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 A lot on Potaoes

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Dr of BBQ

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A lot on Potaoes Thu, 09/3/09 10:34 PM (permalink)
Chefs get creative turning popular tuber into gourmet menu items By BRET  THORN

When Bill Horst was in college, his friends called him the “potato king.”
“I made everything—mashed potatoes, potato salad, scalloped potatoes, twice-baked potatoes,” he says.

They were versatile, everybody liked them and—crucial to a college student’s budget—they were cheap.

Horst went on to work in the financial industry, but recently he returned to his passion and started experimenting with potatoes again. That included cooking paper-thin potatoes and bacon at the same time in the same fryer.

The resulting “Who’s Your Daddy” bacon potato chips have become something of a sensation in San Francisco, where Horst started selling them in Dolores Park as part of the city’s burgeoning street food scene, for between $3 and $5 a bag, depending on the size.

They’ve been successful enough that Horst now is making them in a commercial kitchen.
What first drew Horst to potatoes continues to attract chefs to this versatile tuber that long ago captured the hearts of Americans. It’s also gluten-free, easy to work with and a hallmark of many cuisines, from Jewish and German to Peruvian and Italian.

According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Americans eat more than 126 pounds of potatoes each year. Pictured are Yukon Gold potatoes, left, and the Russet Burbank variety, right. According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Americans on average eat 126 pounds of them each year. That figure might sound high, but it takes four pounds of fresh potatoes to make one pound of dehydrated potatoes, which are used to make most commercial chips.
At Sra. Martinez, Michelle Bernstein’s Latin-tapas restaurant in Miami, the chef tried to make a traditional Spanish dish, patatas bravas, which is made from big wedges of roasted potatoes served with a spicy sauce and aïoli.
“But they were just OK,” Bernstein says. “I thought I was doing an injustice to them. So I decided to go Latin, which I’m obviously more familiar with.”
Bernstein, whose culinary heritage comes from her Jewish Argentine mother, charges $9 for the dish. She turned to Peruvian huancaina sauce for help. That’s a sauce of aji amarillo chiles, saltine crackers, cream cheese, sautéed shallots, lime juice and evaporated milk. Peruvians make a sort of potato salad using that sauce.
Michelle Bernstein, chef-owner of Sra. Martinez in Miami, describes her new-style patatas bravas, above, as “kind of papas huancaina and papas bravas and American potato skins all mixed together.” She stuffs the potatoes with Serrano ham and huancaina sauce. Her choice of the type of potato to use was influenced by an American delicacy that she says she loves: potato skins. She takes tiny new potatoes, roasts them until soft, fries them á la minute, cuts off the ends and fills them with the huancaina sauce and Serrano ham that she crisps up in olive oil. She tops it with cilantro.
“So it’s kind of papas huancaina and papas bravas and American potato skins all mixed together,” she says.
At Miami Beach steakhouse Meat Market, chef Sean Brasel makes his own version of tater tots, which he stuffs with Gouda cheese.


“We take Yukon gold potatoes and basically shred them,” Brasel says. He mixes them with salt, pepper and a little cornstarch, rolls it into balls, stuffs them with shredded Gouda and deep-fat-fries them. He sells a dish of about six of them for $8.


Yukon golds are also Scott Howard’s potato of choice for his buttery mashed potatoes inspired by those of Joël Robuchon. The chef of Five in Berkeley, Calif., bakes them on a bed of rock salt.


“The salt helps pull out more of the moisture so you have a really dry, potato,” Howard says.
To make his buttery mashed potatoes at Five in Berkeley, Calif., chef-owner Scott Howard first bakes Yukon golds on a bed of rock salt, rices them, then whips in room temperature butter and finishes it with milk, salt and pepper, and truffle butter on occasion, just to gild the lily. He rices them and then whips in room temperature butter, “almost like you were making a beurre blanc,” until the dish is about half butter. He finishes it with a little milk, salt and pepper, and sometimes, just to gild the lily, tops it with truffle butter.


“Everyone can judge a mashed potato,” he says. “If you do them well, it really sets you apart.”
At the new B&O American Brasserie in Baltimore, executive chef E. Michael Reidt also aims for superrich mashed potatoes by cooking them confit-style first in lobster-infused duck fat.


New York chef Daniel Boulud says potatoes are typically harvested around mid-August, but at that point their water content is too high to make excellent French fries because they get soggy faster than an “aged potato,” so he asks his suppliers to hold on to some of last year’s crop until October, when the water and sugar content of the new potatoes are right for frying.


If the sugar content in a potato is too high, it will burn on the outside before the center is properly cooked.


Boulud charges $6 for a side of fries at his new burger-and-sausage restaurant, DBGB Kitchen and Bar in the Lower East Side area of Manhattan, and they’re included in the price of burgers, which can run as high as $19.

