Root cellar

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Interior of a large Wyoming root cellar with crops CCC Camp BR-83 North Platte Project, Veteran, Wyoming, "Experimental Plots", vegetables stored in root cellar. - NARA - 293597.jpg
Interior of a large Wyoming root cellar with crops

A root cellar (American and Canadian English), fruit cellar (Mid-Western American English) or earth cellar (British English) is a structure, usually underground [1] or partially underground, [1] used for storage of vegetables, fruits, nuts, or other foods. Its name reflects the traditional focus on root crops stored in an underground cellar, which is still often true; but the scope is wider, as a wide variety of foods can be stored for weeks to months, depending on the crop and conditions, [1] and the structure may not always be underground. [1]

Contents

Root cellaring has been vitally important in various eras and places for winter food supply. Although present-day food distribution systems and refrigeration have rendered root cellars unnecessary for many people, they remain important for those who value self-sufficiency, whether by economic necessity or by choice and for personal satisfaction. Thus, they are popular among diverse audiences, including gardeners, organic farmers, DIY fans, homesteaders, anyone seeking some emergency preparedness (most extensively, preppers), subsistence farmers, and enthusiasts of local food, slow food, heirloom plants, and traditional culture.

Function

Two traditional sod-covered potato cellars in southeastern Idaho Old Potato Cellars near Shelley, Idaho.jpeg
Two traditional sod-covered potato cellars in southeastern Idaho

Root cellars are for keeping food supplies at controlled temperatures and steady humidity. Many crops keep longest just above freezing (32–35 °F (0–2 °C)) and at high humidity (90–95%), [1] but the optimal temperature and humidity ranges vary by crop, [1] and various crops keep well at temperatures further above near-freezing but below room temperature, which is usually 65–70 °F (18–21 °C). A few crops keep better in low humidity. [1] Root cellars keep food from freezing during the winter and keep food cool during the summer to prevent the spoiling and rotting of the roots, for example, potatoes, onions, garlic, carrots, parsnips, etc.. These are placed in the root cellar in the autumn after harvesting. A secondary use for the root cellar is as a place to store wine, beer, or other homemade alcoholic beverages.

Vegetables stored in the root cellar primarily consist of mostly root vegetables (thus the name): potatoes, turnips, and carrots. Other food supplies placed in the root cellar during winter include beets, onions, jarred preserves and jams, salt meat, salt turbot, salt herring, winter squash, and cabbage. [2] Summer squash (aka courgettes or zucchini) may last as long as three months at room temperature; American pumpkins and pattypan squash can endure six months in storage, while kabocha, turban, butternut, and spaghetti squash can be stored for as long as eight months. [3]

A potato cellar is sometimes called a potato barn or potato house.

Separate cellars are occasionally used for storing fruits, such as apples. [1] Apples can give off enough ethylene gas to hasten the overripening or spoilage of other crops stored nearby, [1] although this effect is variable, and many farms successfully store vegetables without segregating their apples. [1] Water, bread, butter, milk, and cream are sometimes stored in the root cellar. Items such as salad greens, fresh meat, and jam pies are kept in the root cellar early in the day to keep cool until they are needed for supper. [4]

The ability of some vegetables and fruit to keep for months in favorable cellar conditions stems in part from the fact that they are not entirely inanimate even after picking. [1] Although they may no longer qualify as living, the plant cells continue to respire in some impaired but nonzero way, [1] resisting bacterial decomposition for a time. The effect can be compared to the way that cut flowers in a vase of water last much longer than cut flowers lying on a table: the flowers in the vase are not entirely dead yet and continue to respire. The analogy is not exact, but the high humidity that supports many cellared crops is involved in this residual respiration.

In some cases, plants are transplanted from the field to the soil floor of a cellar in autumn, and they then continue living in the cellar for months. [1] The fact that they cannot thrive or grow larger in the low-light, low-temperature conditions is not a problem; the only objective is to keep them alive instead of dead, thus warding off decomposition. This is a form of season extension in which the growing season is not extended but the harvest season is substantially extended. [5]

Closets, crawlspaces, garages, sheds, and attics have all been used successfully for storage of at least some kinds of crops. Even the space under a bed can store some crops (such as pumpkins) for several weeks. [1] Especially before rural electrification, farms with springhouses have often used them for root cellar duty (as well as milkhouse duty).

