An Old-School Potato Recipe: Two Ingredients and A Little Bit of Chemistry (2024)

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An Old-School Potato Recipe: Two Ingredients and A Little Bit of Chemistry (1)

The first time I saw salt potatoes prepared, at a backyard barbecue in upstate New York, I was unimpressed, despite the feverish excitement of the gathered locals. My host had purchased a bag of Hinerwadel’s Salt Potatoes at Wegman’s, a local grocery chain, and as far as I could tell, it was just a five-pound bag of thin-skinned new potatoes with a 12-ounce sack of salt along for the ride. After pouring all of the salt (over 2 cups) into a pot with the potatoes and enough water to cover, it was set on the stove to boil. As the potatoes cooked, vigorously simmering for 20 minutes, droplets of the thick brine bubbled from the pot and salt crystalized on the handles of the pot and surrounding burners. The already muggy kitchen becameuncomfortably steamy. I love potatoes more than the next person, but salt potatoes seemed like a mess—and the unusual, albeit simple, cooking method seemed like we would be left with unpalatably salty potatoes.

Oncetender, the potatoes were unceremoniously drained in a colander. Steam rose, and after a few minutes, as their skins dried, the magic of cooking in brine was revealed: a thin layer of crystalized salt created a sparkly dust on the tan potato skins. The potatoes were dumped back into the salt-crusted pot and set on the table with melted sweet cream butter.

Individually dunked in butter and eaten as a finger food, the simple genius of salt potatoes became apparent. The brine boils at a higher temperature than water, so the potato flesh steams inside the skin, which acts as a barrier to the salty brine. The steamed flesh is at once fluffy and creamy, and the dried salt on the skin seasons each bite perfectly.

An Old-School Potato Recipe: Two Ingredients and A Little Bit of Chemistry (2)

Salt potatoes gained popularity in the mid-1800s, when Syracuse was a hub of salt production for the United States. Saline wells and water from Onondaga Lake, which was full of salt deposits from an ancient inland sea, bred a thriving salt industry, with a workforce made up of European immigrants. Long days and nights spent working in the “boiling blocks”—the warehouses equipped with furnaces and iron cauldrons for reducing brine to powdered salt—meant lunch was sacks of potatoes cooked in the vats of boiling brine. Necessity is the mother of invention, but did these salt workers actually invent the method of cooking potatoes in brine?

A few months ago, I was paging through chef Katie Button’s cookbook,Cúrate.I came across a recipe for salt potatoes, orpapas arrugadas—literally “wrinkly potatoes,” a descriptive name nodding toward the salt-sealed skin that wrinkles as it dries. The photo looked like an extra salty version of Syracuse salt potatoes, served with a chimichurri-esque mojo verde. Instead of cooking in terrestrial brine, these potatoes (which cameout of the Canary Islands sometime in the early 17th century) were originally cooked in sea water, which is less salty than Syracuse-style brine. So instead of draining the potatoes, some of the cooking water is poured off once the potatoes are tender. The pot returns to high heat until the remaining water evaporates, leaving a fine salt powder on the potatoes’ skins and the bottom of the pan.

An Old-School Potato Recipe: Two Ingredients and A Little Bit of Chemistry (3)

A little more research guided me to Colombian papa salada, which falls somewhere between the Syracusian and Canarian versions. From the salt mining town of Zipaquira, about 25 miles north of Bogotá, papa salada are cooked with the edible rock salt produced by the halite mines. According to food stylist Mariana Velasquez, who grew up in Bogotá, this unremarkable salt is dissolved in a clay or aluminum pot set over a wood-fired stove. The key to the dish is using a specific, waxy variety of freshly dug potato and about one ounce of salt per pound of potatoes. Their waxiness helps maintain the potatoes’ structure as they undergo a long boil. The potatoes are boiled until the brine has completely evaporated, and the cooked flesh is denser than that of a Syracuse salt potato. The salt scorches on the bottom of the pan and mingles with the wood fire to add a layer of smoky flavor to the papa salada. Served at weekend luncheon barbecues, they are accompanied by grilled meat, a simple guacamole of mashed avocado seasoned with lemon juice, cilantro, and salt, and aji, a spicy green sauce of cilantro, scallions, green chiles, garlic, and vinegar.

Each of these salt-potato birthplaceshas developed recipes that bring out the best in their regional ingredients, but my favorite resultcomes from marrying these styles and improvising based on the ingredients I have (as neither an island dweller nor a miner). Since salt is the star of this dish, you will taste all of its mineral flavors, so choose a delicious one, like sel gris or Maldon. As for the potatoes, choose freshly dug creamers or fingerlings, and serve them with an herby green sauce or melted butter.

