Showing posts with label potato recipes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label potato recipes. Show all posts

Sunday, August 8, 2021

Spicy Beer Shrimp Potatoes

Spicy Beer Shrimp Potatoes are flavorful main course, made with golden baby potatoes, garlic, tomatoes, Old Bay Seasoning and, of course, shrimp and beer!

Food Lust People Love: Spicy Beer Shrimp Potatoes are flavorful main course, made with golden baby potatoes, garlic, tomatoes, Old Bay Seasoning and, of course, shrimp and beer!

Today, August 8th, is International Beer Day so I’m celebrating along with my Sunday FunDay friends. Our host, Rebekah encouraged us thusly: "Share your favorite recipes cooking or baking with beer - or if you don't like beer, cook or bake with your preferred alcohol!" I love the flexibility!

I have made MANY sweet and savory recipes using beer, like my Beer Cheddar Fondue, Spicy Cashew and Feta Beer Muffins, London Porter Cake, Oatmeal Stout Loaf and Beef and Guinness Pie, to name just a few. In short, we are fans of beer for both recipes and drinking.

One day I'll tell you about our youthful excursions down the Guadalupe River on innertubes when the rallying cry over the rapids was "At all costs, save the beer!" It was not uncommon to see a person completely underwater with a single arm visible, beer can held aloft. And we all survived. 

I’d already taken some shrimp out of the freezer to thaw for dinner so that was my jumping off point. Searching both "beer" and "shrimp" I found a ton of recipes online for beer shrimp, typically an appetizer, and thought, I can work with that! 

Spicy Beer Shrimp Potatoes

The addition of potatoes, parboiled then pan-fried till golden, turns what might have been an appetizer into a main course. My recipe is adapted from one on Rasa Malaysia. I served this with a tossed green salad and I recommend you do the same. Extra points if you also make my passion fruit vinaigrette or Amy's beer vinaigrette in the link list below to dress it with.

Ingredients
1 lb or 450g baby new potatoes
1 lb or 450g peeled and deveined shrimp
2 teaspoons Old Bay Seasoning
2 tablespoons olive oil
3 cloves garlic, minced
2 Roma tomatoes
1 cup or 240ml beer of your choice. I used Corona. (Because: International Beer Day!)

Optional for garnish:
Chopped green onions (or sub parsley - I just like the flavor the green onions add)
another light sprinkle of Old Bay Seasoning

Method
Parboil the potatoes in salted water until a pointy knife can poke into them easily but they still have a hard center, about five minutes from when they come to a boil. 

Rinse the shrimp with cold running water. Pat dry with paper towels and season with Old Bay. Set aside.


While the potatoes parboil, use a sharp knife to score the tops of your tomatoes in a cross. Put them in a heatproof bowl. 


Drain the hot potato water into the tomato bowl and set aside for a few minutes.  Tip the water out and slip the peel off of the tomatoes. Cut the tomatoes in half and remove the cores and seeds. Dice the tomatoes. 


On a cutting board, use a wide knife or your flat palm to mash the potatoes down, one at a time. My photo is of the knife, which I did use for the first ones seen here, but I actually had more success just using my hand. 


Heat up a non-stick pan on high heat and add the olive oil. Add the potatoes a few at time and cook till golden on both sides. Turn them carefully so they don't break apart but if a piece gets loose, no worries. 


Remove them from the pan and set aside until all the potatoes are browned on both sides and on a plate.


Add a drizzle more olive oil, if needed, and sauté the garlic in the pan until aromatic but not browned then add in the chopped tomatoes. 


Cook for a few minutes until the diced tomatoes start to slump. 

Add the seasoned shrimp. 


Stir to combine well. As soon as the shrimp turn a bit pink, add the beer.

Bring the beer to a quick boil.


When the shrimp are cooked through, add the browned potatoes back in. Tuck them amongst the shrimp. 

Tilt the pan slightly and spoon the shrimp and sauce over them. 

Food Lust People Love: Spicy Beer Shrimp Potatoes are flavorful main course, made with golden baby potatoes, garlic, tomatoes, Old Bay Seasoning and, of course, shrimp and beer!