For his bacon potato chips, Horst uses Kennebec potatoes, which he says are the variety used by the big manufacturers.

“They’re specifically designed for frying,” he says, “so they give much more leeway before burning, and they have a nicer, golden look to them.”

Horst started with Russet potatoes, which he prefers because of their meatiness, but his customers overruled him.

Daniel Angerer, the Austrian chef-owner of Klee Brasserie in New York, uses small purple potatoes from the farmers market for his version of German potato salad.

Except for the purple color, it’s a pretty typical European potato salad—with mustard, vinegar, olive oil, salt, cayenne pepper, black pepper and garlic—“but my grandmother didn’t do any sousvide,” he says.

He doesn’t actually vacuumseal the potatoes, he just slices them and puts them, along with the seasonings, in a Ziploc bag, and cooks them in water at 186 degrees Fahrenheit for around two hours.

“If you want to use some garlic, you absolutely gotta make sure it’s roasted,” Angerer warns, otherwise it overpowers all of the other ingredients and takes on a “weird flavor.” So before adding the garlic to the other ingredients he immerses it in oil and cooks it slowly for an hour.
He says that, by slow-cooking the potatoes, they retain their purple color.


“It’s beautiful looking, and even better tasting,” he says, “although you have to season it again after cooking it, because it loses a little flavor during the cooking process.”

Before plating the potatoes, he tosses them with Italian parsley or arugula.

“I just started doing a suckling pig menu, and I’m pairing the potato salad with the suckling pig,” Angerer says. “The suckling pig’s nice and rich and the mustardy potato salad cuts through it.”
He also offers it as a side dish, called “greenmarket potatoes with arugula” for $6.


Some other New York chefs use potatoes in place of wheat, especially in Italian food.

At Pizzeria Veloce, chef Sara Jenkins mixes durum wheat with cooked potatoes and the cooking water for her pizza dough.

“It makes it quite tender and sweet,” Jenkins says.

At JoeDoe, also in New York, chef-owner Joe Dobias says he always has a potato pasta on the menu, and it’s not always gnocchi.

“I think potatoes are a little more user-friendly for the restaurant,” he says. “They’re a little more stable, a little less labor-intensive than semolina, more forgiving and they don’t require as much expertise.”

He oven-bakes the potatoes until they’re just cooked, and then he lets them cool.
“Most people make gnocchi when the potatoes are hot,” he says, “but I think it just makes a tougher dough. So I tend to cool the potatoes completely; I even put them in the fridge.”

He recently used his potato dough to make cavatelli—a sort of rougher, thicker macaroni.
“It’s a little trickier than gnocchi, which is more or less a ball,” he says. “You need a finer dough and you have to process the potato a little more so not to end up with tough pasta.”

He serves it with broccoli raab, Berkshire pork and sweet corn to imitate a carbonara. He also makes a dish inspired by East-European Jewish knishes and Moroccan-Jewish pastelico.

“It’s more or less a mashed potato that’s combined with whole eggs and then dipped in whole egg and fried,” he says, so it forms a crust even though, unlike a knish, it’s not coated in flour.

“It leaves itself open to a lot of preparations,” he says. “In the Moroccan recipe it’s stuffed with ground beef, but ours is basically a scallion mashed potato.”

He says mixing the egg into the potatoes gives it the stability necessary for deep-frying, “so it doesn’t fall apart in the fryer.”

He serves it with a grass-fed hanger steak for $25. He currently is using local Carola potatoes from Sheldon Farms in Salem, N.Y.

Not far from New York City, in the upstate town of Ellenville, chef-owner Marcus Guiliano of Aroma Thyme Bistro uses potatoes where many others use wheat to make his food gluten-free.
“Whenever we make something, we always think, ‘How can we make it gluten-free,’” Guiliano says, because he finds that, the more gluten-free dishes he offers, the more diners seeking out gluten-free dishes come to his restaurant.


“By doing things gluten-free, we open up a whole new market,” he says.
At Aroma Thyme Bistro in Ellenville, N.Y., chef Marcus Guiliano often replaces wheat with potatoes to make gluten-free food. For example, he uses Yukon golds as the binder in crab cakes. So to thicken his soups and lobster bisque, he throws in whole thin-skinned potatoes while the soup is cooking and then purées them with the soup.
“I like to use smaller ones, so we get a higher skin-to-flesh ratio,” says Guiliano, because he likes the skin’s flavor. “Some of the fingerlings we get are literally the size of a fava bean.”
When they’re not in season, he uses B or C size Yukon golds. He uses those potatoes as the binder for his crab cakes, too.
“I tried quinoa and millet, but Yukon gold works best for us, because it keeps the crab cakes moist,” he says.
He simply purees the potatoes and folds in all of the other ingredients, forms them into cakes, fries them and serves them.—bthorn@nrn.com