Construction

Common construction methods are:

Most root cellars were built using stone, wood, mortar (cement), and sod. Newer ones may be made of concrete with sod on top. [4]

Regional variations

Newfoundland and Labrador

Photo of a root cellar in Elliston, Newfoundland, 2024 Elliston Root Cellar.jpg
Photo of a root cellar in Elliston, Newfoundland, 2024

Historian Sean Cadigan writes, "Newfoundland and Labrador's climate and soil have not been conducive to agriculture, but outport isolation and poor incomes in the fishery have made supplementary farming crucial." [6] People grew root vegetables: potatoes, carrots, turnip, cabbage and beets, while others grew a wider variety of vegetables in their gardens. [7] Growing enough vegetables to last the winter was imperative to the survival of Newfoundlanders, and without refrigerators, root cellars were one of the few methods to preserve crops. Architect Robert Mellin noted the following on root cellars during his research in Tilting, Fogo Island:

Root cellars are dark, damp, and quiet subterranean structures used for storing vegetables [such as] potatoes and turnips. They are heavy-timbered, gable-roof structures built with logs (or later, sometimes with concrete), covered with shingles made of birch bark to reduce moisture penetration, and then topped with a thick layer of sod held in place by a perimeter picket fence. This precaution keeps animals off the top of the cellar and helps to retain the cellar’s shape. [8]

Many Newfoundland and Labrador cellars use a two-door airlock-type system as a method of temperature regulation, as they allowed people ample time to enter the first door, shutting it behind them before entering the main portion of the root cellar. [9] Folklorist Crystal Braye notes in her study of Newfoundland root cellars:

There are two basic designs for cellar foundations: the double door ground level entrance and the hatched entrance. In the double door ground level entrance, a small porch separates the exterior door from the interior door. Designed to keep frost out, the exterior door is closed before opening the interior door to access the cellar. Hatched entrance cellars are similar in size and interior arrangement but are entered from above, most commonly through a hatch located in floor of a shed constructed on top of the foundation. While lacking the porch component, the intermediate space of the shed creates a frost barrier between the cellar and outdoors. In the less common example where there is no shed, an exterior cover was placed over an interior hinged hatch, leaving a gap between the cellar interior and the outdoors. [10]

The town of Elliston has so many of the structures, the town's motto is the "Root Cellar Capital of the World". [11]

Potato Hole

A potato hole is a hole dug in an earthen floor where a large deep opening was covered by boards and was mainly used to store sweet potatoes during the winter. The “potato hole” or root cellar was also used by slaves to hide food and personal possessions from their slave owners resulting in some slave owners to raise slave cabins off the ground to prevent their slaves attempting to create their own hidden personal space. The storing of valuables in pits was common among many cultures but for some African slaves, like the Igbo people of southeastern Nigeria, storing valuables under the floors of their houses was often practiced . [12] [13] [14]

See also

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Food preservation</span> Inhibition of microbial growth in food

Food preservation includes processes that make food more resistant to microorganism growth and slow the oxidation of fats. This slows down the decomposition and rancidification process. Food preservation may also include processes that inhibit visual deterioration, such as the enzymatic browning reaction in apples after they are cut during food preparation. By preserving food, food waste can be reduced, which is an important way to decrease production costs and increase the efficiency of food systems, improve food security and nutrition and contribute towards environmental sustainability. For instance, it can reduce the environmental impact of food production.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Frost</span> Coating or deposit of ice

Frost is a thin layer of ice on a solid surface, which forms from water vapor that deposits onto a freezing surface. Frost forms when the air contains more water vapor than it can normally hold at a specific temperature. The process is similar to the formation of dew, except it occurs below the freezing point of water typically without crossing through a liquid state.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Turnip</span> Type of root vegetable

The turnip or white turnip is a root vegetable commonly grown in temperate climates worldwide for its white, fleshy taproot. Small, tender varieties are grown for human consumption, while larger varieties are grown as feed for livestock. Turnip is also used in Northern England, Scotland, Ireland, Cornwall, Devon, and parts of Canada, to refer to what in the USA is called rutabaga, also known as neep or swede, a larger, yellow root vegetable in the same genus (Brassica).

