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"We're always looking for the silver bullet to replace the Russet Burbank," French said. Coming up with a reliable new variety takes years. The Premier Russet emerged from the breeder's greenhouse in the early 1990s but wasn't released for commercial growers until 2006. Along the way, it underwent storage trials at facilities near the tiny farming town of Kimberly. Here, University of Idaho researchers stack experimental varieties in refrigerated stalls, testing everything from sprout resistance to shrinkage. And in the test kitchen next door, storage scientist Tina Brandt fries up new varieties, to see how they stack up to Russet Burbanks, which tend to develop unsightly dark splotches that crop up on fry ends. "There have been a lot of fantastic varieties that have come along over the years, but for one reason or another
-- shrinkage in storage, disease resistance, texture -- they haven't been adopted," Brandt laments. At the McDonald's campus in Oak Brook, Ill., perfume-wearing intruders are shooed from tasting rooms, to prevent contamination of french fries samples randomly pulled from restaurants around America for monthly scrutiny by representatives of the company's three main suppliers: J.R. Simplot Co. of Boise, Canada's McCain Foods Ltd. and Omaha-based Con-Agra Foods Inc. These days, however, taste, texture and golden-brown appearance aren't everything. In March, three activist investor groups won an agreement from McDonald's to promote best practices to cut pesticide use by its American potato suppliers. So far, the groups say the company is doing a "great job" adhering to its commitments. McDonald's Smith says he's satisfied growers are already working efficiently and sustainability, largely because wasteful water or chemical practices dent their profits. But finding new potato varieties to meet that goal
-- and that don't hurt quality -- remains on the horizon. Just now, Smith said, McDonald's is scrutinizing the Bannock Russet, a 10-year-old potato variety bred originally in Idaho that isn't as susceptible to disease as Russet Burbanks. "If we can find a variety that does that, with less inputs, water or whatever, that's something we're looking for," Smith said. "To date, there are not a lot of varieties that perform consistently enough."
[Associated
Press;
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