Read more: http://www.nrn.com

<message edited by Dr of BBQ on Thu, 09/3/09 10:36 PM>
 
#1
    Buddy Dek

    • Total Posts: 125
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    • Location: Long Island, NY
    Re:A lot on Potaoes Fri, 09/4/09 8:18 PM (permalink)
    Dr. of Barbecue thanks for a very interesting post. I always enjoy reading or eating potatoes no matter how they are cooked.                                                          BUDDY                                                 
     
    #2
      Dr of BBQ

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      Re:A lot on Potaoes Fri, 09/4/09 11:51 PM (permalink)
      Buddy Dek


      Dr. of Barbecue thanks for a very interesting post. I always enjoy reading or eating potatoes no matter how they are cooked.                                                          BUDDY                                                 


      Buddy,
      I'm also a potato fan but there is a great deal of information in this article. I hope those that are cooking potatoes, deep fried, smashed, mashed, or baked will read this article.
      Jack
       
      #3
        Curbside Grill

        • Total Posts: 3916
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        • Location: Lawrenceburg, TN
        Re:A lot on Potaoes Sat, 09/5/09 2:44 AM (permalink)
        Now I use potatoes to thicken soups, that is it.
        I am a rice person, born in TX, lived all over the orient, but a good rice dish out does a potato dish anyday. Potatoes are the next corn. There is an enzime they want to extract from taters, the price is going to go skyward. Have been seeing a big increase in potato prices the last 7 mos.
        <message edited by Curbside Grill on Sat, 09/5/09 2:46 AM>
         
        #4
          chewingthefat

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          Re:A lot on Potaoes Sat, 09/5/09 10:57 AM (permalink)
          Jack, I've posted this before, in any case one of my sides ,very popular, is a sliced new potato, thin sliced Spanish Onions, chopped up Farmland Sausage, salt, pepper, granulated garlic, fried in a little Olive Oil.
           
          #5
            Dr of BBQ

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            Re:A lot on Potaoes Sat, 09/5/09 2:23 PM (permalink)
            chewingthefat


            Jack, I've posted this before, in any case one of my sides ,very popular, is a sliced new potato, thin sliced Spanish Onions, chopped up Farmland Sausage, salt, pepper, granulated garlic, fried in a little Olive Oil.


            That sounds great. So how long from start to finish how much time)? Are you cooking a bunch of this and holding it on a flat top? What sort of ratio of Potatoes to onions to sausage are you using?
            Thanks
            Jack
             
            #6
              CCinNJ

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              Re:A lot on Potaoes Sun, 09/6/09 9:45 AM (permalink)
              It is a very good article. Many people take potatoes for granted on many levels.
               
              They MAY provide you with the largest profit margin outside of the oil cost factor.
               
              Because oil is involved (with fries) it is important to try to source potatoes closest to original form and direct source. The mark-up in % is very high for frozen potatoes vs. bulk potatoes.
               
              A 5 lb. bag of frozen fries can be in the $4 range. A 5 lb. bag of potatoes can easily be in the $1 to $1.50 range....even if shopping retail at a farm stand.
               
              Some scream labor to peel. If doing volume at that % difference it pays to invest in quality professional equipment to do the work vs. the mfr. mark-up and retail pos %.
               
              It can be as simple as a quality peeler. If you peel potatoes with a dull peeler you picked up at the dollar store 5 years ago...you will have issues hate to peel potatoes and it will take forever. If you are left-handed (many are in the food industry including myself) and try to peel with a peeler designed for a right-handed person with no adjustments...you will have issues.
               
              Many also assume a potato is a potato when the potatoes are the same exact variety...because 12 months out of the year they are in ample supply. There are certain factors at different times of the year. Many assume it must be the oil at the wrong temperature or the oil must be spent. Not always the case.
               
              #7
                chewingthefat

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                Re:A lot on Potaoes Sun, 09/6/09 5:25 PM (permalink)
                Dr of BBQ


                chewingthefat


                Jack, I've posted this before, in any case one of my sides ,very popular, is a sliced new potato, thin sliced Spanish Onions, chopped up Farmland Sausage, salt, pepper, granulated garlic, fried in a little Olive Oil.


                That sounds great. So how long from start to finish how much time)? Are you cooking a bunch of this and holding it on a flat top? What sort of ratio of Potatoes to onions to sausage are you using?
                Thanks
                Jack

                 
                I lb sausage per #10 can sliced white potato, 2 cans per fry and hold, 2 large onions on the Hobart, oil to coat flat top, start the sausage first add onions and potatoes when sausage is 1/2 done let fry turning occasionally for eveness, about 15-20 minutes, max, as they will turn really brown in the steam table if overcooked.
                Tom

                 
                #8
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