Potatoes are from the perennail Solanum tuberosum from the Solanaceae family, the word potato could refer to the plant itself as well as the edible tuber, which is what you buy at the store. Its a root vegetable, that is delicious and the 4th largest most eaten food in the world, behind only to rice, wheat, and corn.
Potatoes do not come from flowers.... a potato, as you know it, is a tuber, a specialized stem.
The question you should be asking is, "what plant do potatoes come from?"
The scientific name given to a potato plant is Solanum Tuberosum, of the Solanuceae family.
The potato is a root and they do produce flowers.
The roots which produce the tubers that we know as potatoes.
Potatoes are the roots of the potato plant.
It is an underground stem.
Neither. A potato is a plant with the potato in the ground under a green top.
CAn you eat a decrative potato plants potato?
Yes the potato is an angiosperm
New baby potatoes come from a potato plant that was just pulled out from the ground and its tubers collected a short while ago. Usually the potato plant is just in the first part of its flowering stage when you can get nice fresh baby taters from the garden.
Salads are made mainly from vegetables (lettuce, radish, onion, carrots, potato etc.)
The Disaccharide Sucrose found in a potato plant is in the flesh of the potato. The potato is nearly 100% starch and carbohydrates that produce sugars in the body.
potato
The part of the potato plant we eat is called the tuber, which is actually an enlarged underground stem.
Why
Potato chips were invented in Louisiana in 1853.
I am assuming you are talking about the potato plant as a whole and not just the stem of the plant, which is what is known as a "potato." So continuing with the assumption that you are talking about a potato plant, then yes a potato plant is a multicellular organism. It is an organism and it has more than one cell that work together for the good of the group of cells.
carper grass, mimosa, sweet potato plant