Cook a little longer to rewarm the potatoes. When the potatoes are warmed through, turn off the heat and add the chopped green onions and a sprinkle on a little more of Old Bay Seasoning. (Don't overdo the Old Bay. It's super salty.)

Food Lust People Love: Spicy Beer Shrimp Potatoes are flavorful main course, made with golden baby potatoes, garlic, tomatoes, Old Bay Seasoning and, of course, shrimp and beer!

Enjoy!

As I mentioned, it’s Sunday FunDay AND International Beer Day. What a time to be alive! Check out the delicious recipes made with beer below. Many thanks to our host, Rebekah of Making Miracles. Pop open a cold one and join us!

We are a group of food bloggers who believe that Sunday should be a family fun day, so every Sunday we share recipes that will help you to enjoy your day. If you're a blogger interested in joining us, just visit our Facebook group and request to join.


Pin these Spicy Beer Shrimp Potatoes!

Food Lust People Love: Spicy Beer Shrimp Potatoes are flavorful main course, made with golden baby potatoes, garlic, tomatoes, Old Bay Seasoning and, of course, shrimp and beer!

 .

Wednesday, August 4, 2021

Parmesan Bacon Potato Squares

Parmesan Bacon Potato Squares are a tasty appetizer (or side dish) of thinly sliced potatoes layered with bacon, cream and cheese that turn crispy and more-ish when they are baked, cooled then cut into squares and roasted in the oven. 

Food Lust People Love:Parmesan Bacon Potato Squares are a tasty appetizer (or side dish) of thinly sliced potatoes layered with bacon, cream and cheese that turn crispy and more-ish when they are baked, cooled then cut into squares and roasted in the oven.

Fair warning: this dish needs to be started at least one day before you plan to serve it but in a way, that’s the best part because it can be mostly made, if necessary, several days ahead and chilled. Leave the final roasting till just before you are ready to serve. 

Potatoes are sliced thinly and layered with cheese and cooked bacon then pressed and chilled so they can be cut into handy squares. Make sure you don’t skip the step where you secure the squares with toothpicks or you will mightily regret it. 

The original recipe on Taste.com.au skips this step and my first batch out of the oven was a complete disaster. The potatoes were delicious for sure, but they weren’t anything like squares anymore. See the evidence below. Don't let this happen to you. 


This recipe makes enough for an enormous crowd. It’s easily halved but, should you have any leftovers, they are spectacular with scrambled eggs, added to an omelet or reheated and eaten as a side dish. (That is what I did with my disastrous ones.) 
 

Parmesan Bacon Potato Squares

As mentioned, this recipe is adapted from one on Taste.com.au, one of my favorite sites for recipe inspiration. You will need two casserole dishes, one larger for the actual potato dish and one you can fit inside it to compact the potatoes while they are chilling. 

Ingredients
6 lbs or 2.72 kg russet potatoes, peeled and sliced thinly with a mandoline
6 fresh thyme sprigs, leaves picked, plus extra for garnish
5 1/3 oz or 150g Parmesan cheese, grated
1 1/2 cups or 355ml heavy cream
3 lbs or 1.36kg thin-sliced smoked bacon, fried (not too crispy) and drained 
1/2 cup or 113g butter, melted and cooled
Optional: Sriracha sauce for drizzling on to serve

Method
If you don’t have a mandolin with which to cut the potatoes, by all means, use a sharp knife but do cut the slices as thinly as possible. 

Use baking parchment to line the base and up the sides of a 9 x 14 in or 23x35mm pan, allowing the sides to overhang somewhat. Put two layers of your thinly sliced potatoes in evenly in the bottom of the lined pan. Top with a little of the cream and thyme leaves. 


Cover those with a layer of Parmesan and cooked bacon. 


Add another double layer of sliced potatoes. Continue building your casserole until you’ve used all of your potatoes and bacon and thyme, making sure you finish with a couple of layers of potatoes on top, along with the last of the Parmesan and cream. 

Finally, pour the melted butter over the top. Fold the baking parchment in and cover the top with some cling film. 

Place a smaller casserole dish on top of the dish and fill with something heavy. I used eight cans of various vegetables. Leave to rest for about 20 minutes. 


