    
Potatoes
 Potatoes © Denzil Green We tend to think, if we think of it at all, that Potatoes are the roots of the Potato plant. They aren't actually: they're enlarged underground stems (which are called tubers) in which the plant stores up nutrition for future growth.
Potatoes overall in North America are a pretty dull affair. It's probably never occurred to them to wonder if there are any other kind of Potatoes than generic white skinned, red skinned and Potatoes wrapped in tin foil ready for baking -- and oh, sweet Potatoes, too. Britain, by comparison, is practically on the verge of designer Potatoes compared to North America, yet refreshingly, no one's gone all snooty about them or anything. North Americans were all excited when Yukon Golds first hit the market. But now the question should be: where's all the rest?
In North America, various Potato marketing boards tend to classify Potatoes as round whites, round reds, long whites, and russets. That categorization may be useful for them, but it's not entirely helpful to consumers -- it doesn't give anyone a single clue about how to cook the potatoes. There is another way to group Potatoes which is far more useful: Waxy, Floury, and All-Purpose, plus two special categories, New Potatoes and Salad Potatoes.
Waxy / Boiling / Low-starch
The cells in this type of Potato stay together when cooked. This mean that chunks and slices will stay together, making them ideal for salads and layered Potato dishes such as scallops. You can slice them after boiling and the slices won't disintegrate on you. Makes gluey, heavy mashed Potato (ugh).
Examples: Cara, Charlotte, new Potatoes, fingerlings, round white and round red ones
Floury / Mealy / Baking / High-starch
These are the best ones for baking and mashing. Their cells separate when cooked, which makes for flaky baked Potatoes, good mash and great chips (as in French Fries). Fall apart, however, when you boil them and attempt to slice them.
Examples: Maris Piper, King Edward, Russets
The way to tell whether the Potatoes you have just bought are waxy or flour is to mix 2 tbsps of salt in 13 oz of water in a stout jug or bowl. Then put the Potato in, and watch what happens: if it sinks, it is a floury Potato, if it floats, it is a waxy Potato. (Practising witches who feel uncomfortable with this procedure need not feel compelled.) Mind you, by this time you're home from the store and dinner hour is approaching, so it's difficult to know how this after-the-fact knowledge is going to do you much good. You could, at least, make a snap decision whether to serve the Potatoes boiled with a little parsley if you find out they're waxy, to avoid the inevitable lunch-bag letdown that would ensue if you tried to mash them -- or reach for the box of instant mashed in the cupboard.
All-Purpose Potatoes
There is yet another type of Potato in North America, the general, all-purpose medium-starch Potato. North American tends to like all-purpose things, like all-purpose Potatoes, all-purpose flour, and all-purpose granulated sugar.
Examples: Long Whites, which are long with a pale brown skin. Desiree, Wilja and Estima
Salad Potatoes (Fingerling Potatoes)
These are small Potatoes that are the right size for salads or for steamed, bite-sized morsels on the side of your plate. They won't grow any bigger than the sizes that you see in the store -- that's their full size. You don't need to peel them. They are waxy Potatoes, so stay together well when sliced or cut after cooking. These are very popular in the UK, but are now starting to make headway in North America, where they are being called "fingerlings" (I think salad Potatoes is a little easier on the tongue and easier to type!) They are also good for roasting. These Potatoes also taste great cooked, then chilled. New Potatoes can also be used, of course, interchangeably with salad Potatoes.
Examples: Anya, Charlotte, Nicola, Ratte, Pink Fir Apple, Bell de Fontenay
When buying Potatoes, try to buy either waxy or floury Potatoes, or new or salad Potatoes, depending on what you plan to do with them. If there are any "eyes" on the Potato, they should be extremely small and not very many of them. Avoid any with black or green spots, and any with skin that is starting to shrivel.
Cooking Tips
Scrub Potatoes, and remove any eyes or buds. Trim away any light green tinged areas. Discard the Potato if more than that of it is green.
Whether to peel or not to peel depends both upon what you are going to be making with your Potatoes, and your personal preferences.
