Mashed potatoes recipe

Recipes that will teach you how to make mashed potatoes and other potato meals..


What Kind Of Potatoes To Use For Mashed Potato Recipe?

There are two things to consider when you are choosing the right potato for your mashed potatoes recipe. One is the amount of starch in the potatoes and the other is the texture of the potatoes.

Low Starch Or High Starch Potatoes?

A potato is mostly made of water and starch and by the amount of starch you have high starch potatoes or low starch potatoes.

High starch potatoes are potatoes like russet and yukon gold. More starch means fuller potato cells which give fluffier texture.

Low starch potatoes are potatoes like round whites. They are waxier and absorb less water (better for cooking, mashed spuds). Cooks also say they have more flavor and less “starchy” taste.

The second thing to look for when you wonder what kind of potatoes to use for mashed potato recipe is texture.

Potato Texture

Texture determines how the potato should be cooked. We can divide potatoes into waxy and floury.

Waxy potatoes are new potatoes. These are harvested early  – in spring or at the beginning of the summer.

Floury potatoes are the usual potatoes the you find in the supermarket. They make the main share of potatoes and are harvested towards the end of summer at beginning of autumn.

If you need potatoes for mashed potato recipe then look for floury potatoes. They are less likely to become gluey. Also a tip – if you are adding milk to your mashed potatoes – add warm milk. Cold milk can cause the starch in the potatoes to set and you will get gluey mashed potatoes.

On the other hand, if you are looking for potatoes to bake, new potatoes might be better. When the potatoes are harvested their skin is very soft, thin and delicate. These are new potatoes. If they are left to cure the skin thickens and you get “old potatoes” (I just made that up I think :)). New potatoes taste better but again, they are not the best kind for making mashed potatoes.

Now, we have picked the right potatoes, lets start cooking- how to cook mashed potatoes. And when you are done cooking browse our site and find some delicious mashed potatoes recipes.






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How To Cook Potatoes | How To Cook Mashed Potatoes

To be honest, there is nothing really special to say about cooking potatoes. If you are using them for mashed potatoes recipe or any other recipe. But there are a few tips and tricks, like always. They won’t make wonders but they will add that extra little bit…

So how to cook potatoes in general or how to cook mashed potatoes?

  1. There are two schools of cooking potatoes. You can either wash them and cook them with the skin still on or you can peel them first and cook them later. Pro and cons? If you do not peel your potatoes you can save time. When they are cooked they will be much easier to peel. I guess they also keep a little more of their taste. On the other hand – if you peel them you get rid of all the dirt so it’s a bit more sanitary plus the potatoes will cook faster, especially if you peel them and then cut them into a few pieces (don’t make the pieces too small). So which way should you go? Your choice, most of the time I peel them.
  2. Put the potatoes into a pan and cover them with cold water. Make sure the water is cold, not hot. How much water? All the potatoes should be covered by it. Add some salt and cover the pan. Live a little room for the steam to escape or you will make a mess.
  3. Bring the water to a boil, then turn down the heat a little.
  4. Potatoes are cooked when they are soft. You can try that by piercing them with the tip of the knife. If the knife goes in nicely and the potato is soft – they are done. It usually takes 15-20 minutes for peeled and cut potatoes to cook. It also depends how many potatoes are you cooking etc…
  5. If you think they are done, drain all the water and then put them back on the stove on low heat. This will make more of the excess water to evaporate and potatoes will have more flavor. If by step one you didn’t peel the potatoes then you must rinse them with cold water and then peel them into an empty pan. Since you only have a few big pieces that you will take out of the water by hand, there will also be no excess water.

Another way how to cook mashed potatoes is to put them into a microwave oven.  Potatoes are one of the foods that can be easily cooked in a microwave oven and still retain nearly all of their nutritional value. Only make sure you cover them with ventilated plastic wrap to prevent moisture from escaping. The result is similar to a steamed potatoes. I must confess I never tried this, so I can’t give you first hand experience.

So now you know how to cook potatoes if you are making mashed potatoes or any other food that includes cooked potatoes. If you want to go one, read one of our mashed potato recipes.