Meanwhile preheat your oven to 350°F or 180°C.

Remove the weights and cling film. Cover the large casserole top in foil and bake for about 1 hour or until the potatoes are tender. Remove the foil (save for later) and bake for another 20 minutes to brown the top. 


Put the foil back on the dish and put the smaller casserole dish back on top. Leave to cool until it can be put in the refrigerator. When cool, put it (casserole dish still on top) in the refrigerator to chill overnight. 

When you are ready to make the squares, start your oven preheating to 400°F or 200°C.

Loosen the sides of the potatoes from the pan and turn the whole rectangle out onto a cutting board so your top is now your bottom. Remove the parchment paper and discard. 

Trim the edges with a sharp knife so you have straight sides. (These scraps are great reheated in a non-stick skillet. Add some eggs for a delicious weekend breakfast.) 

Cut the chilled potato into squares.


 Skewer each one with a toothpick, top to bottom. Put them on their sides on two or three large baking pans (with sides) and roast 10 minutes in your hot oven or until lightly golden. 

Food Lust People Love:Parmesan Bacon Potato Squares are a tasty appetizer (or side dish) of thinly sliced potatoes layered with bacon, cream and cheese that turn crispy and more-ish when they are baked, cooled then cut into squares and roasted in the oven.

Turn the squares over and roast until they are crispy and deep golden, about 10-15 more minutes.

Food Lust People Love:Parmesan Bacon Potato Squares are a tasty appetizer (or side dish) of thinly sliced potatoes layered with bacon, cream and cheese that turn crispy and more-ish when they are baked, cooled then cut into squares and roasted in the oven.

Drain on paper towels. 

Serve warm with sriracha sauce to drizzle, if desired, and some sprigs of thyme for garnish. 

Food Lust People Love:Parmesan Bacon Potato Squares are a tasty appetizer (or side dish) of thinly sliced potatoes layered with bacon, cream and cheese that turn crispy and more-ish when they are baked, cooled then cut into squares and roasted in the oven.

Enjoy! 

It's the first Wednesday of the month so that means it's time for our Foodie Extravaganza celebration of National Potatoes Day which is August 19th this year! Many thanks to our host, Karen of Karen's Kitchen Stories


Foodie Extravaganza is where we celebrate obscure food holidays by cooking and baking together with the same ingredient or theme each month. Posting day is always the first Wednesday of each month. If you are a blogger and would like to join our group and blog along with us, come join our Facebook page Foodie Extravaganza. We would love to have you! If you're a spectator looking for delicious tid-bits check out our Foodie Extravaganza Pinterest Board.


Pin these Parmesan Bacon Potato Squares!

Food Lust People Love:Parmesan Bacon Potato Squares are a tasty appetizer (or side dish) of thinly sliced potatoes layered with bacon, cream and cheese that turn crispy and more-ish when they are baked, cooled then cut into squares and roasted in the oven.
 .



Wednesday, June 2, 2021

Jersey Royal Potato Salad

This Jersey Royal Potato Salad is a family favorite, made with those special new potatoes only grown on Jersey in the Channel Islands. Sub your favorite new potato if you can't get them! 

Food Lust People Love: This Jersey Royal Potato Salad is a family favorite, made with those special new potatoes only grown on Jersey in the Channel Islands. Sub your favorite new potato! If you don’t have access to Jersey Royals, another new potato can be substituted. I’ve also made this quite successfully with the little thin-skinned red ones we can get here in States.

The Jersey Royal story begins in 1880 when a farmer named Hugh de la Haye planted a 15 sprouted pieces of a seed potato and one grew into a plant with papery skins. The slanted hillsides get lots of sunshine and the vraic – a seaweed used for fertilizer on the island – gives the Jersey Royal its unique taste. 

Sadly, we haven’t been able to fly back to Jersey because of the pandemic but I found this recipe with photos in files and decided to share for National Egg Day, if only to remind myself that someday things will be better COVID-wise and we will be able to travel again. 

Jersey Royal Potato Salad

This recipe makes enough for two servings with a little left over. It is easily doubled, trebled or even quadrupled, if you are serving a crowd. If you don’t have access to Jersey Royals, another new potato can be substituted. I’ve also made this quite successfully with the little thin-skinned red ones we can get here in States.