To keep peeled Potatoes fresh and white, add lemon juice to the water you keep them in. Never leave peeled Potatoes to sit out exposed to the air. They won't be bad to eat or anything, but no one will want to -- they can go this disgusting brownish black.
When you boil Potatoes, the reason you start them in cold water rather than in already boiling water is that with already boiling water, the outside of the Potatoes would get cooked before the insides had started to really even heat up. Starting with cold water gives time for the increasing heat to reach and cook the inside of the Potato.
The most sure-fire way to tell if a Potato that you are boiling is cooked is to stick a knife in it, and raise the knife out of the water, keeping the knife pointed straight down. If the Potato slips off easily while you are doing this, it is done.
If you have a few spoonfuls of mashed Potato in the fridge and are making a soup, especially one that has to be puréed in the blender anyway, consider stirring the leftover mashed into the soup before you purée it. If this sounds odd, remember that mashed Potato often contains, milk, butter and Potato, and consider that puréed Potato is used to make "Vicchychoise" or Cream of Potato soup, and that you would often put milk and butter in a creamed soup, anyway. The mashed Potato can make a wonderful thickener that cuts down on the amount of fat in the form of cream or milk you have to add to the soup. You can also use instant mashed Potato flakes to accomplish the same thing.
Crispy Skins on baked Potatoes: After scrubbing the Potatoes, dry them well with a cloth. Prick with a fork in several places to prevent the skins splitting. For added flavour, rub olive oil and a little salt onto the skins. If you're going to use a sea salt, use a flat sea salt such as Maldon; more chunky seal salt will just fall off. Don't wrap baked Potatoes in tin foil. It steams them rather than baking them, they won't taste quite as good, and why use tin foil when you don't have to?
Note: if you are baking the Potatoes in an oven (as opposed to barbequing), bake them on a cookie sheet so that the oil doesn't drip on the bottom of the oven.
When cooking salad Potatoes, they are done if you stick a knife in them and they slip off the knife easily when you lift it (keeping the knife vertical).
If you have Potatoes break apart on you when you are cooking them, chances are they are floury Potatoes, and you have overcooked them. Next time you boil them, try minding them more closely and stop cooking them when they are done. You could also not peel them first, which is fine if you are planning to serve them with skins on, but otherwise it's always really nerve-wracking when the rest of the meal is ready, just waiting on the Potatoes, and you are trying to peel Potatoes that are so hot they are burning your fingies.
Substitutes
Any other kind of starchy vegetable, depending on whether you are using it as a side dish or in a dish.
Nutrition
Poor old Potatoes. First, we avoided them because they were fattening. Then, we decided that they were okay again; that the demons were the oils, sour cream and butter that we larded them up with. Now, with the Atkins diet rage (2004), they are fattening again.
On its own, a Potato has the same amount of calories as an apple of the same size does. It's high in Vitamin C (Spanish explorers used them to fend off scurvy) , and has proteins, potassium and thiamin. It ain't an empty junk food.
However, just as rhubarb has a dangerous side, so does a Potato. When exposed to light, a Potato springs to life and starts growing, turning green and sprouting spouts, like nature intended it to. In the process, though, the Potato, hitherto the most benign, inoffensive thing on our plates, produces poisonous alkaloids that are not destroyed by cooking and that can make you very sick indeed.
Don't fool around with this. When peeling Potatoes, trim out and discard any sprouts and buds. You can cut out any very small green patches that might have formed, but if the Potato is a lot more green than that, discard it. If you are making a vegetable broth from peelings, don't use any Potato buds, sprouts or green peels in it. When a Potato has a greenish hue, it is called "light struck".
The berries produced by a potato plant betray the plant's membership in the nightshade family: the berries are toxic and must never be consumed by any human or animal.
Equivalents
1 medium Potato = 1/2 cup mashed = 1/3 cup instant Potato flakes = 1 cup peeled and sliced
2 - 3 medium Potatoes = 1 pound = 4 cups diced = 3 1/2 cups diced cooked = 1 3/4 cups mashed = 2 cups French fries
1 pound new Potatoes = 9 - 12 small new Potatoes
1 bushel potatoes = 60 pounds / 27.2 kg
2 pounds potatoes = 6 servings potato salad
Storage
Light and warmth encourage Potatoes to go green and to sprout. You need to store them in a dark, cool place.
