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  2. Potato bread - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Potato_bread

    Kartoffelbrot (German: [kaʁˈtɔfl̩ˌbʁoːt] ⓘ) is a potato bread that may contain spelt and rye flour.. Berches is a German-Jewish bread made for Shabbat.Like other Ashkenazi challot, it is typically braided, but unlike the sweet, eggy challah of eastern Ashkenazi cuisine, berches bread contains boiled, mashed, and cooled potato, and has no egg and very little sugar in the dough.

  3. Baked potato - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baked_potato

    Some recipes call for use of both a microwave and a conventional oven, with the microwave being used to vent most of the steam prior to the cooking process. Wrapping the potato in aluminium foil before cooking in a standard oven will retain moisture, while leaving it unwrapped will result in a crisp skin. Cooking over an open fire or in the ...

  4. List of potato dishes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_potato_dishes

    Sliced potatoes seared in goose or duck fat with garlic, then steamed until soft but still crisp. [38] Pommes soufflées: France: Twice-fried slices of potato. First fried at 150 °C (300 °F), cooled, then fried again at 190 °C (375 °F), causing the slices to puff up. Potato babka: Eastern Europe

  5. Russet potato - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russet_potato

    Restaurants such as McDonald's use russet potatoes for their size, which produce long pieces suitable for french fries. As of 2009, "McDonald's top tuber is the Russet Burbank". [5] The russet Burbank is more expensive than other potatoes, as it consumes more water and takes longer to mature, while it also requires large amounts of pesticides ...

  6. Potato cooking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Potato_cooking

    Joseph Dombey, in a letter written from Lima on May 20, 1779, specifies the ancestral way used by the Peruvians to prepare potatoes that constitute, with corn, their only food and that they carry in a haversack during their long journeys: the potato is cooked in water, then peeled and exposed to the wind and the sun until it is completely dry, which allows to preserve it "several centuries, by ...

  7. Potatonik - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Potatonik

    According to food writer Joel Haber, "kartoflnik uniquely started with raw, grated potatoes, rather than cooked and mashed ones [as is done with potato breads]. Thus, [kartoflnik] held onto its potato-y flavor, while also remaining a member of the kugel family." A related dish, ulnik, used buckwheat flour with grated potato, but no yeast. [3]

  8. Innovator potato - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Innovator_potato

    Innovator is potato variety that is oblong in shape with a smooth skin. It is a popular potato variety in Europe and is gaining popularity in North America as a frying and baking potato. [1] The skin of the potato variety is russeted, similar to that of a Russet Burbank potato. Innovator also has shallow eyes with a cream coloured flesh. [2]

  9. Russet Burbank - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russet_Burbank

    By the 2010s, Russet Burbank accounted for 70% of the ultra-processed potato market in North America, and over 40% of the potato growing area in the US. [1] Restaurants such as McDonald's favor russet potatoes for their size, which produce long pieces suitable for french fries. As of 2009, "McDonald's top tuber is the Russet Burbank."