Ingredients
8 1/2 oz or 240g Jersey Royals, boiled till just cooked through
2 eggs, hardboiled
1 teaspoon grated onion, plus any onion juice
2-3 tablespoons mayonnaise
2 teaspoons yellow mustard
fine sea salt
freshly ground black pepper
Cayenne, optional

Green onions to garnish

Method
Mash the egg yolks with a fork and mix in with the grated onion, mustard and two tablespoons of mayonnaise.


Chop the egg whites into the bowl. Follow those with the Jersey Royals, also roughly cut into halves or thirds, depending on the size of your Royals.


Mix everything together and season to taste with fine sea salt, freshly ground black pepper and cayenne, if desired. 

Food Lust People Love: This Jersey Royal Potato Salad is a family favorite, made with those special new potatoes only grown on Jersey in the Channel Islands. Sub your favorite new potato! If you don’t have access to Jersey Royals, another new potato can be substituted. I’ve also made this quite successfully with the little thin-skinned red ones we can get here in States.

If the mixture seems too dry, add the extra tablespoon of mayonnaise. Garnish with some chopped green onion. 

Enjoy! 

Food Lust People Love: This Jersey Royal Potato Salad is a family favorite, made with those special new potatoes only grown on Jersey in the Channel Islands. Sub your favorite new potato! If you don’t have access to Jersey Royals, another new potato can be substituted. I’ve also made this quite successfully with the little thin-skinned red ones we can get here in States.

It’s National Egg Day tomorrow so my Foodie Extravaganza friends are sharing recipes you can use for your own celebration! Many thanks to our host, Camilla from Culinary Adventures with Camilla.



Foodie Extravaganza is where we celebrate obscure food holidays by cooking and baking together with the same ingredient or theme each month. Posting day is always the first Wednesday of each month. If you are a blogger and would like to join our group and blog along with us, come join our Facebook page Foodie Extravaganza. We would love to have you! If you're a spectator looking for delicious tid-bits check out our Foodie Extravaganza Pinterest Board.

Pin this Jersey Royal Potato Salad!

Food Lust People Love: This Jersey Royal Potato Salad is a family favorite, made with those special new potatoes only grown on Jersey in the Channel Islands. Sub your favorite new potato! If you don’t have access to Jersey Royals, another new potato can be substituted. I’ve also made this quite successfully with the little thin-skinned red ones we can get here in States.

.

Monday, February 8, 2021

Potato Salad Bites

These Potato Salad Bites combine my favorite baked potato skins with my beloved potato salad recipe. They are perfect for your picnics or parties. 

Food Lust People Love: These Potato Salad Bites combine my favorite baked potato skins with my beloved potato salad recipe. They are perfect for your picnics or parties.

Potato salad is one of my favorite things to make for a picnic because it goes so great with fried chicken and/or sandwiches but then you need utensils and plates or bowls to serve it which unnecessarily complicates a simple picnic. 

When the leader of our Baking Blogger group announced the theme of this month’s challenge, bite-size baking, I put my thinking cap on to solve that problem. Not that we've been enjoying many picnics since it's still pretty chilly but I do like to plan ahead. 

So here you go, finally, potato salad that’s finger food! I hope you enjoy them as much as we did. I put some in a single layer in a plastic container to bring them to my Mom and I hope you'll be as pleased as I was to know that they arrived in perfect form. 

Potato Salad Bites

I used baby red potatoes but you can use whichever small potatoes are available to you. As you can see, mine fit in my deviled egg plate so that gives you an idea of their size. 

Ingredients
For the potato salad:
1 lb 7 oz or 652g small red potatoes (about 10-11)
1 tablespoon olive oil
Fine sea salt
Freshly ground black pepper
2 eggs, hardboiled
1/4 small Spanish onion 
1/4 cup or 60ml mayonnaise
1/4 cup or 60ml sour cream
2 teaspoons whole grain mustard

For garnish: 
green onion tops
sprinkle of paprika or cayenne

Method
Preheat your oven to 375°F or 190°C. Place the potatoes in a small baking pan and drizzle them with olive oil. Shake them around to coat them with the oil. 


