FOOD

Recipe For Hasselback Potatoes

  

Hasselback potatoes are a variation on roasted potatoes. The potatoes have a crispy outer skin with a delicious, soft inside. The cooking technique isn’t different from common baked potatoes, with the exception of being thinly sliced into an accordion shape.

A blend of butter and garlic creates a crunchy outer crust that is perfectly seasoned. To guarantee that the potatoes are cooked through, I parboiled them for a few minutes, cut them into a fan shape, dried them in the oven, then smeared them with a generous amount of garlic-flavored butter.

The accordion potatoes have a fancy presentation, but really, the dish isn’t complicated at all. I’m thinking of serving hasselback potatoes for Thanksgiving this year instead of the roasted potatoes I typically make. As an added bonus, they go great with meat or poultry, making them perfect for turkey day.

 

1. Info for Hasselback Potatoes

  • Cook Time: unavailable
  • Total Time: unavailable
  • Servings: 6
  • Calories: unavailable

2. Ingredients for Hasselback Potatoes

  • 12 Yukon Gold potatoes
  • 6 tablespoons unsalted butter, softened to room temperature
  • 3 tablespoons olive oil
  • 2 teaspoons table salt
  • 1 teaspoon no-salt seasoning (blend of 21 spices and herbs)
  • 3 cloves garlic
  • ½ teaspoon white pepper, freshly ground
  • ½ teaspoon coarse sea salt

3. Directions:

  1. Brush a baking pan with olive oil and rub with garlic. Set aside.
  2. For the garlic-flavored butter: Finely mince the garlic. Place the garlic, the no-salt seasoning (see tips), 1 teaspoon of table salt and white pepper in a mortar and pestle. Blend the garlic into a thick paste and mix with the creamy, softened butter.
  3. Par-boiling the potatoes (see tips): Wash the potatoes (no need to peel). Place them in a large pot. Fill it with cold water until the potatoes are barely covered. It’s important to start with cold water so the potatoes cook evenly. Bring to a boil, add 1 teaspoon of salt and reduce the heat to medium-high (if you cook the potatoes at a roaring boil, they might fall apart). Cook for about 5-6 minutes. The potatoes should still  be firm. Drain the potatoes thoroughly and let them cool a little. Cut the potatoes in half if some are bigger than the others. Once the potatoes are cool enough to handle, cut a thin slice on one side to create a base, so the potatoes remain stable while roasting in the oven.
  4. Preheat oven to 425°F.
  5. Prepping the potatoes: Let the potato stand on its base and cut it into about 1/8-inch thick slices, making sure you don’t cut all the way through the base so all the thin slices remain attached. Create the thin packed layer of potatoes, opening them like a fan.
  6. Roasting the potatoes: Place the potatoes to the greased baking pan (for easy clean-up you could line it with oiled heavy-duty aluminum foil). Bake for about 2 minutes and once the potatoes have completely dried, remove the pan from the oven. Using a butter knife, spread a thin layer of the garlic butter between each slice.
  7. Transfer back into the hot oven and roast for about 50 minutes at 425°F. Sprinkle with coarse sea salt. When there’s a nice brown crust, your potatoes are ready!
  8. Serve warm with a steak or a roasted chicken.
  9. Bon appétit!

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