For some reason, Mr P. always takes on the role of cooking rice and pasta dishes in our household. It is also his (self-appointed) job to deal with any sort of frying. Now that I think about it, he has made us latkes, Polish placki, chips, wedges, mashed potato... and on it goes. So yes, all forms of potato are his forté. You guessed it! He did the frying up for these delicious rösti too.
ingredients:
1.5 kg potatoes
2 medium onions
3 cloves of garlic, finely chopped
2-3 small red chillies, finely chopped
herbs of your choice - I used 1 tbs dried oregano and 2 tbs lightly dried parsley (or use fresh)
lots of pepper and at least 2 tsp of sea salt
olive oil - start with 1 tbs in the frypan and go from there
Method:
First grate the potatoes and onions in a food processor on a coarse blade; you will have to do this in a few batches
Tip into a large mixing bowl
Add the finely chopped garlic, chillies and herbs
Season well with salt and pepper
Mix gently but firmly together
Put the olive oil into a large frypan and heat up
Place spoonfuls of the potato mixture into the pan, and level it out till no more than 1 cm. thick
Fry for about 6 minutes on a medium heat without stirring till you have a nice golden crust on the bottom
Flip it over and cook for another 4-5 minutes
Now transfer to a lightly oiled, shallow baking tray
Keep frying the potato in batches till it is all done; you will need to add a little more oil each time you fry up the next batch
Spread out over the tray(s) till it is about 1 cm. thick
Bake for about 25-30 minutes @ 220C till golden brown
Notes:
No need to peel the spuds if they are washed
You will need 2 baking trays
Try breaking an egg or 2 on top of the potatoes for the last 5 minutes of baking
By the time you get to the last lot of mixture for frying, there will be a lot of liquid in the bottom. Throw it into a colander and strain it out before shallow frying
potatoes and onions gleaming in the sun |
gather your ingredients |
chop up the onions for blitzing |
tip everything into a large bowl |
Mr P. looking after the potato mix |
spread it out onto a lightly oiled baking tray |
we broke some eggs on top and baked them for the last 5 mins. |
served with cranberry relish and chopped up turkey |
I actually made this dish twice. The first time was without the eggs and turkey. I served it plain with tomato relish, as you can see below. The second time I got a bit creative; as I had left-over turkey, and cranberry relish from the Christmas in July dinner we had had with my sister and nephew, I added that to the plate. It was damn fine, I tell you. You could have all sorts of meat with it, and whatever relish you fancy. Ah, I just remembered - I have beetroot relish in the pantry....
the first version of this dish - with tomato relish |
my chilli doodle |
Ooh loving this dish Sherry! I wonder if I can convince Mr NQN to take on cooking potatoes and pasta in a way that is more than boiling them!? :)
ReplyDeleteFortunately Mr P is quite fond of cooking 🍳. He lived in a share house before I met him and had been cooking all along. It was actually his female housemates who didn't know how to cook :). I am so glad he does as I would hate to be the only cook in the household. Yep get Mr NQN onto a frying pan 🍳:)
DeleteMust be delicious! I love potatoes cooked by any method.
ReplyDeletebest... mae at maefood.blogspot.com
I know what you mean Mae. Potatoes 🥔 are the cat's pyjamas aren't they ?:)
DeleteHi Sherry, I've not made a rosti for ages, but this recipe has inspired me to get frying! I will definitely be giving this recipe a ago. Rosti with bacon, eggs and beans!
ReplyDeletexx
Oh yum deb. yes bacon 🥓 would be great.
DeleteWho doesn't love a potato? I really like the look of this recipe-I did a sweet potato rosti the other night with our steaks. I have left over sour cherry relish from xmas in July so I'll copy your idea here.
ReplyDeleteyum to sour cherry relish. sweet potato rosti sounds great too.
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