Bake for about 30 minutes or until they are cooked through. I stabbed mine with a pointy knife all the way to the middle to check.

Remove the potatoes from oven, and cool 15 minutes on a wire rack. Don’t turn the oven off but do lower the temperature to 350°F or 180°C.

Meanwhile, finely grate the onion into a mixing bowl. I used a microplane so the onion is super fine. If you don't mind little onion bits in your salad, feel free to use a grater with larger holes. Cut the two hard-boiled eggs into slices into the bowl.


Use the tines of a dinner fork to mash them into smaller bits.


Add in the mayonnaise, sour cream and mustard, as well as a couple of generous grinds of black pepper. Mix well. Set aside.


As soon as the potatoes are cool enough to handle (Despite photos to the contrary, I held mine in a clean towel.) cut each potato in half crosswise. Carefully scoop out the insides of the potatoes, leaving a skin shell about 1/4 in or 1/2 cm thick. Try to keep the scooped potato pieces as large as possible so they don’t turn into mashed potato when we make the potato salad with them. 


Place the shells, cut side up, on a baking sheet.  Sprinkle them with salt and freshly ground black pepper.   


Bake in your still hot oven until dry, about 10 more minutes. Cool completely, about 30 minutes.

When the potato innards are cool, add them to your mixing bowl and fold to combine. Again, trying not to mash the potato pieces completely but you can break up any really large pieces. Taste for salt and add more if needed, plus a couple of generous grinds of black pepper.  Depending on the saltiness of your mayo and whole grain mustard, you might not need much, if any, salt. 


Spoon or scoop the mixture generously into each potato shell. 


Top with some chopped green onion and a sprinkle of cayenne or paprika for color. I use cayenne because we like spicy but my mom and grandmothers always sprinkled a little paprika on a bowl of potato salad so either is good. Chill the potato salad bites until you are ready to serve them.  

Food Lust People Love: These Potato Salad Bites combine my favorite baked potato skins with my beloved potato salad recipe. They are perfect for your picnics or parties.

Enjoy! 

Food Lust People Love: These Potato Salad Bites combine my favorite baked potato skins with my beloved potato salad recipe. They are perfect for your picnics or parties.

It's Baking Blogger Monday and we are sharing bite-sized food, which is super fun! Many thanks to our organizer and host, Sue of Palatable Pastime. Check out the link list below. 


Baking Bloggers is a friendly group of food bloggers who vote on a shared theme and then post recipes to fit that theme one the second Monday of each month. If you are a food blogger interested in joining in, inquire at our Baking Bloggers Facebook group. We'd be honored if you would join us in our baking adventures.

Pin these Potato Salad Bites! 

Food Lust People Love: These Potato Salad Bites combine my favorite baked potato skins with my beloved potato salad recipe. They are perfect for your picnics or parties.

 .

Sunday, January 24, 2021

Indian-spiced Pork Chop Potato Skillet

In this Indian-Spiced Pork Chop Potato Skillet you cook the chops till tender in a spicy tomato-onion sauce. Add potatoes and you have a full meal in one pan.

Food Lust People Lust: In this Indian-Spiced Pork Chop Potato Skillet you cook the chops till tender in a spicy tomato-onion sauce. Add potatoes and you have a full meal in one pan.

I’ve written before about what an adventurous eater my mom is. Such a role model! She can’t pass a road stand or food stall without trying whatever they are serving up. Of course, being from southern Louisiana, eating spicy is in our blood, but when we moved to Trinidad, the flavors and spices we were introduced to, and she began to use in her cooking, increased exponentially. 

At the ripe old age of five, I was already a curry addict. After three years we moved on to the next country but Mom kept making curry. It was a true family favorite. The meat might vary - beef or chicken or pork -but there had to be potatoes and, since that was the tradition, she served it over white rice. 

Indian-spiced Pork Chop Potato Skillet

This recipe isn’t strictly a curry but it certainly has many of the same flavors. I adapted it from a pressure cooker recipe on Magpie’s Recipes to go with the Keralan appam I made for a Bread Bakers event, so I skipped the rice. Appam looks like a lacy crepe and it’s made with a fermented rice batter, so I figured I did have rice, just in another form. You can serve it with rice, if you want to, but it’s a great one-pan skillet meal even without it, thanks to the potatoes!