This is a little trickier to do if you don't have a basement, and even for those who have basements, can be tricky to do if the basement is warm, as most are these days. Don't think, however, that you've had a flash of inspiration in keeping them in the fridge: others have tried that, and it doesn't work. Refrigeration causes the starch in Potatoes to turn into sugar, giving them a weird texture and even weirder taste. New Potatoes, however, because they are meant to be a bit sweeter, can be stored in the fridge.
I have heard that Potatoes stored in with onions causes the Potatoes to go bad more quickly, and that Potatoes stored in with an apple causes the Potatoes to last longer, but have not yet tried either.
Don't leave Potatoes in any plastic bag they might have come in; the plastic will trap moisture and cause the Potatoes to go mouldy. Some will say a brown paper bag is ideal for storing Potatoes, but where, I ask you, does one come across a brown paper bag anymore?
I keep mine in the basement in a dark corner, and hope for the best, as the basement is quite warm, and try to use them up within two weeks. Yes, I know that if I had a proper root cellar I could store them for several months, but I'm not about to convert my downstairs office into a dirt-floored dank room for the sake of a few spuds.
When freezing mashed Potatoes, allow about 1/2 inch (1 cm) of headspace in your container as they will expand when frozen.
History
White Potatoes are native to the Andes mountain range in Peru and Bolivia. The Incas grew them as long ago as 2000 BC, especially in mountainous areas where corn cannot grow. It was a staple food for them. They often preserved Potatoes by drying them. They would grind the dried Potatoes to make flour, or rehydrate them in soups.
Spanish explorers recorded mention of Potatoes in 1553 in Quito, and brought some back to Spain, where they were planted as curiosities. Sir Walter Raleigh acquired some, probably from a Spanish ship he'd plundered. He planted them on his lands in Ireland at Youghall, near Cork and in Virginia in the late 1500s. During the 1600s, many other settlers in America planted Potatoes, but interest in the crop didn't really take off until Irish Presbyterian immigrants planted Potatoes in Londonderry, New Hampshire in 1719. So even though it's a New World vegetable, Potatoes in North America came via Europe, not directly from South America.
Potatoes were introduced into Germany via Belgium in the 1620s. Frederick the Great ordered his people to grow and eat them -- but because people thought they were poison, he had to threaten to cut their noses and ears off if they refused. In France, there was similar resistance to the Potato. A man named Parmentier had worked out a strategy. He had Louis XVI serve Potatoes at court in 1780, and made sure word got around. Then, he had a light guard placed around a Potato patch, telling the guard to pretend not to see people stealing from the patch. People figured if the stuff growing there was good enough to guard, it was good enough to steal and eat, and they did. Parmentier also cooked them for Marie Antoinette and Benjamin Franklin.
But an additional reason for Potatoes' lack of earlier popularity was because there were no recipes for them. People had heard that Potatoes were a more reliable starch food than wheat -- and so tried to use them to make bread with Potato flour instead of wheat. Parmentier along with several Italians devised and popularized Potato recipes.
The first place in England where Potatoes were grown outside an experimental patch was in Lancashire, as a curious delicacy. They were introduced into Scotland in 1725.
The Irish Potato famine, 1846 - 1850 was so hard hitting because the Irish had become utterly dependent on the Potato. Potato crops didn't just fail in Ireland during those years -- they failed all throughout Europe. But no country had become as dependent upon the Potato as Ireland. Potatoes provided 80% of people's daily calories (the Irish peasants ate an average of 10 Potatoes a day each!), and provided all the food for their livestock. Three years in a row of heavy rains and Potato fungus destroyed the crop out from under them. They had nothing to feed their animals, and nothing to feed themselves. More than a million people died; nearly 2 million emigrated.
Literature & Lore
The name comes from a Caribbean name for sweet Potato, which could be pronounced either "batata" or "patata".
