Showing posts with label Russet Potato. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Russet Potato. Show all posts

Thursday, October 6, 2011

Puttin on the Ritz - Crème Vichyssoise

Debate abounds as to the true origin of this exquisite soup.  Personally I believe Louis Diat (of the Ritz Carlton) when he stated that he modeled the soup after his mother's recipe, remembering how delicious it was when he and his brother poured cold milk into it.  Thus, he attempted to capture a childhood memory and serve it to his guests.

There are two other "origins" which may or may not be true to some extent.  French chef Jules Gouffé published a recipe that included potatoes, leeks, chicken stock, and cream in a cookbook entitled Royal Cookery (circa 1869), though Jules serves his hot.  There is another form of this recipe that appears even earlier under the name Potage Parmentier, named after Antoine Auguste Parmentier. The story is that Parmentier, on his return from a German prison camp, after the Seven Year War (1756-1763), noticed the sad plight of the French people.  In response, he set up several potato soup kitchens in the city of Paris to feed the poor.

In the grand scheme of things, I suppose it matters not whether this delicious soup is of French, American origin or even "War with Germany" inspired.  Either way, it was a Frenchman who invented the dish...  All I personally care about is how delectable it is.  Though traditionally served chilled, I like it hot as well.  Especially on a cold wet day like today.  Yep, piping hot and velvety; potato and leek soup just hits the spot.

There are a couple ways to go about preparing this soup.  The whole point is to "mill" the soup to obtain a creamy consistency... So, Blender, Food Processor, Stick Blender or a Food Mill; the choice is entirely up to you.  My personal preference, though it takes a little more time and a little more elbow grease, is the food mill.  I feel it gives a more consistent "grain" to the soup than a food processor of stick blender.  But that is just me, and I am infamous for doing things the hard way.  (see my pesto recipe)

Once you have chosen your method of "creaming" the only other decision is whether to Glacée or Not Glacée (meaning chilled or not chilled)   Like I said, I like it hot too.  And since it is only about 44 degrees outside and the rain is making everything damp... Tonight, my vote is for hot.

Crème Vichyssoise

2 TB Unsalted Butter
2 cups (7.5 oz) (215 g) Leek, sliced
1/3 cup (1.5 oz) (45 g) White Onion, Chopped
1/4 cup (2 oz) (60 ml) Cold Water
1/4 cup (2 oz) (60 ml) White Wine
2 1/4 cup (12.5 oz) (355 g) Russet Potato, diced
2 cups (16 oz) (470 ml) Chicken Stock
1 cup (8 oz) (265 ml) Whole Milk
3/4 cup (6 oz) (175 ml) Half and Half
Kosher Salt
White Pepper
3/4 cup (6 oz) (175 ml) Heavy Cream

For Serving:
Chives or Green Onion
Crème Fraîche
optional - Caviar

Melt the butter in a medium pot over medium-low heat.

Add the leek and onion to the pot, sweating until soft.

Meanwhile, in a medium bowl, combine Water and White Wine so that as you peel and cube the potatoes, you can add them to the bowl and toss to coat. (the acid in the wine will prevent browning)

Now that the potatoes are well coated with acid, add the chicken stock to the potatoes as well.

When the Leek and Onion are nice and tender, add the potatoes along with all the liquid in the bowl.

Cover and bring to a simmer, then allow it to continue simmering for 30-40 minutes, or until the potatoes are tender.

Add the Milk, Half and Half and perform an initial seasoning check and adjust with a little Kosher Salt. (remember, less is more because you are going to season it again at the end)

Bring the soup just to a boil (to scald the milk) then remove from the flame.

Now, either beat it into submission with a stick blender, pour it into your food processor and blitz it (in batches), use a conventional blender to puree it (also in batches, Or.....

Like I prefer to do, use a food mill and a little elbow grease.

Pour the soup back into the pot and return to low flame, then add the Heavy Cream.

Adjust seasoning again with White Pepper (cause black flakes would look weird) and more Kosher salt (if neceassary).

Now...  I like it hot, so I serve immediately with a dollop of Creme Fraiche and a spoon of Caviar, topped of with a sprinkle of chives or thinly sliced green onion for punch.

OR... You can move the soup to a storage container and chill until ready to serve.

This recipe makes enough to serve 4-6 people... or in my case... 1 person... Cause I am a pig.  LOL

Mangia!!
~~

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

A Passion For Potato Pancakes - Kartoffel Pfannkuchen

Even though I tend towards all things Italian, especially pasta dishes, every once in awhile my German roots begin to show. At these moments I find myself craving Sauerbraten, Spaetzle, Würstchen im Schlafrock, Hassenpfeffer and Black Forest Cake. But above all the aforementioned German delights, I crave Kartoffel Pfannkuchen.

There is just something about potato and onion all fried up nice and flat to really make your taste buds go into overdrive. It is quite a difficult thing to be the one who is frying them up and not start snitching bits of the edges while they are draining; in essence, burning your fingers, but hey, sometimes you gotta be bold and "Carpe Kartoffel". Cause in this family, if you aren't quick, you won't get one. Mom use to have to hide a few in the back of the refrigerator on the top shelf, so dad could have a couple for breakfast the next morning. LOL

What is are Kartoffel Pfannkuchen exactly? It is a shredded potato pancake, technically a Latke... except for the condition of the potatoes. At least for me. I tend to think of Latkes as being made with mashed potatoes, where as Kartoffel Pfannkuchen are always shredded fine, with onion. I know this is wrong, for Latkes are shredded as well as mashed, but it's how I keep the two straight in my head.