Ingredients
4 thick pork chops – about 225g or 1/2 lb each 
3 tablespoons vinegar  
1 teaspoon sugar 
1 teaspoon salt, plus extra to taste 
1/2 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
2 tablespoons olive oil
3 medium onions, sliced thin  (about 3/4 lb or 350g before peeling)
2 ripe beef steak or equivalent other tomatoes, cored and chopped (about 1 1/4 lbs or 600g whole) 
5 medium potatoes, peeled and cubed (about 1 3/4 lbs or 790g whole)
1 stick cinnamon
3 cloves
3 green cardamom pods
1 teaspoon ground cayenne 
1 teaspoon ground coriander
1/4 teaspoon turmeric
Chopped green onions to garnish, if desired. 

Method
Use a mallet to pound the meat part of the pork chops flat. Sprinkle them with the vinegar and season with the salt, sugar and pepper.  


Cover them with cling film and leave to marinate in the refrigerator for several hours, or even overnight. 

Heat one tablespoon of oil in your skillet and fry the chops two at a time over a high heat until browned on both sides. This should just take 3-4 minutes a side. Apologies for the lack of photos of this step. The chops kept spitting at the camera lens as they fried. Remove the chops to a clean plate. 

Drizzle in the second tablespoon of olive oil and add in the onions. Turn the fire down to medium and cook the onions for 5-6 minutes or until softened, breaking apart the slices with your stirring spoon. 


Add tomatoes and spices and stir. 


Return the chops to the pan and cover with a lid. Simmer for 30 minutes, checking occasionally and adding more water as needed so it doesn’t go dry. 


Add in the cubed potatoes and cook covered for another 15 minutes or so, until the potatoes are tender, adding a little more salt, if necessary.


Remove the pork chops and stir the potatoes into the sauce to serve. Garnish with some green onions, if desired.

Food Lust People Lust: In this Indian-Spiced Pork Chop Potato Skillet you cook the chops till tender in a spicy tomato-onion sauce. Add potatoes and you have a full meal in one pan.

Enjoy! 

This week's Sunday FunDay theme is One Pot Wonders, delicious family meals with easy clean up to boot! Check out all the great recipes.  
We are a group of food bloggers who believe that Sunday should be a family fun day, so every Sunday we share recipes that will help you to enjoy your day. If you're a blogger interested in joining us, just visit our Facebook group and request to join.

Pin these Indian-spiced Pork Chop Potato Skillet!

Food Lust People Lust: In this Indian-Spiced Pork Chop Potato Skillet you cook the chops till tender in a spicy tomato-onion sauce. Add potatoes and you have a full meal in one pan.
.

Sunday, December 13, 2020

Golden Marquis Potatoes

Golden Marquis Potatoes are food fit for royalty. Butter, cream and several rich egg yolks are added to tender mashed potatoes and piped into hollow rosettes, which are then baked till golden. These are the fanciest potatoes that are easy to make.

Food Lust People Love: Golden Marquis Potatoes are food fit for royalty. Butter, cream and several rich egg yolks are added to tender mashed potatoes and piped into hollow rosettes, which are then baked till golden. These are the fanciest potatoes that are easy to make.

If you’ve heard of duchess potatoes, same thing, except marquis potatoes are piped with a well in the middle. These are special potatoes for a special occasion! Traditionally, these would be filled with crushed tomatoes but we think potatoes need gravy instead. 

They look fancy, but they are surprisingly easy to make. Just stir egg yolks, butter, cream, plenty of salt and pepper, and a dash of nutmeg into mashed potatoes, then pile the mixture into a pastry bag and pipe it onto a baking sheet in any shape you like. Sprinkle with a little shredded cheese, if desired, bake, and you’ll have an elegant potato side dish for your Thanksgiving meal, Christmas table, or even a weeknight dinner party.

