition too. Fortyfold main crop.
I don't normally do this but ran out of time for lifting in the autumn because of stuff I was doing in the house and garden.
If it wasn't for slugs I reckon that's a good idea- how many times have taters in the ground that you missed and found later seemed better than the ones you have dug up, cleaned, carefully stored :D :D

small

Before the white rot hit,  :'( I hadn't bought an onion in years. I kept them (Sturon, usually, Stuttgarter Giant sometimes) hung in a cool dimmish room, in old tights separated off by knots so I could isolate the odd early softened ones. Once the new crop was ready I chopped and froze what were left. Tesco for me now I'm afraid, and the pack I bought 6 weeks ago are softening already....

xsweety23x

As long as you store them correctly (I tend to keep mine in hessian sacks) they should last you at least a few months. Keep them out of the light and in frost free conditions and they should last as long as you need them. That's not very long in my family!

Dandytown

I have just given away my stored Pink Fur Apple from 2011.  They were kept in the shed in a potato sack and were fine



gazza1960

As last year was our 1st proper season,I have no other experience in keeping tatters and onions.
but we still have PFA,s in hession sax in the plot shed along with KEddies.
We have some shallots also left but our big onions went ages ago.

Gazza

Kleftiwallah


Pink fir apple certainly seem to keep well.  I've just made a bowl of poatao salad from the last of ours (apart from those that are on the heap).    :D      Cheers,      Tony.
" I may be growing old, but I refuse to grow up !"

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