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Mary-Frances Heck

Mary-Frances Heck is a food writer and chef. She is the former head recipe developer for Lucky Peach and test kitchen director of Bon Appétit. Her first cookbook, Sweet Potatoes: Roasted, Loaded, Fried, and Made Into Pie, will be published in the fall of 2017.

An Old-School Potato Recipe: Two Ingredients and A Little Bit of Chemistry (2024)

FAQs

What kind of potatoes are creamy? ›

Waxy potatoes have less starch than Starchy potatoes and contain more moisture and sugar. They are often smaller with a waxy outer skin and a creamy, firm and moist flesh.

When selecting potatoes What should you look for? ›

Select the Best Potatoes: Look for clean, smooth, firm-textured potatoes with no cuts, bruises or discoloration.

Which variety of potato is best for sautéing? ›

Waxy potatoes (like these delicious fingerlings) are an excellent choice for roasting, sautéing and boiling. Their low starch content helps them maintain their shape after they're cooked. They're not good candidates for frying because their high moisture content makes them limp and soggy.

What is the most flavorful potato? ›

Potato 'Arran Pilot' - First Early

This traditional, first early variety produces white tubers with firm, waxy flesh. Renowned for its deliciously earthy flavour, Potato 'Arran Pilot' should be cooked straight from the ground to be enjoyed at its best. Eat hot or cold as a new potato or as a fabulous salad variety.

What is the fluffiest potato? ›

For the fluffiest and lightest mashed potatoes, use Russets and rinse off excess potato starch before and after cooking.

What is the rarest type of potato? ›

La Bonnotte – the world's most expensive potato

It's only grown on a tiny plot of land and just a few tons are produced each year, which is one of the reasons it is so pricey. The soils of Noirmoutier are sandy and not easy to cultivate and La Bonnotte is so delicate that it must be harvested by hand.

What is the sweetest potato? ›

The most versatile and sweetest variation of sweet potatoes is the Beauregard. Throughout the United States, you will see this species stacked high in the grocery stores during the holiday season. Beauregard's have a bit of a stringy texture, but they stay soft: this is what makes them so popular.

What potatoes have no starch? ›

Low-Starch: Sometimes called waxy potatoes, common low-starch varieties include fingerling (like French or Kipfler), red-skinned varieties (like Red Bliss and Pontiac), Jersey Royals, Dutch Cream, and new potatoes.

What potato has the lowest starch? ›

Waxy Potatoes

These include small and large red-skinned potatoes, blue, purple and fingerling potatoes. They are low in starch and high in moisture and sugar. These potatoes are usually small and round in shape, although some varieties can be bigger.

Which Colour potato is best? ›

The Healthiest Potato is the Red Potato

After taking into account the mineral density, the vitamin density, the macronutrient balance, the sugar-to-fiber ratio, the sodium-to-potassium ratio, and the phytochemical profile, red potatoes are the healthiest potato with data from the USDA Food Database.

Which potatoes don't fall apart? ›

Because waxy potatoes are relatively low in starch and high in moisture, their cells stay intact when they're cooked, meaning that slices or cubes hold up when boiled or baked. Waxy potatoes will hold their shape when boiled—and dressed with a ton of cheese and pepper.

Which is better for mashed potatoes, russet or Yukon gold? ›

Yukon Gold potatoes are a favorite for mashing not only because they have a high starch content (hooray!), but also because of their naturally buttery flavor. They also don't absorb as much water as russet potatoes (aka Idaho potatoes), which can get a little mushy if overcooked or not properly drained.

What potatoes do chefs use? ›

Round White AKA Chef Potatoes

B is the most common in foodservice.

When should you not use russet potatoes? ›

Russet potatoes are called starchy because they contain more of a certain kind of starch that makes them cook up drier and fluffier. That's why they're ideal for soaking up butter and gravy when they're baked or mashed. But that same fluffy texture makes them fall apart in stews.

Does it matter what kind of potatoes you use for potato salad? ›

To keep your salad from falling apart into mush, it's important to use the best potatoes for potato salad. Skip the russet potatoes and use a waxy variety instead, like Yukon gold, red potatoes or fingerlings. Learn more about which types of potatoes you should use for different recipes.

What are all rounder potatoes good for? ›

They're famous as the original all rounder potato as their texture lends itself to a range of cooking methods. From frying to boiling and roasting – they're great for chips, wedges, mash and roast potatoes.

How many different uses are there for a potato? ›

Fresh potatoes are baked, boiled, or fried and used in a staggering range of recipes: mashed potatoes, potato pancakes, potato dumplings, twice-baked potatoes, potato soup, potato salad and potatoes au gratin, to name a few.

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