Do you have an insatiable hunger for potatoes? Do you have a fully-sated hunger for complicated recipes and having to cook all the time? This version of Pommes Anna, simplified and altered to an extent that will make French people cry, might be the recipe for you!
I try to eat unreasonable amounts of potatoes every day, so I want a food that doesn't take a lot of time to make, can be stored and reheated, and remains palatable after eating it for every meal for months at a time. The advantages of this recipe are:
- There's only 3 (required) ingredients.
- The crispy texture on top makes it more palatable long-term than mashed potatoes.
- The result can be reheated in a microwave in 2 minutes.
The main downsides are:
- It takes around an hour and a half to make (15-30 minutes of prep, 50 minutes of baking).
- You absolutely need a mandoline. Do not try to thinly slice 6 lbs of potatoes by hand.
Recipe
Prep Time: 15-30 minutes
Cook Time: 50 minutes
Servings: 8
Nutrition[1]:
- 3320 calories total (415 calories per serving)
- 7 g protein
- 12 g fat
- 72 g carbs
- Provides adequate amounts of most vitamins and minerals except for B12, Vitamin D, Vitamin E, Calcium, and Selenium.
If this is your whole diet, you may want to eat some eggs along with it.
Equipment
- 9x13 inch casserole dish
- Mandoline
Safety Note: Always use mandoline guard!
Ingredients
- 6 lbs Yukon Gold potatoes
- 1 tbsp table salt
- 1 stick (1/2 cup) butter
- Additional seasonings like garlic, pepper or thyme (optional)
Note: Recipe can be scaled to any baking dish. Fill dish with peeled potatoes to measure, then scale butter and salt proportionally.
Directions
1. Pre-heat oven to 400° F.
2. Peel the potatoes and then slice them thinly with a mandoline (I use the 2mm setting on mine). Cut any leftover potato pieces into thin strips. Add all of the potato to a very large bowl.
3. Melt the butter.
4. Add the butter, salt and any additional seasonings to the potato slices and mix it in.
5. Add mixture to the casserole dish. Placing the slices edge-up or randomly (my preference) will give you the most varied and crispy texture. Placing the slices flat will give you a more consistent custardy interior. Pour any additional liquid at the bottom of your bowl over the top.
6. Bake uncovered for 50 minutes.
7. Let cool and then slice and eat, or cool entirely in the fridge for solid pretty-looking slices that reheat in 2 minutes in the microwave.
Notes
- Don't skip peeling the potatoes. There's plenty of fiber on the inside of the potatoes and the skin is too much. It also contains most of the solanine, and if you're eating this quantity of potatoes it's worth avoiding. Some of my example photos demonstrate skin-on and the result was not very good.
- Add an additional tsp of salt if it doesn't taste good to you. I don't recommend reducing the salt unless you know you don't like salt. 1 tbsp for 6 lbs of potatoes is already on the low end of how people typically salt mashed potatoes.
- I use this mandoline (not an affiliate link) but I don't know anything about mandolines and this is the only one I've ever used, so maybe take advice from Serious Eats instead.
Variations
- If you salt the potatoes, wait 5 minutes, then press and drain them, then re-salt, the result will be more intensely flavored and less watery, but it's more work and likely makes this less effective as a diet food.
- Replace the butter with 1/2 cup of any oil suitable for baking. Light olive oils also work well, although I find the result less filling.
- You can probably reduce the oil and it will still cook acceptably, although the top will probably dry out rather than getting crispy, and it will get less palatable (in my opinion). Butter is only 1/4th of the calories (800/3300) so I don't think this is worth it.
- Try alternate potatoes if you want. The result with russets was crispier but didn't taste as good (in my opinion). Yukon Golds are objectively the best potato, but you do you.
- Dice 2 onions and sauté them in the butter before adding it to the potatoes.
- Place the slices flat if you want a more traditional custardy texture.
- ^
According to MacroFactor.
One thing to keep in mind is that, from what I understand, ovens are very imprecise so you gotta exercise some judgement when using them. For example, even if you set your oven to 400°F, it might only reach 325°F. Especially if you open the oven to check on the food (that lets out a lot of heat).
I've also heard that when baking on sheet pans, you can get very different results based on how well seasoned your sheet pan is. That shouldn't affect this dish though since the intent is for the top to be the crispy part and that happens via convection rather than conduction. But maybe how high or low you place the baking dish in your oven will affect the crispiness.
I'm no chef, but I love to cook, and my thanksgiving meals are planned in spreadsheets with 10 minute increments of what goes where. Plus I currently live full-time in an RV so I've gotten used to improvising with nonstandard and less reliable tools. Take or leave my suggestions accordingly.
It's often a good idea, until and unless you know your oven really well, to put an oven thermometer in the oven on the rack and adjust accordingly. They're <$10. Try placing it in different spots and figure out how evenly or unevenly your oven heats, and how a pan in... (read more)