Showing posts with label Mashed potato. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mashed potato. Show all posts

Sunday, June 12, 2011

Kosher: Just Potatoes

Potato mash, as served in the Swiss mountain r...Image via WikipediaIf you are looking for a kosher dish, and on potatoes, this may be one that you can consider. It is lifted from The Jerusalem Post.

Read on!
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Lag Ba’omer is when we get to use our bonfire lighting skills and roast potatoes and marshmallows.

A new Hebrew cookbook, Potatoes, written by celebrity chef and food writer Israel Aharoni and veteran food journalist and author of many cookbooks Nira Russo, was published in time for the holiday and it contains more than 120 recipes, many useful tips and general information about different kinds of potatoes, methods of cooking and utensils.

This is not only a beautiful album with spectacular photographs (by Nelli Sheffer), but unlike other cookbooks, is a very useful one that you will keep handy in your kitchen.

The tips will add flavor to your everyday cooking and the information about methods and utensils will save you time and work.

The book is divided by cooking methods – baking, frying, boiling, steaming and pies – but to quote the writers: “Our main pride is the basic recipes made perfect. Our secrets to producing velvety mashed potatoes, basic but excellent latkes, our know-how of producing the perfectly baked potato in a home oven, and once and for all: how to make a good rosti.”

From the book we chose recipes that suit both Lag Ba’omer and Shavuot, and can be served as side dishes or main dishes with salad.

PERFECT MASHED POTATO 

Add cheese to the mashed potato and discover heaven.

✔ 3 Tbsp. olive oil 
✔ 2 zucchini, washed and cubed 
✔ 1 chopped onion 
✔ 4 or 5 red medium potatoes
✔ 11⁄2 cups water 
Salt & black pepper 
✔ Pinch nutmeg
✔ 30 gr. butter 
✔ 2-3 triangles of “La vache qui rit” cheese (or similar cheese) 
✔ 1⁄4 cup milk Heat oil in pan or wok, trim ends of zucchini and onion.

Peel potatoes and cut into 1-cm. slices.

Add the potatoes to the pan, and mix while cooking for 5 minutes. Place vegetables in a pot, add water and cover. Lower heat and cook for 10 minutes.

Discard some of the cooking water. Place back on the stove and turn heat up. Add salt, pepper and nutmeg. Add half of the butter. Press using a hand masher. The heat will dry the potatoes making it more absorbent for additions. Spreading the mashed potato on a pan will quicken the drying of the mashed potato.

When dry, add cheese and mix well.

Spread again, add milk, mix. Add butter, mix and taste. Add salt if necessary.

The secret: Adding “La vache qui rit” gives smoothness and richness to the mashed potato.

The same idea can be applied to a simple baked potato: Take a small piece off the end while still hot, insert 1 triangle of cheese or more and mix with a fork.

More: Use Boursin, the French cream cheese. Yes, it’s expensive, but one dollop of herb Boursin will upgrade any mashed potato or soup. Did anybody mention calories? 

MASHED-POTATO STUFFED POTATOES 

A very pretty way of serving potatoes.

You simply bake young long potatoes, remove both ends, dig out the inside, place them “standing,” and fill them up with mashed potato. This makes for a very nice vegetarian main dish.

✔ 6 medium size long potatoes 
✔ 4 egg yolks 
✔ 30 gr. butter 
✔ 1⁄2 cup cream (or 1⁄4 cup sour cream and 1⁄4 cup cream) 
✔ 1 tsp. sugar 
✔ 1 tsp. mustard 
✔ Salt, pepper 
✔ 2 Tbsp. ground Parmesan cheese or other hard cheese 

Heat oven to 200º. Wash potatoes and bake on a grid over a baking sheet about an hour. Cool. When cooled cut each potato in half in the middle and place with cut side up. Empty the potato carefully.

Place in a bowl and mash with all ingredients except cheese. Fill the potatoes.

Create a small scoop on each potato using an icing nozzle or ice-cream scoop.

Sprinkle with grated cheese and bake until golden brown. Serve immediately.

POTATO TILES WITH HERBS 

✔ 1 kg. peeled “Desiree” (red) potatoes
✔ 1⁄4 cup olive oil 
✔ 2 cloves garlic, chopped
✔ 5 leaves sage, chopped 
✔ 2 Tbsp. thyme leaves 
✔ 2 Tbsp. rosemary leaves chopped finely 
✔ Salt, black pepper 
✔ 1⁄2 cup Parmesan cheese ground Slice potatoes to 3 mm. thick rounds.

Cook in boiling salty water 6-7 minutes.

Drain and wash with cold water. Drain all the water.

In a bowl, mix together oil, garlic, herbs salt and pepper. Pour over potatoes and mix well. Make sure all the potatoes are coated with the oil mix.

Place potatoes in an oven proof dish in lines, like tiles.

Sprinkle cheese over the potatoes and place in a pre-heated 200º oven for half an hour, until potatoes are browned nicely. 

The best spuds

Besides a nice bonfire, one of the holiday traditions is open-fire baked potatoes.

