Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

One potato, two potato

Enjoy the sweet luck o’ the Irish

- By Emily Ryan For Digital First Media

At Bridge Street Chocolates in Phoenixvil­le, a leprechaun and a shamrock garland decorate the store, tempting candy lovers to indulge in a sweet St. Patrick’s Day treat: the Irish potato.

“Not really good for us, is it?” owner and chocolatie­r Gail Warner said with a laugh. “It’s butter. It is cream cheese, confection­ers’ sugar, vanilla and shredded coconut. And then you typically roll them in cinnamon.”

For a twist, she also rolls some in “one of the darkest cocoa powders you can use.”

“We should probably call it our ‘extra-dirty potato,’” Warner joked. “It gives you that cocoa flavor, and it cuts the sweetness a bit because it’s a super-sweet confection.”

How about a chocolate-covered version? Christophe­r Chocolates in Newtown Square offers Oh Ryan’s Irish Potatoes dipped in dark chocolate.

“Let me tell you, there’s nothing better,” raved Dave Lam-

FROZEN

At Owowcow Creamery, there’s another way to enjoy Irish potatoes — in a cone or a cup. “Our ice cream is definitely an homage to the Philadelph­ia treat,” said general manager Shira Tizer Wade. “It’s a sweet cream ice cream with handmade cream cheese, cinnamon and coconut swirl.” Interested? Find Irish potato ice cream at Owowcow’s Ottsville, Wrightstow­n and Lambertvil­le locations. “We’re trying to create a flavor that speaks to people on a number of levels,” she added. “It flew off the shelves last year. People went crazy for it.”

parelli, who founded both companies, naming them after his sons, Christophe­r and Ryan.

At the Oh Ryan’s factory in Linwood, production starts in January.

“We’ve tapped out over 90,000 pounds so far this year,” he said. “Pure sugar – nothing healthy about it, which is why it sells really well.” And that’s no blarney! “Just like the Mummers and scrapple, it is a Philadelph­ia candy,” Lamparelli explained. “They’ve been around Philadelph­ia for 150 years.”

But the exact origin remains the stuff of legend.

“You get that lull between Valentine’s Day and Easter,” he said. “And I bet a crazy candymaker was making coconut cream Easter eggs and accidental­ly dropped some coconut cream in cinnamon. It looked like a potato, and he thought, ‘I can sell this.’”

Irish potatoes once cost a penny each, and sometimes candymaker­s tucked a penny inside as a surprise.

“Get your penny back and you were lucky,” Lamparelli described. “It gave you the luck of the Irish.”

Irish Potatoes INGREDIENT­S

¼ cup butter 8 ounces cream cheese 1 teaspoon vanilla 4 cups confection­ers’ sugar 2½ cups shredded coconut Cinnamon (for rolling) Brute cocoa powder (optional)

INSTRUCTIO­NS

Blend butter, cream cheese and vanilla. Add in confection­ers’ sugar and shredded coconut. Chill. Scoop and roll into individual balls. Roll in cinnamon for a traditiona­l Irish potato. For a darker look, roll in cinnamon twice. Keep refrigerat­ed. Take the chill off the potatoes for serving to enjoy a tender creamy potato.

For extra cinnamon flavor, sprinkle cinnamon in the mixture before rolling. Since we love chocolate, we roll some of our potatoes in a dark brute cocoa powder for “extra-dirty potatoes.”

 ?? PHOTO BY EMILY RYAN ?? At Bridge Street Chocolates in Phoenixvil­le, choose from traditiona­l or “extra-dirty Irish potatoes,” rolled in cinnamon and cocoa.
PHOTO BY EMILY RYAN At Bridge Street Chocolates in Phoenixvil­le, choose from traditiona­l or “extra-dirty Irish potatoes,” rolled in cinnamon and cocoa.
 ?? PHOTO BY EMILY RYAN ?? Dark chocolate covers these Oh Ryan’s Irish Potatoes.
PHOTO BY EMILY RYAN Dark chocolate covers these Oh Ryan’s Irish Potatoes.
 ?? PHOTO BY EMILY RYAN ?? Many area candy shops sell Irish potatoes like these from Bevan’s Own Make Candy in Media.
PHOTO BY EMILY RYAN Many area candy shops sell Irish potatoes like these from Bevan’s Own Make Candy in Media.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States