A popular urban food myth is that the colloquial name for Potato, "spud", comes from a group that called themselves Society for the Prevention of Unwholesome Diet (SPUD), who tried to warn people off eating Potatoes. Like all urban myths, very easy to swallow, but alas, too easy to be true: the word in the mid 1400s was used for a short knife, and then in the 1500s became used for various digging tools. By the mid 1800s, the word had transferred itself again, from the implement used to dig up Potatoes, to Potatoes themselves.
The French first applied the name "pomme de terre" to Jerusalem Artichokes, and then later transferred the name to Potatoes. Brillat-Savarin, the French food writer, didn't like Potatoes, whatever they were called. He saw them as only of interest to those who had nothing else to eat: "To my mind, the only value of potatoes is as a safeguard against starvation; apart from that, I know of nothing more insipid."
Acknowlegements
British Food Standards Agency. Survey To Investigate The Varietal Labelling of Potatoes – Part 2. December 2003. Retrieved April 2005 from http://www.food.gov.uk/multimedia/pdfs/fsis4503full.pdf.
Scottish Agricultural Science Agency. European Cultivated Potato Database. 2001. Accessed from 2005 onwards at http://www.europotato.org/menu.php
Also called: Solanum turberosum (Scientific Name) Pomme de terre (French) Kartoffel (German) Patate (Italian) Papas (Spanish)
See Also
Champ
Other entries for Potatoes
AC Glacier Chip Potatoes, Aida Potatoes, Alamo Potatoes, Alasclear Potatoes, Alaska Red-Eye Potatoes, Alaska Russet Potatoes, Alaska Sweetheart Potatoes, Albas Potatoes, All-Purpose Potatoes, Allegheny Mountain Potatoes, Allehanna Potatoes, Alta Russet Potatoes, Alturas Potatoes, Amorosa Potatoes, Amyla Potatoes, Anita Potatoes, Antigo Potatoes, Arenac Potatoes, Arran Banner Potatoes, Arran Comet Potatoes, Ashworth Potatoes, Assia Potatoes, Avon Potatoes, Beauty of Hebron Potatoes, Berita Potatoes, Black Potatoes, Bounty Potatoes, Bovee Potatoes, Burbank Potatoes, Calgold Potatoes, Calrose Potatoes, Canary Island Potatoes, Canus Potatoes, Cariboo Potatoes, Caruso Potatoes, Chenango Potatoes, Chinook Potatoes, Chisago Potatoes, Conchita Potatoes, Creamer Potatoes, Crushed Potatoes, Dazoc Potatoes, Delus Potatoes, DeSota Potatoes, Donna Potatoes, Earlaine Potatoes, Early Gem Potatoes, Early Rose Potatoes, Eide Russet Potatoes, Empire Potatoes, Erendira Potatoes, Erie Potatoes, Erli-Red Potatoes, Essex Potatoes, Fillmore Potatoes, Fingerling Potatoes, Floury Potatoes, Glenmeer Potatoes, Golf Potatoes, Grelot Potatoes, Industrial Potatoes, Instant Mashed Potato Flakes, Irish Peace Potatoes, Irish Queen Potatoes, Jersey Redskin Potatoes, K N I K Potatoes, Kasota Potatoes, Lake Potatoes, Langworthy Potatoes, Madison Potatoes, Manota Potatoes, Marygold Potatoes, Mason Potatoes, Maverick Potatoes, Mazama Potatoes, McCormick Potatoes, Menominee Potatoes, Merrimack Potatoes, Mesaba Potatoes, Michibonne Potatoes, Michigami Potatoes, Michigan Purple Potatoes, Michimac Potatoes, Miranda Potatoes, Mohawk Potatoes, Myatt's Ash-Leaf Kidney Potatoes, Oneida Potatoes, Ontario