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A Few Things About Potatoes

Potatoes are the main ingredient here (duh!). So no wonder they are the base of every mashed potato recipe and no wonder they have a big part in the final taste of your mashed potatoes. So what kind of potatoes are best for turning them into mashed potatoes?

Lets learn a few thing about potatoes first!

Potato is a starchy root vegetable crop that comes from a plant called Solanum tuberosum Solanaceae (or at least from some of the plants subspecies). Potatoes all come from the area that is today Peru and Bolivia. More specifically – southern Peru, just north of Lake Titicaca.

Potato came to Europe around the year 1700 and from Europe mariners spread it all over the world. Still the most diverse potatoes come from the place of origin – in Andes you can find more that 100 different potato varieties in a single valley. Andes really are the home of potatoes. Some of the more known potato varieties include Désirée, Bintje, Fianna, King Edward, Kipfler, New, Nicola, Pink Eye, Pink Fir Apple, Red Pontiac, Rooster, Russet Burbank, Spunta, Chiloé (Camota, Cielo, Pachacona, Clavela Blanca, Cabritas, Chelina).

Potato is the the fourth largest food crop in the world, right after rice, wheat, and corn.

What is in a potato?

Mostly starch! There are about 26 grams of carbohydrates in an average potato and most of it is starch. An interesting medical fact is that some of the starch in potatoes is resistant to enzymatic digestion that happens in stomach and small intestine. It comes almost intact all the way to the large intestine. This has similar effects and benefits as fiber.

Benefits Of Potato – What Are Potato Benefits?

Potato benefits include providing bulk, starch mentioned above offers protection against colon cancer, improves glucose tolerance and insulin sensitivity, lowers plasma cholesterol and triglyceride concentrations…).

How much of this healthy starch stays in the potatoes depends on how we cook them and what kind of mashed potato recipe do we use :). But enough about that :)

Common Ways To Cook Potatoes

There are more ways to cook potatoes. You can cook them with skin-on or peeled, whole or cut up, with seasonings or without. But anyway you cook them – you must cook them to break down the starch. Next time we will look at potatoes more from the mashed potato recipe point of view or at least from a cooks point of view. Still – mashed potatoes are not the only way to use them in your meals. If you are interested in other potato recipes, you will find plenty of them if you follow the link provided.


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How Do You Like Your Mashed Potatoes

Even though mashed potatoes are one of the most common and easy foods there are loads of variations to the mashed potatoes recipe. And everyone has his favorite type. We guess this is one of those foods that everyone ate at home when they were still living with their parents. And this is where you pick up your taste. No matter what you do, where you go and what you eat, you always measure meals by that taste you developed as a kid. If your family never ate fish, you probably don’t like them now. If your family used lots of vinegar on your salads today no salad is sour enough, and so on… And if you mom made great mashed potatoes – well all other mashed potatoes just taste wrong. It’s just that those mashed potatoes that your mom made are the best and all others can’t compare.

Of course they are not wrong, they just come from someone else’s mother :). So you can have your mashed potatoes plain or with lots of milk, maybe with lots of butter, maybe mixed to the max and very smooth or maybe you still like to feel some un-mashed bits and pieces. Maybe you like them with carrots, maybe with a little parsley, maybe with some onions or garlic… None of these are wrong or right but they are all different.

So every time you make mashed potatoes think about your mom :)!


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Simple Mashed Potates Recipe | Simple Mashed Potato Recipe.

OK, now lets get started with a simple mashed potato recipe. We will try, and start with a simple recipe, one that most of you probably already know (or not, if you found this website) but we must start somewhere. Later we will try other recipes, that make this food much more that just a few potatoes mashed together :). (more…)


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Welcome To Mashed Potato Recipe

Hello to all potato lovers, this site is dedicated to mashed potato. Yes, really! Mashed potatoes may not seem special enough to have their own website but we disagree! Firstly, mashed potatoes can be just as tasty and delicious as any other food and secondly, there are not enough mashed potato recipes out there. Mashed potatoes are so much more that just a few potatoes smashed together.
We are not going to convince you that there is a science behind mashed potatoes, but by adding different things, mashed potatoes can become quite a dish. Enjoy our site and we hope wi give you some good recipe ideas.


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