Home fries?

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OK, so when I was a kid, my mother would make what she called "home fries", but what she made doesn't match up with anything I see when I search "home fries"

She would slice the potatoes like potato chips, except thicker. She made them in her big, copper-bottomed frying pan, but I don't remember if she immersed them in oil and fried them like fried chicken, as they were soft, not crispy. If she did, it would have been in Wesson Oil, or Crisco.

There were onions, and bits of bacon in there, too.

Does that ring a bell with anyone?

Thanks
 
Some parts of the country call them Cottage Fries.

You can make them using raw potatoes or boiled potatoes. You can also make them on a baking sheet in the oven.

I used to make them in a cast iron frying pan with canola oil. I used enough oil to come about halfway up the sides of the potato slices when I cooked raw potatoes and just enough oil to coat the bottom of the pan when I used cooked potatoes. The trick, for me, is to get the oil hot, add the potatoes and leave them alone to cook for several minutes before flipping them. Most people are in a hurry and want to keep moving them around the pan. It takes me a good half hour to get them brown and crispy on both sides. If you pay attention the sound of the oil and the bubbles will change as the potatoes release moisture and begin to get crispy. Like anything else it takes some practice.

I never added peppers or onions to them. The other vegetables tend to burn before the potatoes are cooked to suit me. I have cooked them with bacon fat and oil, not bacon bits though. To get some onion flavor I shake onion salt or onion powder on them when they are finished along with salt and pepper. I never put anything in the pot other than the oil and potatoes.
 
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Typically, home fries are made with cubes/chunks of potato slowly fried in a little fat (not like fried chicken) with onions. You can also add mushrooms, bacon, etc. If you use raw potatoes, you have to cook them more slowly. The object is to get a dark crust on the potatoes.

I often cube potatoes and toss them with a little oil then nuke them for a few minutes to speed up the cooking process.
 
I use a mandolin to slice raw potato. If I add onions or mushrooms, peppers I dice and saute them before hand till just soft. MIx into potatoes, a little bit of salt. Oil to cover the bottom of the pan, preheat and then add potato. Cover and cook at medium until potato is soft then open and let it get nice golden brown crust, You can turn the heat up a bit, but do not burn the potato. When the first side is fried, cover the pan with a nice fitting lid, flip the pan over, put it back on fire and slide the potato back into the pan. Add some more oil around the pan. let the second side fry till golden brown. Do not stir, do not bother the potato. Just wait. When ready slide on the plate. Add salt or other seasoning if it needs it.
 
Aunt Bea is absolutely right.
I remember my mom used to fry sliced potatoes with onion on a cast iron. She would use maybe an 1/8 cup of oil, fry sliced onions until golden brown (about 5 minutes) on medium heat. While the onion is cooking, she would cut potatoes, soak them in a pot with cold water to prevent potatoes from browning. Then dry the potatoes and toss them in the pan with onion.
Everytime mom makes this dish.... the whole house smells like cooking heaven!
 
Or use the safety guard.

When I think of fried potatoes, I think of home fries (or country fries) which are cubed, cottage fries (sliced), or hash browns (shredded). I love them all - never met a potato or way of making it that I didn't like. :LOL::yum:
 
I was thinking of one of those Veg-O-Matic things, but I don't know if they work. Half the reviews say they're junk, half say they're great.

I got one of those Vidalia chopper things a few years back, and it is AWESOME. The only problem is it chops too small for the taters. Works great on peppers, onions, and celery, etc.
 
What they are called depends on what part of country you are in. They ARE called home fries in the south, not cottage fries. We've had this discussion previously about where they supposedly originated, the names, and the various shapes. Just depends on where you are located what they are called and/or shaped.

I learned to cook them from my mom, grandmom. They used a little more than enough oil to cover bottom of pan, but certainly not halfway up, as you don't want a lot of oil left in pan but you don't want to end up dry frying them either as they will stick then. I also use a mandolin now to cut the potatoes. You get even slices and it's also a lot faster than cutting them by hand but work with what you have. I start out with the stove on about medium high to heat the oil and right when potatoes first go in with S and P, then lower to about half way between medium and medium-high to cook. I usually cover for the first 10 minutes or so to get the potatoes soft, turning once after 5 minutes or so. Then I take the top off and add the onions, sliced or chopped, your choice, and cook 10-15 minutes more, turning occasionally until the potatoes are golden brown and crispy and the onions are cooked.

If they are made with breakfast, my family always cooked the bacon first and then used the bacon grease plus oil to fry the potatoes. Your mom may have done that and then broke up some bacon to put in the potatoes.
 
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I start out with the stove on about medium high to heat the oil and right when potatoes first go in with S and P, then lower to about half way between medium and medium-high to cook. I usually cover for the first 10 minutes or so to get the potatoes soft, turning once after 5 minutes or so. Then I take the top off and add the onions, sliced or chopped, your choice, and cook 10-15 minutes more, turning occasionally until the potatoes are golden brown and crispy and the onions are cooked.

If they are made with breakfast, my family always cooked the bacon first and then used the bacon grease plus oil to fry the potatoes. Your mom may have done that and then broke up some bacon to put in the potatoes.

Exactly how I do my home fries.
 
I am scared to death of those things. I'm a poker dealer, and a good cut or slice on either hand leaves me unable to work.