Potatoes, Osage Potatoes, Osseo Potatoes, Pele Potatoes, Pennigan Potatoes, Potato Chips, Pride Potatoes, Red Warba Potatoes, Redburt Potatoes, Redglo Potatoes, Redkote Potatoes, Reliance Potatoes, Sassy Potatoes, Satapa Potatoes, Seresta Potatoes, Shamrock Potatoes, Snowdrift Potatoes, St Louis Potatoes, Starch Potatoes, Sweet Potatoes, Sylvia Potatoes, Tawa Potatoes, Thome Black Potatoes, Ulster Tara Potatoes, Ute Russet Potatoes, Valisa Potatoes, Virgil Potatoes, Waimea Potatoes, Ware Potatoes, Waxy Potatoes, White Cloud Potatoes, White Gold Potatoes, Yankee Chipper Potatoes, York Potatoes, Yorkshire Hero Potatoes, Zahov Potatoes
Other entries for Root Vegetables
Añú, Beet, Carrots, Cassava, Celery Root, Crosne, Garlic, Herbed Vinegars, Horseradish, Jerusalem Artichokes, Jicama, Konjac Root, Malanga, Oca, Onions, Parsnips, Prairie Turnip, Radishes, Rutabaga, Salsify, Scorzonera, Sea Holly, Swede, Taro, Turnips, Water Chestnuts, Yacon, Yamagoboo, Yams
Other entries for Vegetables
Agave, Artichokes, Asparagus, Brassica Family, Canned Vegetables, Cardoons, Celery, Corn, Cucumbers, Eggplant, Frozen Vegetables, Gourds, Horseradish Tree, Hoshi Shiitake, Leafy Vegetables, Lotus, Mixed Vegetables, Mushrooms, Pak Wan, Peas, Peppers, Sago Palm, Seaweed, Spinach, Sprouts, Squash, Tomatoes, Viscous Vegetables
Related Recipes
Au Gratin Potatoes (1), Au Gratin Potatoes (2), Bacon and Potato Pie, Barley and Sweet Potato Risotto, Bean, Bacon and Potato Salad, Blue Cheese and Bacon Potato Patties, Boxty, Brie Potato Cakes, Brie & Artichoke Potatoes, Broccoli Soup, Bubble & Squeak, Champ, Charlotte Potato Salad with Single Cream, Lemon and Chives, Cheese, Potato and Onion Squares, Chilled Pea Soup, Colcannon, Coriander Soup, Corn Chowder, Corned Beef Hash, Creamed Horseradish Mash, Delmonico Potatoes (1), Delmonico Potatoes (2), Eggs and Hash, Fish and Shrimp Pie, Fried Eggs with Bean and Potato Pancakes, Green Bean & Pesto Linguine, Leek & Potato Mash, Leek & Potato Mash with Cabbage & Bacon, Leek & Potato Terrine, Lemon Chicken with Roast Potatoes, Make-Ahead Mashed Potatoes, Mashed Potato and Stilton Pie, Mashed Potato Cake, Mashed Potatoes with Cauliflower and Cheddar, Mashed Sweet Potato with Parmesan, Mustardy Roast Potatoes, Parsnip Cakes, Pâté Râpé, Pea and Potato Cakes, Pesto Potatoes, Potato and Artichoke Pie, Potato and Bean Fritters, Potato and Cauliflower Frittata, Potato and Celery Root Scallop, Potato and Pancetta Salad, Potato and Zucchini Frittata, Potato Bread (with Sour Cream & Chives), Potato Cake, Potato Collops, Potato Sausages, Potato Wedges, Potato & Meatloaf Hash, Potato, Bacon and Mushroom Frittata, Roasted Chips, Roasted New Potatoes, Roasted Root Vegetable Salad, Rosemary and Garlic Roast Potatoes, Salmon Patties, Sour Cream and Bacon Potato Salad, Stilton and Leek Soup, Stilton and Squash Casserole, Stuffed Potato Patties, Sweet Potatoes with Brie & Cranberry, Tomato & Cheddar Potato Bake, Tuna Cakes, Veggie Cornish Pasties, Winter Veg Soup
Top...

| 
|
| | | It's a myth that the word "spud" comes from a group that called themselves Society for the Prevention of Unwholesome Diet (SPUD). |
|