Roasting potatoes

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TheDoctor

Noble and true, with a heart of steel
Moderator
Location
The TerrorVortex
A good floury spud - Maris Piper, King Edward for preference.
Parboil, drain and leave in the hot pan for a bit.
Coat thoroughly in fat.
Roast for as long as they need, recoating with fat as necessary..
 

Electric_Andy

Heavy Metal Fan
Location
Plymouth
We use Maris Piper. I part boil them but do not let them dry (I will try that next time). I buff them around the pan to get some fluff on the outside, then tip into roasting hot oil, and salt them. I was at my Mum's yesterday and she used extra virgin rape seed oil, and it gave a really nice flavour.
 

smutchin

Cat 6 Racer
Location
The Red Enclave
Both Hassleback and Monk's potatoes are tastier, healthier and less faff.

My mum made hasselback potatoes to go with our Sunday lunch yesterday. I've seen them before but didn't know that's what they were called. I'm surprised you think they're less faff than standard roasties - cutting all those slits into them must be pretty time-consuming.

They're all right. I wouldn't necessarily say they're better than standard roasties, just a different way of preparing them. Not convinced they're healthier either - more surface area to absorb the fat.

Personal favourite is boulangère potatoes - perfect with roast lamb. Definitely more faff than standard roasties but worth the effort.
 
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raleighnut

Legendary Member
Maris Piper, pick the right size of spud (just big enough to cut into halves, the others are for chips or mash) peel and halve them, into salted water and brought to the boil then switch the heat off and leave for 5-10 minutes, drain and place in the roasting tray flat/cut side down and make sure they're well coated with oil (I use half Sunflower and half Olive Oil) and into the bottom of the oven for an hour or so But after 1/2hr take em out and baste them again.
 

swee'pea99

Squire
Amazing! Four pages of recipes and not one of them right! Now, listen up...

Start off with the right spuds: King Edwards ideally, Maris Piper at a pinch.
Choose ones that are all the same size and can be halved for the perfect final size, and/or enough bigger to be cut in 3 or 4 to get the same final cut size.
Put them in your big lidded pan, add a level tsp or so of salt, add boiling water till just covered, then return the boil and simmer for about five minutes, testing with a fork to see when you can feel just a bit of 'give'. If they still feel completely hard, keep cooking.
When they feel just a bit softened, use the lid to help drain all the water off down the sink. Put the pan back on the hob (no heat) for a few seconds. Add a fair bit of (good) salt. Put the lid back on. Grab the pan top and bottom, using oven gloves, and give it a good shake. Remove lid to check for 'chuffing' (a word I'd never heard, but I like it!) You may have to shake a bit more, depending on how cooked the spuds were. If there's mashed spud everywhere, you probably over-cooked. Don't shake any more, and remember for next time...(they'll still be fine - don't worry)
Upend onto a bowl/plate, another good sprinkle of salt, and leave to cool down for a few minutes, then into the fridge (uncovered) for an hour. (Not essential, but it helps them dry more, then take up more oil for max crispiness.)
Olive oil (healthy) in baking tray on the hob...heat it up a little to help thin. Spread over full surface. Add spuds and use a fish slice to turn them about until all are oiled all over. (Add a little more oil if necessary.) Add another sprinkle of salt.
Top of 190 degree oven for 50ish mins. Use the fish slice to turn them over a couple of times during the cook.

If they don't turn out perfect, blame someone else.
 
U

User482

Guest
^ Olive oil?

*walks away muttering*.
 

mjr

Comfy armchair to one person & a plank to the next
My mum made hasselback potatoes to go with our Sunday lunch yesterday. I've seen them before but didn't know that's what they were called. I'm surprised you think they're less faff than standard roasties - cutting all those slits into them must be pretty time-consuming.
I just put them in a spoon while slicing them - the curve of the spoon stops the knife cutting all the way through. It's easier than slicing onions because the knife is less inclined to slip but I guess it depends how quick you are at chopping consistently with a knife. Once the potatoes are cut, that's the fiddly bit done for either Hasselback or Monk's, whereas for roasting it's just the beginning - also, there's so many ways to roast them that no-one ever seems happy because it's not quite what they would have done. ;)
 
Ask a hundred people how to do roasties you get a hundred different answers.
But only one of them is called Delia Smith.

She seems to favour steaming now but my old DS book says boil. I boil them longer than most for a softer interior.
Chuffing and hot oil are essential. Once you have taken the hot pan out of the oven, keep it hot with the hob. Oil will soon cool down after adding a bunch of spuds. If the oil gets cold, the spuds will soak up oil rather than crisp.
 
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Mr Celine

Discordian
Start off with the right spuds: King Edwards ideally, Maris Piper at a pinch.

Salt.... salt.... salt... salt...

Why bother specifying a potato variety if you spoil it with salt? It makes all potatoes taste the same. Wean yourself off it and discover a whole new world of real flavours.

A good roast potato has to be flavourful with high dry matter content. The best that are relatively easily obtainable are Golden Wonder. Record are also good, but rare. Maris Pipers will do at a pinch.

Peel and chop, put in a large pan of cold water, bring to the boil and boil for 6 minutes. Drain them immediately, shake them vigourously in the pan. Put them in a roasting tin with hot goose fat, roll them around to ensure they're all well coated. Roast at 170 fan oven for an hour. Alternatively put then in the roasting pan around whatever joint you're cooking and baste them with oil or the fat in the pan.
 
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