Most, if not all, full-size mandolins come with a hand guard. Using it leaves you with some wastage but if it's a necessity then oh well. The key to using a mandolin though without the hand guard is PAYING ATTENTION to what you are doing. I've only cut myself once when using the big one (stainless steel, that we purchased probably close to 20 years ago, was made in France) and that's because I got distracted and wasn't paying full attention to what I was doing.

The other person in the household pretty much isn't allowed to use the metal mandolin anymore because he is too easily distracted, especially if there's a football game going on. :rolleyes:

We also have a little handheld Kyocera ceramic blade mandolin. It's nice for quick uses like slicing cucumbers or red onions for salads, even has stood in for a truffle shaver on occasion as it has 4 settings from paper thin to 3 mm.

Using the mandolin is so much easier and faster when you have a lot to slice. I'd hate to have to go back to slicing potatoes by hand for home fries.
 
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Most, if not all, full-size mandolins come with a hand guard. Using it leaves you with some wastage but if it's a necessity then oh well. The key to using a mandolin though without the hand guard is PAYING ATTENTION to what you are doing. I've only cut myself once when using the big one (stainless steel, that we purchased probably close to 20 years ago, was made in France) and that's because I got distracted and wasn't paying full attention to what I was doing.

The other person in the household pretty much isn't allowed to use the metal mandolin anymore because he is too easily distracted, especially if there's a football game going on. :rolleyes:

We also have a little handheld Kyocera ceramic blade mandolin. It's nice for quick uses like slicing cucumbers or red onions for salads, even has stood in for a truffle shaver on occasion as it has 4 settings from paper thin to 3 mm.

Using the mandolin is so much easier and faster when you have a lot to slice. I'd hate to have to go back to slicing potatoes by hand for home fries.

Thanks for the information. I searched the Kyocera mandoline, and found this from Cook's Illustrated: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I15-htHJF_I

The Kyocera did well, but the Swissmar Borner was the top choice, and it just looks more substantial and safer to me.

Amazon.com: Swissmar Borner V-1001 V-Slicer Plus Mandoline: Kitchen & Dining

Thanks for your help!
 
I've had the Swissmar for years. Honestly, I bought it based on price, not ATK rating.

For a tool that doesn't get used a lot, it's great and inexpensive.
 
What they are called depends on what part of country you are in. They ARE called home fries in the south, not cottage fries. We've had this discussion previously about where they supposedly originated, the names, and the various shapes. Just depends on where you are located what they are called and/or shaped.

I learned to cook them from my mom, grandmom. They used a little more than enough oil to cover bottom of pan, but certainly not halfway up, as you don't want a lot of oil left in pan but you don't want to end up dry frying them either as they will stick then. I also use a mandolin now to cut the potatoes. You get even slices and it's also a lot faster than cutting them by hand but work with what you have. I start out with the stove on about medium high to heat the oil and right when potatoes first go in with S and P, then lower to about half way between medium and medium-high to cook. I usually cover for the first 10 minutes or so to get the potatoes soft, turning once after 5 minutes or so. Then I take the top off and add the onions, sliced or chopped, your choice, and cook 10-15 minutes more, turning occasionally until the potatoes are golden brown and crispy and the onions are cooked.

If they are made with breakfast, my family always cooked the bacon first and then used the bacon grease plus oil to fry the potatoes. Your mom may have done that and then broke up some bacon to put in the potatoes.

OK, so I made some last night, using this recipe. I cooked the potatoes by their recipe, then threw the peppers and onions in the leftover oil to saute'. It was very good, but the recipe calls for a cup plus a teaspoon of canola oil, and I'm not crazy about using so much oil.

I'm going to take another swing at it today, using your recipe, but I have a few questions.

First, since you're not cooking on high heat, is it OK to use a non-stick pan?

Second, also since you're not cooking on high heat, is it OK to use Extra Virgin Olive Oil, instead of canola oil?

Thanks
 
First, since you're not cooking on high heat, is it OK to use a non-stick pan?

Second, also since you're not cooking on high heat, is it OK to use Extra Virgin Olive Oil, instead of canola oil?

If you use a non-stick pan, it will be more difficult to get the crispy crust you want. In a stainless-steel pan, food will initially stick and then release when it's time to turn it.

You can use evoo but any heat changes the flavor so I wouldn't use an expensive one where you want the flavor of the oil to be apparent. Bacon fat would be delicious, though :)
 
G-mom used a cast iron. Mom used nonstick. I used to use nonstick but have begun to gravitate more and more toward SS pans as you get better crusts on things like GG notes. Things do stick until they are ready to be turned. It's just a matter of patience and practice learning to use the SS pans, but worth it IMO. Same with the cast iron. My DH likes to cook with cast iron. I do too for the most part, it's just the weight that's the issue for me.

I personally wouldn't use EVOO or any olive oil for pan fried potatoes, just my quirk and I like them how they were done from my childhood. Mom and G-mom used bacon fat, lard, Crisco or vege oil, or any combination thereof. I do, however, use olive oil for my oven roasted potatoes, which are large chunks, partially cooked via steaming, dumped out on p.towels to dry a bit, S and P and lots of oil, then roasted on a foiled sheet pan at 375 until nice and browned and crispy on the outside and soft and fluffy on the inside, turning occasionally, usually about 30-45 minutes depending on size of chunks.
 
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