Golden Marquis Potatoes

This recipe is adapted from the fabulous Julia Child’s book, The Way to Cook. You will need a large piping bag and a 1/2-inch star piping tip for this recipe. For the Salisbury steak with mushroom gravy recipe, check out this link

Ingredients
1 1/2 lbs or 675g Russet potatoes
4 large egg yolks, at room temperature
4 tablespoons unsalted butter at room temperature
1/4 cup or 60ml heavy cream, at room temperature
3/4 teaspoon kosher salt, plus more as needed
1/4 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
1/8 teaspoon freshly grated nutmeg

Method
Line a large baking sheet (or two) with parchment paper or a silicone liner and set aside. This recipe makes about 18-20 marquis potatoes, depending on how big you pipe them.

Peel and wash the potatoes, cut them into 1/2-inch or 1 cm chunks. Steam until tender, about 15 minutes. 

Remove the potato chunks from the heat and use a potato ricer or masher to completely mash the potatoes until they are lump free. A potato ricer is best for this job but if you are diligent about getting all the lumps out, a masher works as well.

 Preheat the oven to 400°F or 200°C.  

While the potatoes are still warm, but not hot, add the yolks in one at a time, mixing well with each addition until the yolk is completely incorporated. Repeat until all the yolks are in. The photo below was yolk number three. 


Add the softened butter, cream, 3/4 teaspoon salt, black pepper and nutmeg. Stir until the butter has melted and the mixture is homogeneous.


Transfer to a large piping bag fitted with a 1/2-inch star piping tip and pipe round mounds (2 1/2 inches wide by 2 inches tall) onto the prepared baking sheets, spacing them about 2 inches apart. My second pan only had eight. 


Place both sheets in the oven and bake for 15 minutes. Rotate the pans top to bottom and front to back and continue baking until the tops of the potatoes are light golden brown, about 10 minutes more.

When the marquis potatoes are golden, remove them from the oven and use a flat spatula to transfer them to a serving plate or directly to dinner plates. Fill with your favorite gravy.

Food Lust People Love: Golden Marquis Potatoes are food fit for royalty. Butter, cream and several rich egg yolks are added to tender mashed potatoes and piped into hollow rosettes, which are then baked till golden. These are the fanciest potatoes that are easy to make.

As you can see from the photos, I love to serve these with Salisbury steak with mushroom gravy but since Christmas is coming, turkey gravy would go nicely as well. 

Food Lust People Love: Golden Marquis Potatoes are food fit for royalty. Butter, cream and several rich egg yolks are added to tender mashed potatoes and piped into hollow rosettes, which are then baked till golden. These are the fanciest potatoes that are easy to make.

Enjoy!

This week our Sunday FunDay bloggers are sharing holiday side dishes your family will love! Many thanks to our host Rebekah of Making Miracles. Check out all of the links below.



We are a group of food bloggers who believe that Sunday should be a family fun day, so every Sunday we share recipes that will help you to enjoy your day. If you're a blogger interested in joining us, just visit our Facebook group and request to join.

Pin these Golden Marquis Potatoes!

Food Lust People Love: Golden Marquis Potatoes are food fit for royalty. Butter, cream and several rich egg yolks are added to tender mashed potatoes and piped into hollow rosettes, which are then baked till golden. These are the fanciest potatoes that are easy to make.

 .

Monday, November 2, 2020

Brussels Sprouts and Potatoes with Sausage Crumbles

If you are looking for a wonderful, flavorful side dish for the holidays, try my Brussels sprouts and potatoes with sausage crumbles, that is, a lovely mix of aromatics fried with sausage until crispy and golden.

Food Lust People Love: If you are looking for a wonderful, flavorful side dish for the holidays, try my Brussels sprouts and potatoes with sausage crumbles, that is, a lovely mix of aromatics fried with sausage until crispy and golden.

Welcome to Holiday Side Week, brainchild of Heather from Hezzi-D's Books and Cooks, where side dishes are the star of your celebration table! Make sure you scroll down past my recipe to check out all the other wonderful side dishes we are sharing. I’ve always thought that side dishes don’t get enough credit so I am delighted to join the group this year. 

This side dish is one I’ve adapted from a Jamie Oliver recipe. I’ve loved him since 2002 and he’s still one of my favorite chefs. Jamie’s done a couple of new series just for the pandemic that haven’t made it across the pond yet so I watch them online and it’s such a joy to see his smiling, encouraging face and easy manner in the kitchen. 

