Gardening Supplies

What You Need to Know About Growing and Using Cassava as a Staple Crop



Cassava is DANGEROUS, right? Well… let’s take a deeper look at this staple crop.

Learn more about survival gardening and feeding your family in my books, where I explain many staple crops and methods in depth: https://amzn.to/3fWmyTs

Subscribe to the newsletter: https://thesurvivalgardener.us3.list-manage.com/subscribe/post?u=d1c57e318ab24156698c41249&id=1f74a21dc8

Compost Your Enemies t-shirts: https://www.aardvarktees.com/products/compost-your-enemies

David’s gardening blog: http://www.thesurvivalgardener.com

Inside the continental US, cassava is generally unknown to gardeners, other than immigrants from warmer climates who grow some on a backyard scale. It’s high in starch and often grows to about 12’ tall.

Its palmate leaves and graceful cane-like branches are attractive in the landscape or in the garden. Cassava’s pseudonyms include yuca (with one “c,” NOT two – “yucca” is a completely unrelated species), manioc, the tapioca plant, and manihot. In Latin, it’s Manihot escuelenta.

Cassava is virtually pest-free, drought tolerant, loaded with calories, capable of good growth in poor soil – cassava is a must-have anyplace it can grow. Once it’s hit maturity, you can basically dig it at any point for a few years (though the roots may sometimes get too woody to eat). If temperatures drop to freezing, your cassava will freeze to the ground. This won’t usually kill the plant, but it does mean you need to plan your growing accordingly. In the tropics is capable of growing huge roots and living for years. If you live north of USDA Growing Zone 10, occasional frosts will knock it down. Growing it at any zone beyond 8 may be an exercise in futility. Cassava needs warm days and nights to make good roots.

Sadly, the plant contains a certain amount of cyanide, from its lovely leaves to its tasty roots. Boiling or fermenting gets a good bit of it out, so fear not. Compared to many things we eat, cassava’s pretty tame.

That said, there are “sweet” varieties and “bitter” varieties of cassava. Sweet types are low in cyanide and are safe to eat after cooking to fork-tender, but bitter types are high in it and need additional processing. You’re unlikely to find high-cyanide varieties in the US. I don’t have any “bitter” types in my garden, and have not seen them.

All we do to make our cassava safe to eat is to cook it until it’s soft, but that’s because it’s a “sweet” type.

The bitterness of a cassava root usually correlates to its cyanide toxicity,
Low rainfall and tough growing conditions tend to make roots more toxic. The takeaway here is that if your cassava roots taste bitter, they’re probably not good to eat.

That said, over a half-billion people eat cassava on a regular basis and manage to live just fine through it, so don’t get too hung up. Get sweet varieties and take care of them, and cook them well. You can also soak cassava roots for a few days before cooking to make them even safer, though we don’t bother doing that with our roots.

There are Cassava cane cuttings for sale on ebay and Etsy.

Chop a sturdy stem into pieces about 1.5’ long and stick them in the ground on their sides about two inches down and cover them lightly with soil. Select cuttings that have gotten woody, with bark that is no longer young and green. You can also plant the canes vertically, about 2/3 in the the ground, or even diagonally.

Cassava likes irrigation and good soil. It will survive drought and heat. 6-12 months later (depending on care, variety and rainfall), they’ll be ready to start harvesting. To harvest, machete down the entire plant a foot or so from the ground, throw the branches to the side and start digging. Be careful, though – the roots are easy to chop through. The roots you’re looking for grow down and away from the main stem and are generally located in the first 1-2’ of soil. They’re deep brown with flaky skin. Don’t dig them too long before you’re going to process them as cassava doesn’t store well at all. Once you harvest the roots, you’ll want to chop up the rest of the plant to make a new set of canes for planting out. I snap off all the leaves and compost them, then cut the bare canes into planting size. Remember: canes that are too green tend to rot rather than root, so throw them on the compost too. Sturdy, 1-2” diameter canes are perfect.

Ensure they’re right side up by looking for the tiny little growth buds by the leaf bases. That little dot should be above the leaf’s base, not below. You can bury cut canes in a box beneath the ground for the winter, you can let your current plants freeze to the ground and just wait for spring to bring new growth back… you can put cuttings in pots and bring them inside on freezing nights, then plant out in spring… or you can get a greenhouse and always keep a few plants in there for propagative stock. The roots can be chopped and frozen raw as well – they keep quite well that way. Start learning how to grow this plant. It’s a lifesaving staple.

22 Comments

  1. Hi, sir David can you give a favor,can you sell me cassava cane for planting ,I’m from Los Angeles California,thanks ,

  2. I got one as a gift from family friend and only figured out what it was from your channel. Unfortunately after boiling it and dumping the water it still didn't agree with me.

  3. Bought my cassava from Pete Kanaris’ Green Dreams nursery in Florida. Has done well and had small edible roots this fall. I’m taking cuttings and planting in my gardens in Zone 8a and 8b.

  4. Okay. I'm in Zone 8 here in North East Texas. (NOT Dallas!) Cassava looks interesting but, how do you COOK it? Fried? Boiled and mashed? Baked? With what? Carrots and onions? Ham and cabbage? If I grow it I'm going to want to eat it so I need to know this stuff.

  5. I've got a Yucca. Or at least I think I do. I'm confused now. I ordered some Monstera seeds from China and they sent Yucca. Turns out it's one of the few things easy to grow as an Alaska houseplant. I'm still gonna try Cassava next year in Alaska. I got some giant Taro last year and it was wet cold and nasty. It just has a look like it will grow here.

  6. Ok im hooked, but how well would it do in hard red clay soil??? Just wondering if i could use this to break up and improve the soil.

  7. Thanks Dave, you're the best 👍
    Just like pokeweed, not nearly as scary as it seems at first. 👵

  8. Thanks, David! I will leave it in the ground for winter,here in Molino FL. I planted little bit late ,didn't grow too much. Got the stock from a malaysian seller on eBay

  9. I'm in Eastern Pennsylvania outside of Philadelphia and would love to grow something like this… The land around me is very fertile.

  10. Do you grow marijuana by any chance? I'll bet your plants are awesome if you do! I love your show and all of the wisdom you share! Oh yeah if you do grow wood you show us your grow?

  11. At least this has inspired me to buy some at the store and see if I like it. Digging a two foot deep hole is quite a project! If you leave the deeper roots buried, will they sprout up again?

  12. David, your channel is absolutely awesome! Thank you so very much for putting all this information into interesting and useful videos. Loving them! 🙂

  13. Love this informative video. And thanks to your inspiration I’m looking at doing a land race pumpkin. I have 4 varieties picked out so far. Seminole, Cherokee tan, calabaza, and Thelma sweet potato. Do you have any suggestions for south Mississippi

Write A Comment

Pin