How do you brown potatoes?

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nhoj

Assistant Cook
Joined
Oct 22, 2011
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26
I have tried to brown Potatoes without luck.
I have boiled them and tried brown them in butter, but they fall apart while browning them.

What am I doing wrong?
 
Are you talking about roasting potatoes or cut up potatoes for home fries etc.?

I think your potatoes broke apart because you cooked them first.
 
I'd skip the boiling part. It's adding too much liquid in them for them to brown properly.

Try slicing them in 1/4" or so slices and while you are slicing them, heat up your frying pan and add equal amounts of butter and cooking oil. Not very much. Fry them until they brown on one side, flip them, and turn the heat down, cover, and cook on low until tender.
 
I do the same as Cheryl, except I dice them into about 1/2" pieces and toss in a little chopped onion. Depend on how you like them.

We also like home fries. Leftover baked potatoes, frying pan is heated, then add butter. Plop the potatoes into the pan and break them up with a spatula, then fry until they're browned. They don't get as crispy, but awfully good with chicken fried steak and cream gravy. And easy.
 
How do you brown Potatoes

No boiling. Make sure your potatoes are really dry, pat with paper towels. Good suggestions from the previous posts.

If you have a waffle iron, I've seen some wonderful crusty hash browns made in them. Haven't tried it, but they look really good. You can also do hash browns in a skillet or on a griddle. Again, I would make sure there's no moisture.
 
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If you wait to try to turn them in a stainless steel pan, they will brown and release beautifully. If they stick, they're not ready to turn.
 
Another thought would be to bake Tater Tots. They're pretty fool-proof, and tasty to boot! (We have a few Tots fans here on DC...)
 
Saw this on the aisle. A small $2.49 milk carton container of hash browns, serves 6. All you add is water and pan fry I suppose.
 
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Whenever I do potatoes that are chunked or cubed, I always precook by steaming them, whether on the stove or the microwave, to where they are just barely beginning to soften on the outside. Then I dump them on paper towels to blot off excess moisture, then continue cooking from there. They always come out nicely browned/crispy/crunchy on the outside and soft and fluffy on the inside.

If I cook sliced potatoes, I start them out covered, then uncover for last 10-15 minutes so they'll crisp up nicely.
 
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If you want to par-boil them, that's fine. Don't over cook them though. Then put the taters on a pan & place in your oven at 300 degrees until they stop steaming. Fry them in butter or you can add some oil in with the butter. For home fries it's best to use day old baked potato's which you don't have to re-cook.
 
When browning potatoes, patience is a virtue. Definitely pat them dry, generous amount of bacon fat or oil, nice and hot. Dump the potatoes in and, as Alton Brown says, walk away. Give them time to get nice and crispy before you stir them.
 
depends on what the OP really wanted to do. But you can brown boiled potato too. Simply leave them alone in the frying pan until they are browned, Do not stir them, don to bother them. Just like you would with frozen Hash Browns. Wait till they are browned on one side then carefully flip them over.
 
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