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Tuber</span> Storage organ in plants

Tubers are a type of enlarged structure used as storage organs for nutrients in some plants, usually stems, but some definitions refer to roots. Tubers help plants perennate, provide energy and nutrients, and are a means of asexual reproduction.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Root vegetable</span> Plant root used as a vegetable

Root vegetables are underground plant parts eaten by humans as food. In agricultural and culinary terminology, the term applies to true roots such as taproots and tuberous roots as well as non-roots such as bulbs, corms, rhizomes, and stem tubers.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Food storage</span> Type of storage that allows food to be eaten after time

Food storage is a way of decreasing the variability of the food supply in the face of natural, inevitable variability. It allows food to be eaten for some time after harvest rather than solely immediately. It is both a traditional domestic skill and, in the form of food logistics, an important industrial and commercial activity. Food preservation, storage, and transport, including timely delivery to consumers, are important to food security, especially for the majority of people throughout the world who rely on others to produce their food.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Acorn squash</span> Type of squash

Acorn squash, also called pepper squash or Des Moines squash, is a winter squash with distinctive longitudinal ridges on its exterior and sweet, yellow-orange flesh inside. Although considered a winter squash, acorn squash belongs to the same species as all summer squashes.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Basement</span> Below-ground floor of a building

A basement or cellar is one or more floors of a building that are completely or partly below the ground floor. Especially in residential buildings, it often is used as a utility space for a building, where such items as the furnace, water heater, breaker panel or fuse box, car park, and air-conditioning system are located; so also are amenities such as the electrical system and cable television distribution point. In cities with high property prices, such as London, basements are often fitted out to a high standard and used as living space.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Produce</span> Group of farm-produced crops and goods

Produce is a generalized term for many farm-produced crops, including fruits and vegetables. More specifically, the term produce often implies that the products are fresh and generally in the same state as where and when they were harvested.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Yacón</span> Species of plant

The yacón is a species of daisy traditionally grown in the northern and central Andes from Colombia to northern Argentina for its crisp, sweet-tasting, tuberous roots. Their texture and flavour are very similar to jícama, mainly differing in that yacón has some slightly sweet, resinous, and floral undertones to its flavour, probably due to the presence of inulin, which produces the sweet taste of the roots of elecampane, as well. Another name for yacón is Peruvian ground apple, possibly from the French name of potato, pomme de terre. The tuber is composed mostly of water and fructooligosaccharide.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Larder</span> Cool room for storing food

A larder is a cool area for storing food prior to use. Originally, it was where raw meat was larded—covered in fat—to be preserved. By the 18th century, the term had expanded: at that point, a dry larder was where bread, pastry, milk, butter, or cooked meats were stored. Larders were commonplace in houses before the widespread use of the refrigerator.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Storage clamp</span> Type of storage of agricultural products

A clamp is a compact heap, mound or pile of materials. A storage clamp is used in the agricultural industry for temporary storage of root crops such as potato, turnip, rutabaga, mangelwurzel, and sugar beet.

<i>Pachyrhizus erosus</i> Species of legume

Pachyrhizus erosus, commonly known as jícama or Mexican turnip, is a native Mexican vine, although the name jícama most commonly refers to the plant's edible tuberous root. It is in the pea family (Fabaceae). Pachyrhizus tuberosus and Pachyrhizus ahipa are the other two cultivated species in the genus. The naming of this group of edible plants can sometimes be confusing, with much overlap of similar or the same common names.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Wine cellar</span> Storage room for wine

A wine cellar is a storage room for wine in bottles or barrels, or more rarely in carboys, amphorae, or plastic containers. In an active wine cellar, important factors such as temperature and humidity are maintained by a climate control system. In contrast, passive wine cellars are not climate-controlled, and are usually built underground to reduce temperature swings. An aboveground wine cellar is often called a wine room, while a small wine cellar is sometimes termed a wine closet. The household department responsible for the storage, care and service of wine in a great mediaeval house was termed the buttery. Large wine cellars date back over 3,700 years.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Vegetable</span> Edible plant or part of a plant, involved in cooking

Vegetables are parts of plants that are consumed by humans or other animals as food. The original meaning is still commonly used and is applied to plants collectively to refer to all edible plant matter, including the flowers, fruits, stems, leaves, roots, and seeds. An alternative definition of the term is applied somewhat arbitrarily, often by culinary and cultural tradition. It may exclude foods derived from some plants that are fruits, flowers, nuts, and cereal grains, but include savoury fruits such as tomatoes and courgettes, flowers such as broccoli, and seeds such as pulses.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Olericulture</span> Study of cultivation of vegetables

Olericulture is the science of vegetable growing, dealing with the culture of non-woody (herbaceous) plants for food.

