Archeologists believe this conservation method was developed "probably during the Formative Period" from around 2,000 to 200 BC
A peasant steps on potatoes to begin the elaboration of chuno (dehydrated potato) in Machacamarca, Bolivia, on June 30, 2021. - From the Aymara word “ch'uñuâ€, this ancestral method of uncertain origin, also used in Peru, allows potatoes to be stored for decades without losing their nutritional properties: carbohydrates, fibre, vitamins and minerals
Image: Aizar Raldes / AFP
It's seven o'clock in the morning on Bolivia's altiplano, and through the morning fog is visible an uneven carpet of thousands of potatoes, spread out in front of a water tank near a house.
It's a common sight at farms in Machacamarca, a small village to the south of La Paz.
"This is how we make chuno," says Prudencia Huanca, 52, referring to a traditional dehydration practice which allows potatoes to be eaten decades after they are dug up— without losing their nutritional properties.
Huanca and her husband Egberto Mamani, 56, produce chuno from the potatoes they grow on a small piece of land about an hour from the capital.