Athens, Georgia
September 8, 2005
European consumers give U.S.
peanuts top billing in blind taste test.
The United States may only produce
5 percent of the world’s peanuts, but they win the international
taste test hands down. A panel of 300 European consumers chose
U.S.-grown peanuts over peanuts from Argentina and China.
The United States may only produce
5 percent of the world’s peanuts, but they win the international
taste test hands down.
A panel of 300 European
consumers chose U.S.-grown peanuts over peanuts from Argentina
and China, according to a United States Department of
Agriculture study.
“The study is interesting
because we’ve always heard that within the U.S. and across the
world, consumers prefer the taste of U.S. peanuts, particularly
the peanut produced in the Southeast,” said John Beasley, a
peanut agronomist with the
University of Georgia Extension Service. “We pride ourselves
on taste in the South.”
European tasters from London,
Berlin and Amsterdam identified about 70 percent of the Chinese
samples and 40 percent of Argentine samples as problematic, said
Timothy H. Sanders, who led the European peanut consumer
research study.
Zero U.S. lots posed problems.
In a similar blind taste test
conducted in the U.S., “hands down, testers preferred U.S.
peanuts,” Sanders said.
The tasting part of the
European test was finished in 2004, and the study’s findings
were released in August 2005. A future taste test trip to Europe
may be in the works, said Sanders, a USDA Agricultural Research
Service leader based in Raleigh, N.C.
“The reason we’re presenting
this data in Europe is to assure international buyers that
although U.S. peanuts come at a premium price, they also come as
a premium product,” he said.
U.S. growers produced about
2.05 million tons of peanuts during the 2003-2004 marketing
year. Of those, 258,000 tons were exported.
This year, U.S. peanut farmers
are expected to produce a record 2.6 million tons, about 900,000
tons more than last year. The U.S. will export about 262,000
tons, said Nathan Smith, a UGA Extension Service peanut
economist.
Southeastern peanuts are so
good because of a long growing season and good soil, Beasley
said. “And producers are dedicated to a high-quality product.”
But the key to excellent peanut
flavor is a timely harvest. Farmers must monitor peanut maturity
carefully in each field.
“Plant on a timely basis,
harvest on a timely basis,” Beasley said, “and you're going to
have a good, flavorful peanut.”
But if U.S. growers become
slack, “we could quickly lose our reputation,” he said.
Southern peanut farmers have to
deal with many diseases and pests, but they also have longer
windows to plant and harvest their crops.
Argentina farmers, for
instance, get cool weather quickly in the fall.
“It doesn’t take many nights of
temperatures in the mid-to- lower 50s to shut the maturity
process down,” Beasley said.
The effects of weather can show
all the way to grocery store shelves. Drought conditions and
cool fall weather especially affected Georgia’s 1986 peanut
crop.
“We had a lot of peanuts dug
before they were physiologically mature,” Beasley said. “We had
more complaints about peanut flavor that year than any other.
The peanuts had a big enough size, but when they were roasted,
they gave off a bitter taste.”
This year, some Southern peanut
growers are facing fast- approaching cooler weather with crops
that may not be ready for harvest.
Cool spring weather and rain
forced some farmers to plant later, into June. This pushes
optimal harvest dates into November. Because it reduces the
chance of the crop getting the deadly tomato spotted wilt virus,
Georgia peanut farmers usually plant in May.
Georgia Faces
By Stephanie Schupska, news editor, the
University of Georgia College
of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences. |