It is advisable to pay attention to the potatoes. All kinds are good for open fire roasting, but baking potatoes are best. Look for the yellowish Marvel or the Vivaldi.

Choose mature potatoes with a smooth clean skin of similar medium size. Smell them to make sure they are not rotting.

Wish to outdo everyone else’s potatoes this year? Here is how: 

Scrub each potato well. Dry with a kitchen towel, place on a large aluminum foil square. Remove a slice from the top, and make deep cuts almost all the way through the potato. Rub cut side with oil and sprinkle salt. You may add any herb. Wrap potato with the foil.

Another delicious way is to slice potatoes almost all the way through, and spread with either mayonnaise or prepared tehina, wrap with aluminum foil and bake for half an hour.

Tip: String six to eight potatoes on 1⁄3- cm. metal wire. Wrap and bury in the ashes. Check after 25-30 minutes. The wire assures a thorough even baking and makes removing the potatoes from the fire much easier.
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Taken from The Jerusalem Post; source article is below:
Cooking Class: Just potatoes

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Monday, November 8, 2010

Three Chefs Share Their Recipes for the Holiday

Potato mash, as served in the Swiss mountain r...Image via Wikipedia
There are some recipes that you can use for the holiday season. Look at some of the offered dishes below:


1. Pomegranate-Glazed Cornish Game Hens With Wild Rice and Chestnut Stuffing

2. Curried Lentils With Butternut Squash 

3. Fennel, Orange, and Pomegranate Salad

4. No-Guilt Mashed Potatoes

 
If you are keen on these, click for the full article here:
Three Top Chefs Share Their Holiday Recipes


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Thursday, September 3, 2009

Cheat Shepherd’s Pie

Brought to you by FairPrice

A Healthier Alternative

FairPrice Mixed Vegetables are a nifty and nutritious staple to have in your freezer


ANNETTE TAN

food@newstoday.com.sg



Weekend afternoons are days I reserve for playing in the kitchen. By that, I mean experimenting and taking my time with more complex dishes that require more work than I can afford on a weekday.

On those working days, fuss-free ingredients are my best friends. The less peeling and chopping I do, the better. Yet I want my food to be as fresh and of optimum quality as possible. So, a little shrewd planning is often called for.

Dishes such as shepherd's pie are great because I can make the components separately and ahead of time, with help from healthful ready-to-use products such as FairPrice Mixed Vegetables and good pasta sauce.

FairPrice Mixed Vegetables are a product of Hungary and feature a healthy mix of peas, carrots and corn that can help the whole family meet our fibre requirements. It is also cholesterol-free and comes with a good eating stamp of approval in the form of the Healthier Choice symbol.

Available in 400g or 1kg packs, they are a good staple to have in the freezer. Toss them into soups, salads and pastas, or fry them up in an omelette. The possibilities are endless and your family will be healthier for it.



FairPrice Mixed Vegetables ($2.20, 400g / $3.80, 1kg) is available at all FairPrice supermarkets.






Cheat's Shepherd's Pie
Serves 4

  • 3 potatoes, peeled and halved
  • 1 tbsp salt
  • 15g butter plus another 10g for topping (softened)
  • 3 tbsp milk
  • 1/2 tsp salt
  • 1/2 tsp pepper
  • 2 tbsp FairPrice Olive Oil
  • 2 cloves garlic, minced
  • 400g minced beef
  • 1 tbsp Worcestershire sauce
  • 1/2 cup FairPrice Mixed Vegetables
  • 1 cup bottled tomato pasta sauce
  • 1 tbsp sugar
  • Salt and pepper to taste

  1. To make the mashed potato topping, place the potatoes and salt in a saucepan, cover with water and bring to a boil. After about 12 minutes (or when the potatoes are tender right through when poked with a fork), remove from heat and drain.
  2. In a bowl, mash the hot potatoes and 15 grams of butter with two forks or a potato masher.
  3. Add milk, salt and pepper, and mix well. Do not overwork the potatoes or your mash will turn gummy. Set aside. (You can do this a day or two in advance and keep in the fridge.)
  4. To make the filling, heat olive oil in a saucepan and add garlic. Fry till fragrant but not browned.
  5. Add the minced beef and fry for about 8 minutes, or until the beef has released its moisture and the moisture has evaporated.
  6. Add Worcestershire sauce and fry for another 2 minutes.
  7. Add FairPrice Mixed Vegetables and fry for another minute or so.
  8. Add pasta sauce and stir to mix. Cook till the sauce has thickened slightly, about 8 to 10 minutes.
  9. Add sugar and stir. Taste, and add salt and pepper accordingly. Set aside to cool. You can do this up to two days in advance and refrigerate.
  10. Preheat oven to 180 degrees C.
  11. To assemble, spread the beef mixture in a pie dish and level with a spoon. Spread the mashed potatoes over the beef to form an even layer on top.
  12. Dot the surface of the mashed potatoes with the other 10 grams of butter and then use a fork to blend it into the surface, making a pattern as you do. This will give the pie a nice "crust".
  13. Bake in the oven, on the centre rack, for 25 minutes. Serve hot.


From TODAY, Food – Thursday, 13-Aug-2009


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