Purple Yam is a climber with variable tubers, usually
spherical or conical (when cork brown or purplish black and transverse
section purplish white), or oblate or cylindric, much branched (when
cork brown or grayish yellow and transverse section white). Stem is
twining to right, hairless, ridged, with 4 narrow, membranous wings,
prickly at base. Bulblets are present, variable in shape. Leaves are
simple; stalk green or purplish red, 4-15 cm; leaf blade green or
purplish red, ovate, 6-15 x 4-13 cm, papery, hairless, base arrow
shaped to deeply heart-shaped, tip shortly tapering or with a tail.
Male spikes solitary or a few together, 1.5-4 cm, sometimes forming a
panicle; axis obviously zigzagged. Male flowers have outer tepals 1.5-2
mm; stamens 6. Female spikes are solitary or 2 or 3 together. Purple
Yam is found in Tropical Asia, including East Himalaya, at altitudes of
600-1200 m. Purple yams have edible tubers which have a mildly sweet,
earthy and nutty taste, reminiscent of sweet potatoes or taro. Purple
yam is most common in Philippine cuisine (where it is known as ube or
ubi). It is often eaten boiled, baked, or as a sweetened dessert called
ube halayá; the latter being a popular ingredient in the iced dessert
called halo-halo. Flowering: November-January.
Identification credit: Aarti Khale
Photographed in Lal Bagh, Bangalore.
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The flower labeled Purple Yam is ...