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Mashed Potatoes; A Staple Of The Dinner Table
By Ben Cook | November 19, 2009
One of the best and most popular side dishes to the dinner table has been the mashed potato. Mashed potatoes have come down through generations and has even had a major role in a movie, Close Encounters of the Third Kind, and what would Thanksgiving be without them. The are supposed to present as smooth and creamy but most of the time they may have some delicious lumps of potato and no one seems to mind.
Mashed potatoes can be simple with just a bit of butter, milk, salt and pepper added or they can be a little more complicated with garlic, green onions, or cheese added. Some recipes get very complicated adding a variety of other vegetables, meat product like bacon, and gourmet cheese and then they are baked again making the twice baked potato that is actually mashed potatoes heated up twice.
Instant potatoes are available but they may not taste as good as real ones. Edward Asselbergs, a Canadian scientist patented the process that makes them in’62. He developed a way to dehydrate potatoes and a way to rehydrate and use them in today’s home. There were some early methods patented in’12 and’54 but they didn’t't work as well. Today we don’t have to use instant potatoes but can get tubs or already made mashed potatoes that just have to be heated up in the microwave.
There are some purists that think you should boil a potato and then just mash it with a fork to make mashed potatoes. They say that if you put it in a food processor or mixer the potato cells are damaged releasing their starch making them very sticky however, many kids grew up enjoying those sticky potatoes and make them that way today. The methods of making mashed potatoes differ from household to household from peeling, boiling, and mashing the potatoes with a wire potato masher to baking them in the oven removing the skin and putting them into the electric mixer. In the old days people used a ricer to make smooth potatoes. A ricer is a large sieve like looking thing with a handle connected to a blade. You turn the handle and it squished the potato through the little holes in the body of the apparatus making little worm like potato threads. These can be whipped up with other additives to make a velvety textured mashed potato.
Use russet, Idaho or Yukon Gold potatoes to get the best results when mashing them. To make a simple mashed potato boil two and half pounds of peeled chunked potatoes in 4 quarters of water. After they start to boil just reduce the heat and let them simmer for 15 to 20 minutes or until they seem soft when poked with a fork. Drain the potatoes and put them in a bowl and mash them with a wire masher or put them in a mixer bowl and beat them for a few minutes. Add one fourth cup of milk, one fourth cup of butter, one half teaspoon salt and one half teaspoon pepper and mix well. This will feed 6 people
Try this more complicated method of making mashed potatoes if you are in the mood for something different using cheese and sour cream. Ingredients include 8 to 10 potatoes that have been peeled and cut in chunks measuring about 3 pounds, eight ounce package of cream cheese that has come to room temperature, half of a sixteen ounce tub of sour cream, six tablespoons of butter, one fourth teaspoon of garlic salt, one fourth teaspoon of pepper and one half cup of Cheddar cheese that has been shredded. Place the potatoes in a large pan and cover them with water. Bring them to a boil then simmer for about 20 minutes or until the potato is soft when pierced with a fork. Drain them well and put them in the bowl to your mixer. Add the cream cheese, sour cream, and butter and mix on high. Add the garlic salt and pepper and mix very well until a light and fluffy consistency. You have the choice to add the Cheddar and whip it in or just sprinkle it over top and let it melt over the mashed potatoes.
Wire mashers should be used in an up and down motion instead of side to side so that the integrity of the cells stay in tact and the potatoes do not become starchy. Always add softened butter rather than throwing in a cold, hard chunk of butter that may not get mixed in well. You can warm your milk before adding to keep the potatoes warm and make a creamy consistency. Do not let the milk boil though. Use chicken broth instead of milk as this will give them a heartier taste but make sure to test before adding salt since there is salt in the broth.
Your family and friends will love having mashed potatoes with dinner just as families have for years and years. You can add bacon, chives, green onions and just about anything else you want or you can serve them plain and simple. You can serve them with just a pat of butter, a dollop of sour cream, sprinkling of cheese, or slather them with gravy. There probably won’t be much left when dinner is over.
Ben likes his potatoes to be mashed. So if you need some delicious mashed potato recipes visit his website that is full of different recipes. He specially recommends his best mashed potatoes recipe.
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