Enterprise-Record (Chico)

One potato, two potato

- By Nancy Lindahl sweetbasil­andthebee@gmail.com BASIL >> PAGE 2

“What's your favorite spring food?” I asked Hanna one afternoon. She thought for a minute or two then surprised me by saying “potatoes — potato salad makes me think of spring.”

“Goggie's potato salad?” (a family tradition) — “No not particular­ly — any potato salad, creamy or herby, doesn't matter.”

While I was chewing on this, she asked if I had heard about English jacket potatoes — all the rage on TikTok and Instagram — “No! What are they?” — I was pretty excited to learn about something new in potatovill­e.

Jacket potatoes

English jacket potatoes are a new way of baking a potato that results in a crisp outer skin and a fluffy luscious interior. It's all about time and “The Cut”.

Here's the scoop from Cup of Jo: “When we were visiting our family in England last week, we ate our weight in jacket potatoes. They're different from the baked potatoes we make because they have super crispy skin and a fluffy melty inside. So amazingly good. They're all over the place in England. Every pub and restaurant we went to devoted a section of the menu to them, along with a choice of toppings: grated cheddar, baked beans, tuna, coleslaw or plain with butter, salt and pepper.”

“My aunt Janey often made them for our dinners in Cornwall — as a side to roast chicken or sausages — and we all loved them so much, so she agreed to share the basic recipe. …

“Preheat oven to 200 (degrees Celsius or 400 degrees Fahrenheit). Cut a cross on the potatoes. Put the potatoes at the top of the oven — straight on the rack, not a baking tray. Cook 1-2 hours (usually closer to 2). When they feel crunchy on the outside, pull the rack out, cut the potatoes open again to release the steam, then put them back into the oven. The major important thing is not to turn the oven down as they go soggy and lose their crunch. After ten minutes, serve immediatel­y with shedloads of butter, salt and pepper. Perfect.”

Funeral potatoes

Recipe by Young Sun Huh is also called Utah potato casserole.

Potato talk turned to Molly who revealed that my son-inlaw Eric's absolutely favorite potato dish was funeral potatoes. Have you heard of them? Yes. Have you eaten any? No.

They are a Midwestern favorite, so named because they reliably turn up at potluck gatherings like funerals. They have all the markers of Midwestern tastiness — canned cream of chicken soup and lots of cheese with the surprise snap of corn flakes. Hard to imagine for a California girl, but Molly says they are so delicious two people can polish off a pan — so we gave it a try and here's the recipe for you.

As author Young Sun Huh notes,” It's pretty much impossible

to dislike a dish of onions, garlic and cream topped with melted cheese and abundant crunchy cooked cornflakes. Even the biggest naysayers in our kitchen were seduced by this dish's addictive creamy flavor and crispy topping.” Ingredient­s:

• 4 tablespoon­s unsalted butter

• 1 small onion, diced (about 1 cup)

• 2 cloves garlic, minced

• One 30-ounce bag frozen shredded hash brown potatoes, lightly thawed

• One 10.5-ounce can condensed cream of chicken soup

• 1 cup sour cream

• 1/4 cup grated Parmesan

• 1 1/2 teaspoons kosher salt

• 1/2 teaspoon ground black pepper

• 2 cups shredded sharp yellow Cheddar cheese • 1 1/2 cups lightly crushed corn flake cereal

DIRECTIONS >> Preheat the oven to 350 degrees Fahrenheit.

Heat 2 tablespoon­s butter over medium heat in a skillet. Add the diced onion and cook, stirring, until soft and translucen­t, about 6 minutes. Stir in the garlic and cook until fragrant and softened, an additional 2 minutes.

In a bowl, toss together the cooked onions and garlic, hash brown potatoes, condensed soup, sour cream, Parmesan, salt, pepper and 1 1/2 cups Cheddar. Spread the mixture in a 9-by-13 inch casserole dish. Melt the remaining 2 tablespoon­s butter. Top the casserole with the remaining 1/2 cup cheese, corn flake cereal and melted butter.

 ?? NANCY LINDAHL — CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Cutting the cross for jacket potatoes.
NANCY LINDAHL — CONTRIBUTE­D Cutting the cross for jacket potatoes.

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