No matter WHAT you actually call them, they are absolutely delicious, even if a little bad for you due to the pan frying. But this is another one of my guilty pleasures, especially since I don't eat then that often. I suggest Peanut oil for frying, as you will be frying at about 380-400 degrees. Canola can't cut it and Soybean oil isn't much better. You might be able to get away with Corn oil, but I always have peanut on hand for deep frying.

This is a conversion from the original family recipe, which was kind of vague. 6 medium potatoes and a small onion. I hate measurements like that in recipes. I mean, I know what it means cause I grew up on these, but there is no way that what *I* think is a medium Potato is necessarily what *you* think is a medium potato. And while this works best with Russet Potatoes, if you choose to use Red potatoes, well, a "medium" Russet is bigger than a "medium" Red Potato, so I decided to convert it into weights both "Standard" and Metric. Thus all the chicken scratch from weighing and re-weighing to find an average... LOL

Kartoffel Pfannkuchen

45 oz (1.25 kg) Russet or Red Potatoes, shredded
3/4 cup (3.6 oz) (105 g) AP Flour
3 large Eggs
1 tsp Kosher Salt
5.6 oz (160 g) White Onion, shredded
Peanut Oil for Frying

First you must peel the potatoes. (for while potato skins are tasty, they will burn really easy)

Then prepare a bowl of cold water.

Shred the potatoes into the cold water. (this will remove a small amount of potato starch, since you will be adding flour AND it will prevent the potatoes from browning)

In a separate bowl, whisk the Flour, Eggs and Salt together to fo0rm a "batter".

Stir in grated Onion.

Drain and squeeze most of the moisture from the shredded potatoes and place in a large bowl.

Pour the Flour/Egg/Onion mixture over and toss everything to coat.

Cover with plastic wrap on the surface and let sit for 20 minutes.

Heat 1/4 cup oil in a 12 inch skillet set over medium-high flame. Once it's hot, scoop about 2 TB worth of the "batter" and drop into the skillet.

Working as quickly as possible, use the back of the spoon to spread the "batter" so that it is lacy.

Fry until the edges become medium brown before flipping them over and frying the other side. (about 2 minutes per side)

Drain on paper towels before sprinkling with a little salt and pepper.

And serve with a little dollop of sour cream if desired. (Though I more often just eat them plain)

Mangia!!
~~

Friday, August 27, 2010

Put the Potato in the Coconut and Eat It All Up - Coconut Mash

Now that I have that "tequila drinking" song from Practical Magic running around in my head, let me explain. I am actually putting the Coconut in the Potato.

I have been toying with several ideas for Vegan food preparations over the last few months. True, most of them have never actually manifested themselves as edible dishes; for they are still merely thoughts bouncing around inside my skull - A lot of bouncing. There is a lot of room in there ya know. Yeah.

Under occupied head space aside. One of these dishes was vegan mash potatoes. I love mashed potatoes with the skins, I love light and fluffy whipped potatoes, I love their denser cousin - riced potatoes. I just love potatoes. However, creating a Vegan smashed tater dish is not without it's challenges. I have tried with Almond Milk, I have tried with Hazelnut milk, I tried with Hemp milk; I don't touch that soy stuff (ick! I do not intend on including phyto-estrogen in my diet any time soon) They turned out soggy and disgusting every time. These products are just too watery to produce anything but goo when added to the mix.

The one thing I had yet to try was Coconut milk.

Ding Ding Ding!!! We have a winner folks!

They were unbelievably awesome. If I had not made them myself, I probably would have been fooled into thinking they were just plain old mashed potatoes. Though I have to admit, when I had my second helping, I did throw on a little pat of butter and it made them even more awesome (cause I am obsessed with dairy) I know, I know - They weren't vegan anymore at that point, but hey; I am not actually a vegan anyway. They were still delicious and I will be making them again very soon.

Coconut Mash

2 1/2 lbs Red or Russet potatoes (I will use Russet next time)
1 cup Coconut Milk (it should NOT contain any sugar or weird ingredients)
1/2 tsp Red Curry Paste (yeah, I am in a curry mood lately)
3 TB Extra Virgin Olive oil (or Coconut Oil)
Kosher Salt

Simply steam your potatoes until tender (I was making Mash, so I left the skins on; I remove them when I whip or rice them)

Mix the curry paste into the coconut milk.

Then stir in the Olive oil as well.

You can either mash them with a "potato masher" or throw them in the bowl of your mixer with a paddle attachment.

Smash them until almost smooth or as smooth as you can get with the skins. (I actually prefer a few lumps in my mash - It proves that they are not reconstituted potato flakes) LOL

With the mixer still running on low speed, begin pouring in Coconut Milk/Oil/Curry mixture.

Once incorporated, add a pinch of salt, then crank up the mixer to medium high and beat until a little on the fluffy side.

Serve immediately. (with butter, if your not Vegan) ;)

Mangia!!
~~