Your favorite potato

Could be a regional thing, too. The potato pancakes I’m familiar with are made with a runny batter made from grated potato, flour, eggs, and I don’t know what else, shallow fried in oil. They’re a mainstay at church bazaars, farmers’ markets and whatnot around here (eastern PA, heavy on the Polish/Russian/Slovak ancestry).

The leftover mashed potatoes version we always just called “mashed potato cakes.” My mother would dip them in egg and then breadcrumbs, just for maximum starch overload. :cool:

And don’t forget bacon!
I too cannot narrow this down. Sentimental favorites from childhood are Scalloped (I have the oval metal pan my mom always used for them :slight_smile: ) and potato filling, which we had at Christmas and Easter. It was mashed potatoes but then she added onion and celery and baked it in a casserole. I have to assume it was Pennsylvania German, but the ones I am finding on-line add bread cubes in addition to the veggies. If they were there, I didn’t notice!

I think it’s 400 degrees. The time is 40-60 minutes, depending on the potatoes. Just until they can be pierced easily with a fork.

I tried looking the recipe online and am seeing some different temps. Also, some people put Parmesan cheese down on the butter. That’s probably excellent.

I might have to make some potatoes.

Would have to be a hell of a girl to
A. Still be wearing a girdle these days, and
B. Make me swing that way, as I am a happily “opposite-married” woman. :wink:

oh. my. god. Screw the diet, making these tomorrow.

even better. Making these the next day and maybe every day forever.

Yes, the name would indicate it originated in Finland. My Googling indicated it’s traditionally Swedish, so there must indeed have been some overlap.

Finland was at one time under the Swedish crown, so the Finns have something of an ambiguous attitude toward their western neighbors. The ones I’ve known have always had a wide variety of ethnic jokes to tell about them.

These sound like latkes to me. My dad (first-generation Austro-Hungarian American) always made potato pancakes with batter.

Anyone here fancy potato kugel? :dubious:

I tell you what I don’t care for much: The thick-cut chips in fish and chips, what are called “steak fries” in the U.S. I like my fries crisp, but those are often limp and greasy and don’t go down well.

I prefer my fries crinkle cut. And dipped in mayo.

I’m glad the boards are back. The world needs to know my fries preferences.

I prefer the couch potato.

GlaDOS, or as she’s better known in her tuber form, PotatOS

ETA: Wrong topic.