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| Arracacha
(Arracacia xanthorrhiza)
Arracacha incorporates some characteristics from both
carrot and celery, being of the same family (Apiaceae). The economically valuable
part of the plant is a starchy storage root. The young stems can be used in salads or as a
cooked vegetable, and the leaves are often fed to livestock. There are two major drawbacks
to arracacha use. First is its short shelf life; it must reach consumers within a week of
harvest. Second is the plants high susceptibility to viruses. Arracacha has been
cultivated in southern Brazil for some 100 years, but over the last 40 years has developed
into a major horticultural operation providing income to thousands of farm families. The
crop is currently produced there on 12,000 hectares and is one of the country's most
highly prized vegetables. Farmers like arracacha because it needs only a fraction of the
inputs required for potato, and because it produces high returns to investments. Arracacha
is a rare case of a legal, high-value cash crop that poor farmers can grow. Food companies
process arracacha roots into a number of products such as baby food, instant soups, and
precooked roots.
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