Potatoes are right there with bacon at the top of my awesome foods list and we do have some of potato with the majority of our dinners. However, looking for new and delicious things to do with them.
Normally we're either doing baked or mashed, with the intermittent scalloped/au gratin, potato salad and french fries.
Trying to look up recipes for ideas, I usually come across various methods of the above dishes, and I'd really like to find some new ideas to shove potatoes into our meals.
Any favorite potato recipes would be greatly appreciated. It does not need to be a potato only dish, but looking for primarily side dishes, unless meat is included - then it can be a main dish.
Thanks!
Chop potatoes into discs. Cook in a pan (add butter, salt) until crispy brown. Throw on some eggs. Voila, spanish omelets! (as my mom called them)
Potato curry of various varieties is w1n.
Potato pizza - thin and crispy base - is also genius.
Potato leek soup!
Chop two parts each of potatoes, sweet potatoes, carrots, parsnips, and pumpkin into large chunks. Add one part each of onion, garlic, and tomato. Toss with olive oil and salt. Roast in the oven at 375-400 degrees for two hours, stirring every half hour, until edges are well caramelized. Mash with butter and pepper (if you add the pepper with the salt, it tends to burn).
In the unlikely event of leftovers, fry 'em up as little pancake thingies.
Protip: cutting up a pumpkin is a pain in the ass, but so worth it. It will take roughly twice as long as you think it will.
Also, make mashed potatoes with the blue ones? And you get a Dr. Seuss side dish.
Funeral potatoes.
Ask Nigel how.
Hasselback Roasted Potatoes
Recipe courtesy Robert Irvine, 2007
Show: Food Network Specials
Episode: All-Star Holiday Dishes
2 pounds potatoes, medium sized (your choice of type)
Salt
1 1/2 tablespoons all-purpose flour
Freshly ground black pepper
1/3 cup canola, vegetable or grapeseed oil
1/4 cup very finely parsley leaves
Peel the potatoes and rinse to remove any traces of dirt. Cut into the potatoes into uniform pieces. (This will help in cooking time if they are all similar.) Take a sharp knife and beginning on 1 end, cut about 2/3 through the potato. Repeat the same incision from 1 end of the potato to the other, spacing the cuts uniformly. (The idea is to create the look of a fan, which is why you don't cut all the way through the potato.)
Place the potatoes in a large saucepan and cover with water. Add a pinch of salt and cook until just tender. (Do not overcook. The potatoes should remain a little hard, as they will continue to cook during roasting.)
Preheat the oven to 375 degrees F.
Drain the potatoes and place them on absorbent toweling to remove excess water. Mix the flour and salt and pepper, to taste, in a bowl and carefully toss with the already blanched potatoes. Place the floured potatoes onto a baking sheet and drizzle with oil. Bake until golden brown, approximately 30 to 40 minutes.
To finish, scoop the potatoes with a slotted spoon onto absorbent paper toweling and to drain any excess oil. Transfer to a serving dish and garnish with the parsley.
These all sound delicious. Thanks guys! Like I said, I always love potatoes, but some variety is nice.
Quote from: Rev. St. Syn, KSC on August 11, 2008, 09:31:26 PM
Potato curry of various varieties is w1n.
I know there were discussions in another thread of exactly what "curry" counts as. Stews? With curry powder (pre-mixed?) ? Sounds intriguing, but I don't know much about curry in any form. I can always do more research on this of course.
Quote from: Nigel on August 12, 2008, 02:19:46 AM
Potato leek soup!
I love doing soups and I think this one might be next on my list when I find a good recipe. Also...
Quote from: Richter on August 12, 2008, 03:15:07 PM
Funeral potatoes.
Ask Nigel how.
I know I've seen a few references to your funeral potatoes too, Nigel. Not sure if you've posted a recipe or not...or would be so kind as to pass it on :D
Quote from: Nigel on June 08, 2008, 04:55:54 AM
Oh, now you're asking for it! OK, I will start with Funeral Potatoes:
1 can Campbells Cream of Whatever soup
1 lb shredded cheese (in Mormonland, "cheese" ALWAYS means cheddar. Other types will be individually specified if necessary)
1 8-oz container of sour cream
1 bunch of green onions
1 16-oz bag of shredded hash brown potatoes
1 tube of Ritz crackers, or if you're feeling FANCY you can use Pringles.
