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How To Ruin Roasted Potatoes And Other Spuds

Posted: 04/16/2012 9:24 am

By Jasmin Sun, Food & Wine

At New York's Minetta Tavern, co-chefs Lee Hanson and Riad Nasr nearly upstage their exceptional steaks with an arsenal of perfectly cooked potatoes -- either fried, mashed with cream and butter or simply roasted. Here, they explain how to master potatoes at home by identifying and troubleshooting the most common mistakes.

Terrific Recipes for Potatoes

Roasted Potatoes Mistakes
1. Roasting raw potatoes. Simply tossing raw potatoes into the pan before roasting will guarantee tough results because the high water content will steam out over the course of a long cooking time. "You feel more like you're eating the skin, because the structure just collapses inside," says Hanson. "It also gets too hard. There's crispy, and then there's tooth-shattering." To achieve that perfectly crispy exterior and creamy interior, parboil potatoes until 3/4 cooked, when a knife tip can pierce the potato, but it won't slip off when picked up. Drain before roasting for about 20 to 30 minutes at 425 degrees.

2. Starting with a cold pan. Putting potatoes in a cold roasting pan increases the likelihood that they'll stick. Hanson and Nasr suggest heating a pan in the oven then adding oil. Let that heat to just before smoking before dropping in the potatoes.

3. Crowding the pan. Leaving space between the potatoes helps them cook evenly, so it's best to keep them in a single layer.

4. Micromanaging. It's important to let potatoes brown completely on one side before turning them over. "As with most food," explains Hanson, "potatoes are just not as good if they've been handled over and over."

5. Adding tons of oil. Only use enough oil to coat the bottom of the pan; otherwise, they'll have a fried quality. "I prefer using duck fat, but I understand that can be hard to obtain for most folks, so olive oil or clarified butter works well too," says Hanson. For an extra layer of flavor, the duo likes to add a few sprigs of rosemary or sage to the oil.

6. Using the wrong variety. Don't try to roast a waxy potato like red bliss. It's better to stick to Yukon golds. Otherwise, the chefs like German butterballs or even fingerlings.

Mashed Potatoes Mistakes

1. Using cold butter and cream. Having your butter and cream at room temperature or warmer helps them absorb more easily into hot potatoes.

2. Over-blending. Using all warm ingredients means you shouldn't have to overwork the mixture, which can make the potatoes gluey. "You have to treat your mashed potatoes like a mousse: Avoid whipping it too much when you add the butter and cream," says Hanson.

3. Mashing with a fork. For a creamy result, stick with food mills or potato ricers, which act like a press, pushing the cooked potato through tiny holes. "Mashed potatoes should be smooth, buttery and hot, almost like a puree," says Hanson. "I completely disagree with people who like chunky mashed potatoes. They may say that it's 'rustic,' but I don't get it."

Fries Mistakes
1. Using small spuds. Unless you want really short fries, Hanson and Nasr insist on finding the largest potatoes you can, like Idaho russets.

2. Frying fresh-cut potatoes. Soaking peeled, washed and cut fries in cold water overnight removes excess potato starch, which prevents fries from sticking together and helps achieve maximum crispness.

3. Cooking them only once. Hanson and Nasr subscribe to a two-step cooking process: first, blanching the fries in oil until tender but not browned, and then -- when you're ready to serve the fries -- cooking them in 380-degree oil until golden and crisp.

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By Jasmin Sun, Food & Wine At New York's Minetta Tavern, co-chefs Lee Hanson and Riad Nasr nearly upstage their exceptional steaks with an arsenal of perfectly cooked potatoes -- either fried, mashe...
By Jasmin Sun, Food & Wine At New York's Minetta Tavern, co-chefs Lee Hanson and Riad Nasr nearly upstage their exceptional steaks with an arsenal of perfectly cooked potatoes -- either fried, mashe...
 
 
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02:17 AM on 04/24/2012
II put my potatoes through a food mill for Thanksgiving this year, they came out the consistency of crafting paste, everybody hated them. I stuck with my tried and true coiled potato masher for Christmas (they came out just like grandmas) I disagree with people who think their own subjective opinions about food should be law.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mustangallee
What you write here will be in cyberspace forever!
01:48 PM on 04/21/2012
For really good roasted potatoes do boil them about 3/4 done, but rough up the outsides with a fork before you start the roasting process. More crispy texture on the outside! People rave over them.
I have my olive oil hot with minced garlic before I put them in the hot oven!
07:05 PM on 04/19/2012
I love mashed potatoes with a few chunks in there. Sometimes with a bit of the peals left in. Sorry our expert does not.
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Cassandra L Chapa
11:17 AM on 04/19/2012
Nothing on a good baked potato?
03:46 PM on 04/19/2012
I never put nothing on a good baked potato, lol.

Personally, I like a medium sized russet. Scrub well under cold water, slice an X on top to vent steam, sprinkle with Kosher salt, and bake in the oven (not microwave) at 350 until they're fork tender.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
wildbill654
information/misinformation age?
11:08 AM on 04/19/2012
Hmm! I like mine from fresh dug to over winter stored and really have never tried roasting them but otherwise they are fine from nuke baked, mashed to home fries. That's the whites, reds and burbanks.
I wonder if the chefs know that when they buy sweets or open a can of "yams" that they are all soft sweet potatoes as there are no amount of yams grown in the U.S. Easiest veggie grown if you are South of D.C. as it needs nothing. Immune to bugs, disease and all you have to do is plant and havest in Sept. Don't wash, but put out to dry in any warm covered area and store in basement. Still have 20 lbs since last year.
10:20 AM on 04/19/2012
Or microwave the whole potato for two minutes so it partially cooked. Slice with filleting or other really sharp blade then roast the slices
08:22 AM on 04/17/2012
How can you disagree with people who like "chunky" mashed potatoes? It's a matter of taste weather you "just don't get it" or not. Eat what you like, but don't be dismissive of people who like what you don't. De gusitubus non disputantum.
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Cassandra L Chapa
11:19 AM on 04/19/2012
Thank you. Everything else was informative and educational...the whole 'chunky potato' part wasn't about fact, but a matter of opinion...
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Thomas Macso
Truth and nothing but the TRUTH
11:52 AM on 04/19/2012
Couldn't agree with you more. It gives it that "tooth" feel, feels like a potatoe not a "puree". There is a place for "whipped" potatoes, I wouldn't be dismissive about it as the author was about "chunky" mashed, but prefer not to have it (whipped).