Texasgal
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Thu Feb-03-11 09:41 PM
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Any of you have a good recipe for those?
I rememember eating them at my grandmas house back in the day.
I'm really craving them now.
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NMDemDist2
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Thu Feb-03-11 09:49 PM
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| 1. i make mine from leftover mashed taters |
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throw an egg in there to bind em and add whatever you want, onion or herbs
make patties and fry em up in enough oil to come up just a bit on the sides
easy peasy no?
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cbayer
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Thu Feb-03-11 09:59 PM
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| 2. I like the ones from mashed potatoes, but also ones made from raw potatoes. Here is the one |
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I use:
1 medium onion, peeled 4 large russet or Idaho potatoes (about 3 1/2 pounds), peeled 2 large eggs 2 tablespoons all-purpose flour 6 tablespoons vegetable oil 6 tablespoons unsalted butter Applesauce and/or sour cream, for serving
Preheat oven to 200°F. Place 2 nonstick baking sheets in oven. Using box grater or food processor fitted with grating disc, coarsely grate onion and place in colander set in sink. Coarsely grate potatoes, add to colander, and set aside to drain. In large mixing bowl, lightly beat eggs, then whisk in flour. Press potatoes and onion to extract as much liquid as possible, then add to egg/flour mixture. Season with salt and freshly ground black pepper. Using wooden spoon or hands, mix well, but do not overwork. In heavy-bottomed, 12-inch skillet over moderately high heat, heat 1 tablespoon oil and 1 tablespoon butter until hot but not smoking. Drop 4 scant 1/4-cup portions of potato mixture into pan and flatten with spatula to form four 3-inch pancakes. Fry until bottoms are golden-brown, 4 to 5 minutes, then turn over and fry until golden-brown and crisp, an additional 4 to 5 minutes. Transfer to paper towels to drain; season immediately with salt and pepper. Keep warm on baking sheets in oven while making remaining pancakes. Using paper towels, carefully wipe out pan. Add 1 tablespoon oil and 1 tablespoon butter and fry 4 more pancakes. Repeat with remaining batter, wiping out pan and adding 1 tablespoon oil and 1 tablespoon butter before each batch. Serve pancakes hot with applesauce and/or sour cream.
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Texasgal
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Thu Feb-03-11 10:05 PM
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I'm gonna try them.
I have no mashed already so I'll most likely try recipe #2.
I'll post! Thank you!!!
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Inchworm
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Thu Feb-03-11 10:15 PM
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:rofl:
I haven't thrown away leftover mashed 'taters in a while.
:9
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Lucinda
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Thu Feb-03-11 10:33 PM
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I have Bill. :P He's a tater eatin fool. Potatoes ARE a food group for that man.
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grasswire
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Thu Feb-03-11 11:02 PM
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| 6. apparently the secret to getting the water out.... |
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...is to put the grated tatoes in a clean dishtowel and wring as much liquid as possible out. That's the only way I know to get good results.
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tigereye
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Sat Feb-05-11 04:25 PM
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| 7. just had one here yesterday- went to a local restaurant |
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with a friend, and had the classic German reuben on a potato pancake. It was really good, but really rich. Alas I do not have a recipe, and have never made them.
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furgee
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Fri Feb-18-11 07:25 PM
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| 8. I should never have read this link. |
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Had 5 lb potatoes on the counter this morning and they are now gone. They are so easy to make, After I grate them I add a little flour and 2 eggs. Fry up in oil. That is it.
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Lucinda
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Fri Feb-18-11 07:54 PM
Response to Reply #8 |
| 9. This forum should come with a caution statement: |
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"Lot's of fun but may cause weight gain"
Hmm...I want to try it with sweet potato now...yum.
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Lugnut
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Sat Feb-19-11 02:15 AM
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| 10. My dad made the best potato pancakes I ever ate. |
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Daddy always used baking potatoes because they have very little moisture in them. He hand shredded them on my grandmother's shredder that was handed down to me. Squeeze as much of the moisture from the shreds as you can and put them into a big bowl. Finely chop a whole onion and add that to the potatoes. Add egg/s and a little flour to bind the shreds depending on the number of potatoes used. Heat up vegetable oil in a skillet and put spoonfuls of potato batter into the oil. Spread it out with the back of a spoon and fry in small batches until golden brown on both sides. Spread some paper towels on a platter to drain the oil from the pancakes.
"NEVER put baking soda or powder in the batter.", was one rule he taught me. The end result should be flat crispy pancakes. I've shredded potatoes in the food processor to save my knuckles and that works very well. Instead of a mushy batter you get a hash brown kind of pancake. It's different but it's not bad. I prefer the mushy batter.
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Mon Oct 27th 2025, 01:39 PM
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