Chop the onions. Dump everything but the crackers into a bowl and mix well. Transfer into a casserole dish, crush the crackers on top, and bake at 350 for 1 hour. Bring to your favorite funerals, bible study meetings, or family reunions! A real crowd-pleaser!
Caution: for some reason this recipe WILL NOT WORK if you try substituting fresh, grated potatoes. Maybe it would be OK if they were chopped rather than grated, but I don't want to try it after what happened last time.
EDIT: looking at the ingredients list I am realizing that this recipe is not fucking cheap for the amount of food, not to even consider the amount of nutrition and what you'll have to pay for cholesterol-lowering meds, so if I post any more DELICIOUS Mormon recipes it will have to be in a different thread. I know you're all so disappointed!
Awesome. Thanks!
Actually sounds similar to the au gratin potatoes I've made. Green onions, ritz/pringles and hash browns being the main differences. Am interested in this though to see how it'd work with the hash browns.
In the recipe I used, it actually recommended hash browns, but I wanted to use fresh potatoes, so I sliced them. Still came out delicious, but took FOREVER to cook and the potatoes weren't cooked evenly and some not even fully - should have stirred them more, though that defeated the purpose of putting them in the oven and forgetting.
And OMG so much cheese!! I used a combo of mild to extra sharp cheddars and a bit of monterey jack and probably whatever misc. cheese remains I had lying around. Soooo horrible for you, but so good.
I'm gonna have to try it with the hashbrowns though. See if it cooks better.
My mom's done a similar recipie, but with a bit of mustard thrown in, and potato chunks, not hash brown.
Gratting raw potatoe could work, but judging by Nigel's warning, I'd say cook them a bit first.
(microwave 1/2 way, bake, or shred and boild in a bit of water first maybe?)
grill em.
Oh yeah, grilling!
Hobo food:
Chop up some potatoes and throw them into a square of tin foil with carrots, chicken (or whatever), whole garlic cloves, sage or whatever herbs. Wrap that sucker up and cook over open flames/on top of hot coals. It's yummy because the chicken juice gets absorbed by the vegetables.
nuke em.
scrub them well, to get the mud off, cut a cross in them, and nuke them for a couple of minutes (remember that nuking time is linearly proportional to the volume of stuff in the microwave, so two potatoes take twice as long).
now comes the important bit, potatoes never cook evenly in the microwave (i tried at all different settings before i figured this out--trust me it's impossible), so you gotta let them post-cook for a while. i got best results when wrapping them in alu foil and waiting 10 minutes or so. but a friend told me recently that if you don't want to be wasteful, you can just let them rest folded up in a dishcloth as well.
use this extra time to create a nice cream of sour cream, chives, garlic, salt and pepper. and possibly yoghurt. or olive oil. or whatever.
--
also, mashing: peel the potatoes, cut them up into little pieces, put in a bowl with half a cup of water, cover the bowl and nuke it. drain the water, add garlic, milk, chives, butter, salt and pepper, possibly grated cheese too, and stir it with a fork until it's completely smooth.
Quote from: Rabid Badger of God on August 13, 2008, 08:07:54 AM
Oh yeah, grilling!
Hobo food:
Chop up some potatoes and throw them into a square of tin foil with carrots, chicken (or whatever), whole garlic cloves, sage or whatever herbs. Wrap that sucker up and cook over open flames/on top of hot coals. It's yummy because the chicken juice gets absorbed by the vegetables.
Oooo. I actually forgot about that. We've done that a few times over a fire with ground beef, potatoes, peppers and onions. The chicken and garlic would be really good to try.
Quote from: Richter on August 12, 2008, 09:28:21 PM
My mom's done a similar recipie, but with a bit of mustard thrown in, and potato chunks, not hash brown.
Gratting raw potatoe could work, but judging by Nigel's warning, I'd say cook them a bit first.
(microwave 1/2 way, bake, or shred and boild in a bit of water first maybe?)
Yes, you'd have to do something like partially-cook the potatoes before grating or something, otherwise they come out black and gummy.
Black?
Damn.
I apologize for ever taking your warnings lightly.
:lulz:
Yeah, it was kind of a surprise for me, and added a truly funereal effect to the potatoes. My friends weren't all that into it though.
Must've been a cremation.