Jamie’s at home, just like the rest of us, cooking for family and making wild substitutions, just like the rest of us when we can’t find our normal ingredients in stock. 

About the humble sprout, he says they tend to work best when totally over-cooked or only just cooked and this recipe gives you the best of both with half of the sprouts cooked till golden and almost crispy and the other half lightly steamed and bright green. 

Brussels Sprouts and Potatoes with Sausage Crumbles

Jamie uses a typical British sausage called Cumberland in his dish so I chose a fresh pork sausage in natural casing that has a very similar flavor profile. Use whatever fresh tasty sausage you have available or you can even substitute bacon in a pinch. 

Ingredients
Olive oil
1 medium onion
1-2 rosemary sprigs
1 large clove garlic
1 lb or 450g Brussels sprouts
2 large Russet potatoes (approx. weight 1 lb 10 oz or 750g)
1/2 teaspoon whole fennel seeds
2 quality fresh sausages
1 tablespoon white balsamic vinegar

Optional: chopped red chili pepper for heat and garnish

Method
Peel and chop the onion finely. Peel and sliver the garlic. Pull the leaves off of the rosemary sprigs and chop them finely.


Peel the potatoes and cut them into cubes. In a bowl, cover the potatoes with cool water so they don’t turn brown. Set the bowl aside. 


Cut and discard the hard stem ends off of your Brussels sprouts. Finely slice half of the sprouts and cut the other half in halves.  


Heat a drizzle of olive oil in a large lidded pan, then add the onion, fennel seeds and rosemary and cook over a medium heat for 3-4 minutes, until the onion is soft.


Squeeze the sausage meat out of the casing and add it to the onion pan. Break it up with a wooden spoon as it cooks, until it is just small bits. 


 Keep frying until the sausage is golden and starting to get crisp. Add in the garlic and fry for just a few minutes more until everything is a luscious crunchy brown. The lighting on my stove is terrible. Apologies. 


Remove the  sausage and seasonings from the pan and set aside. 


Drizzle a little more olive oil into the pan. Drain the cubed potatoes and dry them on a clean kitchen towel. We want them to brown and wet taters will just steam. 

Put the potatoes single file in the pan over a medium high heat and don’t stir until they are golden on the bottom. You can give the pan a shake occasionally. Toss the potatoes and leave them to brown on a second side, turning them with tongs, if need be.


Keep tossing and turning until the potato cubes are golden on all sides. 

Scoot the potatoes to the sides and add the sliced sprouts to the middle with another drizzle of olive oil. 


Put the lid on and cook for about 5 minutes, without stirring. 

Remove the lid and cook for a further 5 minutes, raising the heat a little. You want the sprouts to toast and brown. You can stir them into the potatoes at this point. 


Add a splash of the white balsamic vinegar, and season with salt and freshly ground black pepper. 

Now add in the halved Brussels sprouts with a small splash of water. 


Pop the lid on and cook for about 5-8 minutes, stirring occasionally, until the halved sprouts are just tender. 

Add the sausage crumbles back in.


 Add a final drizzle of white balsamic. Taste for salt and pepper, adding more if necessary. 

Food Lust People Love: If you are looking for a wonderful, flavorful side dish for the holidays, try my Brussels sprouts and potatoes with sausage crumbles, that is, a lovely mix of aromatics fried with sausage until crispy and golden.

Sprinkle with some chopped red chili pepper and serve. 

Food Lust People Love: If you are looking for a wonderful, flavorful side dish for the holidays, try my Brussels sprouts and potatoes with sausage crumbles, that is, a lovely mix of aromatics fried with sausage until crispy and golden.

Enjoy!

Check out all the great holiday side dishes my friends are sharing! There is no excuse this holiday season for boring sides. 


Pin these Brussels Sprouts and Potatoes with Sausage Crumbles!

Food Lust People Love: If you are looking for a wonderful, flavorful side dish for the holidays, try my Brussels sprouts and potatoes with sausage crumbles, that is, a lovely mix of aromatics fried with sausage until crispy and golden.

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