• KrudlerOP
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      461 year ago

      It was tasty, I just thought it did not produce sufficient flavor for what I expected with all that extra surface area.

      I feel like simply parboiling quartered potatoes and roasting them with beef fat is a little bit better “return on investment”.

      I enjoyed making it. I love trying different things even if they aren’t what I hope.

      • @ijon_the_human@lemmy.world
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        161 year ago

        What type of potato did you use? I find the startchier varieties work best. When oiled meticulously they get crispy everywhere.

        Mind you, I find them a hassle too.

        • KrudlerOP
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          1 year ago

          Edit, I had to remove this comment and stop commenting because I’m getting too wound up about cooking lol

      • @evranch@lemmy.ca
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        21 year ago

        I tried this too and was similarly unimpressed! Good, but not amazing.

        IMO the best flavour to work ratio for potatoes is to cube them and toss them into an Actifry with either beef fat or coconut oil and salt. Get a ton of crispy surface with about 5 minutes of active work, including cleanup.

        Mashed is also super easy despite the above comment and is probably my go-to way to eat potatoes. Cube, pressure cook 7 min, mash with milk and butter. And I grow a ton of potatoes so I eat them almost every day 😁

      • littleblue✨
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        01 year ago

        Apples & oranges, to be fair. You can’t compare a cream process with a simple fat process, especially when the latter is a minimalist approach and the former is recognized almost solely by its presentation. All due respect, but the critique sounds more like a preference, underneath. I hope you try this recipe again and pull from the constructive advice elsewhere in this thread. Good luck! Have fun!

    • @hydrospanner@lemmy.world
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      51 year ago

      How is doing…that…to a potato less work than cutting a few into large chunks, boiling in salt water, then mashing with some butter, milk, salt, pepper, garlic, and sour cream?

      I feel like in terms of strict effort, doing the slicing on one potato, not even counting the cooking, is more of a bother than the entire process of making a big batch of mashed potatoes.

    • @JohnnyEnzyme@lemm.ee
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      01 year ago

      Gourmet potato chips

      Yet without the key prep-work that makes good chips and french fries taste so great. In other words, standard-recipe Hassleback doesn’t include the classic 2-3 steps of getting the starch out via cold water baths before cooking. Do that, and I bet this tastes worlds better.

      This would also work well in an air-fryer, I think. You’d brush lightly with oil of choice, cooking a few minutes, turn upside down, re-brush and re-cook until eventually done to preference. That way you’d get a nice even bake.

      I do something similar with spiralised potatoes, and they taste great. The cold-water baths are certainly some extra work, but if you do several taters at once I think it works out pretty well.

      @Krudler@lemmy.world

  • GodlessCommie
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    81 year ago

    They look so sad and not nearly enough cream. I usually slice all my potatoes, toss them in the cream mixture, then stack them in the dish Hasselback style and they always come out perfect, Crispy on top, creamy and moist in the middle and bottom

  • @robocall@lemmy.world
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    71 year ago

    It’s not that difficult to do, just requires some knife skills and not rushing. But I never liked the finished results. It’s crispy on the outside and mushy on the inside.

  • FuglyDuck
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    61 year ago

    I remember my mom trying to make Hasslback potatoes.

    It turned out not well. (No cream, her knife skills are… well lets just say 1/2 was as thin as they got. oh. and did i mention no cream?)

    • amio
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      1 year ago

      Are you thinking about scalloped potatoes? Hasselback with cream is news to me.

      • FuglyDuck
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        11 year ago

        They need something on top.

        Personally I love adding shredded cheddar for the last bit so it gets baked on, sour cream and chives.

        • @AA5B@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Yeah, thanks for the perfect place to put my comment - I’ve also been underwhelmed by hassleback but mostly on how do you get your butter/oil/spices between all the layers? Until you come them, and even after, the slices have been too brittle to bend apart without breaking

          Maybe sour cream and toppings can be added after cooking, but butter or oil kind of need to be there for cooking

  • @WoolyNelson@lemmy.world
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    61 year ago

    I made a ton of them while learning knife skills. They are way too much work versus tastier options, but they look pretty.

    • @thefartographer@lemm.ee
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      81 year ago

      Not op, but they definitely used laser eyebeams. You can tell from the precision and crispy edges that they shot laser beams from their eyeballs. Final answer, Regis.

    • KrudlerOP
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      1 year ago

      Been a home cook for a long time and I make everything from scratch so thank you very much for that :)

      Yes freehand cuts. I think it’s just doing it a million preps, my tools are el cheapo $5 German steel knives and I use a metal wheel quick sharpener and a pro hone. I’m a bit of a sinner lol

      I don’t have time to fuss, and I’ll just throw out my knife and get a new one every 3 years