Quote from: triple zero on August 13, 2008, 10:47:09 AM
nuke em.
scrub them well, to get the mud off, cut a cross in them, and nuke them for a couple of minutes (remember that nuking time is linearly proportional to the volume of stuff in the microwave, so two potatoes take twice as long).
now comes the important bit, potatoes never cook evenly in the microwave (i tried at all different settings before i figured this out--trust me it's impossible), so you gotta let them post-cook for a while. i got best results when wrapping them in alu foil and waiting 10 minutes or so. but a friend told me recently that if you don't want to be wasteful, you can just let them rest folded up in a dishcloth as well.
use this extra time to create a nice cream of sour cream, chives, garlic, salt and pepper. and possibly yoghurt. or olive oil. or whatever.
--
also, mashing: peel the potatoes, cut them up into little pieces, put in a bowl with half a cup of water, cover the bowl and nuke it. drain the water, add garlic, milk, chives, butter, salt and pepper, possibly grated cheese too, and stir it with a fork until it's completely smooth.
You can cook potatoes in the microwave by wrapping them in plastic wrap (but don't forget to punch a few holes or it will explode!)
One shortcut I learned a while back is just to pour salad dressing on sliced potatoes (skins ON) laid out on a cookie sheet and bake them. Make sure you toss them pretty good in the dressing.
They turn out nums that way, too.
btw, for you American spags, don't waste your time with low-grade Idaho potatoes. Maine potatoes are much, much better quality.
RWHN,
-former potato picker
Picker? Don't you dig up potatoes?
Well, when I was a kid, it was still done by hand on some farms. I also worked on a Potato Harvester where they are dug up.
Taters!!! http://www.albinoblacksheep.com/flash/taters
potatoes, cut into discs
aubergine or cougettes or both, cut into strips
some cream
a dollop of passata di pomodoro, or make your own (garlic, small onion, tomatoes, red wine, basil, lick of chili)- it's good if you burn it a little
a good elbow of cheese (provolone, fontina, gruyere, etc. whatever you have) cubed
a load of parmesan
olive oil
salt and pepper
pinch of mace
peel potatoes them and chop into discs, parboil in water
slice courgettes/aubergines and grill them coat them in olive oil while the potatoes boil
put in an oven proof dish with potatoes
loosely mix warmed passata and cream, and mix in lots of the cheese.
salt and pepper
coat with a load of parmesan
oven cook for a while
you can add meat if you like, leftover chicken, bacon, whatever. i make it with not much passata but some people make it with loads. i like it with cream in. maybe burnt mushrooms. it's kind of a parmigiana/gratin hybrid.
also, if you have lots of garlic and some facepunch red wine i suggest you make garlic mash by roasting some bulbs and squeezing garlic, cheddar, cream or milk and butter, cabbage into the mash. also if you fry some loosely cut onions cooked in oil and smoked paprika and throw them in too it is nice.
That sounds fucking fantastic, I will try it!
(http://home.ripway.com/2004-6/129400/potatoes.gif)
Quote from: Professor Cramulus on August 18, 2008, 06:42:56 PM
(http://home.ripway.com/2004-6/129400/potatoes.gif)
suddenly....must.....eat......po.....ta......toes.........
fry 'em, mash 'em, stick 'em in a stew?
Mmm, some nice lovely chips would be nice.
Baked sweet potatoes with butter and brown sugar are fucking awesome, btw.
True!
I like them with just butter and salt though.
I like mine boiled until soft, then grilled a bit, then some salt and pepper, and finally heavily doused with malt vinegar.
Quote from: Iason Ouabache on August 19, 2008, 07:37:56 AM
Baked sweet potatoes with butter and brown sugar are fucking awesome, btw.
That's true. I never really think of sweet potatoes. Sweet potato fries, too, are very yummy.
We've made our own a few times, but an Irish bar/restaurant near us makes them, and has their own homemade ketchup, which is delicious. Granted, I could probably make my own ketchup if I wanted, which I might try sometime.