<i>Chaerophyllum bulbosum</i> Species of flowering plant

Chaerophyllum bulbosum is a species of flowering plant from the carrot family and known by several common names, including turnip-rooted chervil, tuberous-rooted chervil, bulbous chervil, and parsnip chervil. It is native to Europe and Western Asia. It was a popular vegetable in the 19th century.

A potato house is a structure built for the storage of harvested potatoes or sweet potatoes. Such buildings were common in Sussex County, Delaware, and adjoining areas of Delaware, and Maryland in the early 20th century, when sweet potato production was at its local peak.

The sweet potato is a very important crop for subsistence farmers in Africa and developing countries in other regions. Its relatively short growing period, tolerance to drought and high yield from poor soils lead to its use as a famine reserve for many of these households. However, it is a highly perishable food source that is susceptible to destruction by microorganisms, metabolic spoilage, physical destruction and pests. Therefore, it is not generally stored for long after harvest. This is a major barrier for the optimal use of the crop and causes much waste.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Outbuilding</span> Accessory structures on farm or ranch

An outbuilding, sometimes called an accessory building or a dependency, is a building that is part of a residential or agricultural complex but detached from the main sleeping and eating areas. Outbuildings are generally used for some practical purpose, rather than decoration or purely for leisure. This article is limited to buildings that would typically serve one property, separate from community-scale structures such as gristmills, water towers, fire towers, or parish granaries. Outbuildings are typically detached from the main structure, so places like wine cellars, root cellars and cheese caves may or may not be termed outbuildings depending on their placement. A buttery, on the other hand, is never an outbuilding because by definition is it is integrated into the main structure.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 Bubel & Bubel 1991.
  2. Tortorello, Michael (6 November 2008). "Food Storage as Grandma Knew It". The New York Times. p. D1. Retrieved 1 November 2010.
  3. Farmers and Gardeners of Centre Terre Vivante (2007). Preserving food without freezing or canning: traditional techniques using salt, oil, sugar, alcohol, vinegar, drying, cold storage, and lactic fermentation. Foreword by Deborah Madison (New ed.). White River Junction, Vermont: Chelsea Green Pub. p. 20. ISBN   978-1-933392-59-2. OCLC   122280218.
  4. 1 2 "An Old Time Dugout Root Cellar". Archived from the original on 22 May 2012. Retrieved 5 December 2009.
  5. Coleman 2009.
  6. Cadigan, Sean. "Agriculture". Heritage Newfoundland and Labrador. Retrieved 17 October 2017.
  7. Harvey, Katherine (2018). "Architectural History of the Crocker Root Cellar, Bradley's Cove" (PDF). Heritage Foundation of Newfoundland and Labrador Occasional Paper. 9: 7. Retrieved 19 June 2020.
  8. Mellin, Robert (2006). "Conservation in Tilting, Newfoundland: Rugged Landscape, Strong People, Fragile Architecture". APT Bulletin. 37 (2/3): 13–21.
  9. Harvey, Katherine (2018). "Architectural History of the Crocker Root Cellar, Bradley's Cove" (PDF). Heritage Foundation of Newfoundland and Labrador Occasional Paper. 9: 4. Retrieved 19 June 2020.
  10. Braye, Crystal (April 2013). "Exploring Our Roots: A Heritage Inventory of Newfoundland's Root Cellars" (PDF). Heritage Foundation of Newfoundland & Labrador Occasional Paper on Intangible Cultural Heritage. 3: 2, 4. Retrieved 19 June 2020.
  11. Warren, Dennis (February 2024). "The Making of a Root Cellar" (PDF). Heritage NL Fieldnotes Series (33): 1.
  12. https://www.nps.gov/bowa/learn/historyculture/upload/THE-FINAL-Slave-Diet-site-bulletin.pdf
  13. "Hidden in a Potato Hole". Carolina Journal -. 19 October 2012.
  14. "Retrace History Along the Harriet Tubman Underground Railroad Byway". 28 January 2022.

Bibliography