Post #306,867
4/6/09 3:25:40 PM
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This week, a little bit on potatoes.
http://www.clovegard...ed/ns_potato.html
Need to do some updating on Tomatoes next.
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Post #306,883
4/6/09 7:14:29 PM
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Interesting article, as always.
"Peru and Chili". You've got peppers too much on your mind. :-)
Cheers,
Scott.
(Who realizes that Andrew may have put that in there on porpoise.)
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Post #306,890
4/6/09 9:12:30 PM
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Got it - thanks . . .
. . and no, I wouldn't do it on purpose - at least not when CRC isn't hanging around.
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Post #333,204
9/27/10 9:19:54 AM
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You can't ever trust me to be inactive --
-- because when I'm active I can also go retroactive.
--
Christian R. Conrad
Same old username (as above), same old GMail.
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Post #306,886
4/6/09 7:54:21 PM
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so which ones are best for fries and hash browns?
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Post #306,889
4/6/09 9:07:14 PM
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Now that is a very good question . . .
. . and very hard to answer - which is why I haven't answered it yet.
What it boils down to is individual cultivars of each general category - and good luck telling which cultivar is in the bin at your market, without 30 years experience in potato research.
Some russets, for example, are designed for French fries while others are listed as "good for fresh market, not for processing (including fries)" and they all look pretty much the same. "Fresh market" is the kind you're likely to find in your local grocery.
For frying, you want varieties with a high specific gravity. Does that help?
The most varieties (and most common varieties) listed as "good for chipping and French fries" seem to be round red and round white boiling potatoes. Probably good for hash browns too.
Of course the question is far more critical for processors and fast food chains than for home cooks who can eyeball what's going on and compensate. In any case, I'd stay away from the general purpose potatoes for frying and chipping, though Yukon Gold is listed as pretty good for French Fries.
Baking is a lot easier - russets, most kinds. For boiling, round boilers - unless the potato is supposed to thicken the soup or stew a bit, then White Rose - but not Yukon.
Anyway, I'm still researching this.
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Post #306,898
4/6/09 10:17:53 PM
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maybe I can help :-)
yukons and russets are the best for french fries as the water content isnt quite as high as the boilers,
for hash browns reds can do if cubed, not if shredded unless placed on a thin layer and frozen first (I think the freezing may dry the potatoes a tad maybe thats why it works) yukons are good but new is great!
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Post #307,506
4/19/09 12:02:05 PM
4/19/09 12:20:49 PM
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Gonna have to face it I'm addicted to spuds
The other day I'm driving with one of my kids and the Weird Al song comes up on the CD player. A lyric:
You planned a trip to Idaho
Just to watch potatoes grow
we looked at each other, I'm not sure which of us said "hey, that sounds like fun, lets see what we can figure out" but the other agreed way too fast.
Yeah, the spud is a popular menu item around here, in many, many forms.
Actually, I'd rather go to Peru...
Edited by mhuber
April 19, 2009, 12:20:49 PM EDT
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Post #307,509
4/19/09 12:13:04 PM
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rare around here except for fries
rice at least 28 days a month.
thax,
bill
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Post #307,525
4/19/09 8:46:02 PM
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Isn't that a bit like going to Wisconsin...
... to watch cows turn grass into milk? :-)
Though at least the cows do move around a bit.
Wade.
"Ah -- I take it the doorbell doesn't work?"
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