Quote from: silentaether on August 18, 2008, 02:16:23 PM
potatoes, cut into discs
aubergine or cougettes or both, cut into strips
some cream
a dollop of passata di pomodoro, or make your own (garlic, small onion, tomatoes, red wine, basil, lick of chili)- it's good if you burn it a little
a good elbow of cheese (provolone, fontina, gruyere, etc. whatever you have) cubed
a load of parmesan
olive oil
salt and pepper
pinch of mace
peel potatoes them and chop into discs, parboil in water
slice courgettes/aubergines and grill them coat them in olive oil while the potatoes boil
put in an oven proof dish with potatoes
loosely mix warmed passata and cream, and mix in lots of the cheese.
salt and pepper
coat with a load of parmesan
oven cook for a while
you can add meat if you like, leftover chicken, bacon, whatever. i make it with not much passata but some people make it with loads. i like it with cream in. maybe burnt mushrooms. it's kind of a parmigiana/gratin hybrid.
also, if you have lots of garlic and some facepunch red wine i suggest you make garlic mash by roasting some bulbs and squeezing garlic, cheddar, cream or milk and butter, cabbage into the mash. also if you fry some loosely cut onions cooked in oil and smoked paprika and throw them in too it is nice.
I made this last night, with the addition of a zucchini, and it was FAN FUCKING TASTIC. Sooooo good! I ate it for breakfast too.
Quote from: Nigel on August 20, 2008, 07:15:49 PM
Quote from: silentaether on August 18, 2008, 02:16:23 PM
potatoes, cut into discs
aubergine or cougettes or both, cut into strips
some cream
a dollop of passata di pomodoro, or make your own (garlic, small onion, tomatoes, red wine, basil, lick of chili)- it's good if you burn it a little
a good elbow of cheese (provolone, fontina, gruyere, etc. whatever you have) cubed
a load of parmesan
olive oil
salt and pepper
pinch of mace
peel potatoes them and chop into discs, parboil in water
slice courgettes/aubergines and grill them coat them in olive oil while the potatoes boil
put in an oven proof dish with potatoes
loosely mix warmed passata and cream, and mix in lots of the cheese.
salt and pepper
coat with a load of parmesan
oven cook for a while
you can add meat if you like, leftover chicken, bacon, whatever. i make it with not much passata but some people make it with loads. i like it with cream in. maybe burnt mushrooms. it's kind of a parmigiana/gratin hybrid.
also, if you have lots of garlic and some facepunch red wine i suggest you make garlic mash by roasting some bulbs and squeezing garlic, cheddar, cream or milk and butter, cabbage into the mash. also if you fry some loosely cut onions cooked in oil and smoked paprika and throw them in too it is nice.
I made this last night, with the addition of a zucchini, and it was FAN FUCKING TASTIC. Sooooo good! I ate it for breakfast too.
That does sound delicious, though I had to look up courgettes and aubergine :sad:
Also, with regard to:
Quotea dollop of passata di pomodoro, or make your own (garlic, small onion, tomatoes, red wine, basil, lick of chili)
Does the chili refer to chili powder, chili sauce, chili peppers...etc.? Since I'd probably have to make my own since I don't believe I've seen passata di pomodoro.
Is this more of a side dish? Entire meal? Either/or?
We ate it as a main dish casserole. I didn't know until just now that courgettes were zucchini, either.
I made my own passata, and I put olives in it too.
It was crazy good, I want some more.
Quote from: Netaungrot on August 20, 2008, 12:23:23 PM
I like mine boiled until soft, then grilled a bit, then some salt and pepper, and finally heavily doused with malt vinegar.
win.
Made my potato soup (same as the recipie mentioned somewhere in this forum) today. It was good, but not as good as in the past. I don't know why. :/
(http://www.mentalfloss.com/wp-content/uploads/2007/12/poe.jpg)
(http://un-mute.com/articles/wp-content/uploads/2007/12/tay-zonday3.jpg)
(http://www.folica.com/images/reviews/9/689-my-toes.jpg)
MASH EM
BOIL EM
STICK EM IN A STEW!
(http://images.wikia.com/uncyclopedia/images/c/cd/PoTaToes.gif)
Heh, took me a couple minutes to figure that one out. Mostly because I didn't know the middle guy's name.
Quote from: Professor Cramulus on August 18, 2008, 07:06:07 PM
fry 'em, mash 'em, stick 'em in a stew?
:lol:
somebody link the youtube.
Quote from: iPhone on August 21, 2008, 07:42:36 AM
(http://www.mentalfloss.com/wp-content/uploads/2007/12/poe.jpg)
(http://un-mute.com/articles/wp-content/uploads/2007/12/tay-zonday3.jpg)
(http://www.folica.com/images/reviews/9/689-my-toes.jpg)
MASH EM
BOIL EM
STICK EM IN A STEW!
(http://images.wikia.com/uncyclopedia/images/c/cd/PoTaToes.gif)
:lulz: