Potato Pancakes--Cook-Off 16
#1
Posted 29 November 2005 - 02:08 PM
For our sweet sixteenth Cook-Off, we're making potato pancakes. Sure, many of you make potato pancakes now and then, and you may be thinking that this is not a very special dish. Allow me to disagree!
First, let's admit that we haven't had any Jewish cooking here in the cook-off before, and as Chanukah approaches (Dec. 25, 2005 to Jan. 2, 2006 this year) we have a natural opportunity to share latke recipes for that holiday staple. In addition, many folks get out the grater for holiday brunches and New Years Eve parties, since the potato pancake is a great party food as well. Finally, there are many versions of the potato pancake to be found throughout the spud-eating world, including Belarusian draniki, Boxti Irish pancakes, Swedish potato lefse, Polish kartoflane placki... the list goes on and on!
Finally and as always, the eGullet Society has some folks ready to share ideas and recipes for this dish. Start by clicking here for a titanic latke thread, started by our own Steven Shaw, who has in fact been crowned as a latke king. You can also click here for a controversial discussion about whether latkes require potatoes. Truth be told, I'm not finding much on the others -- so we've got some work to do!
Get your graters, skillets, and fats out, people!
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#2
Posted 29 November 2005 - 02:29 PM
I know I'm in lefse country. I hate lefse. I hate the idea of butter and sugar on that potato pancake, which I think is more like a crepe.
I'm thinking of trying latkes. Need side ideas before I pull out the grater and devour the available info.
#3
Posted 29 November 2005 - 02:40 PM
So, before I delve into making potato pancakes, what should I serve with them?
I know I'm in lefse country. I hate lefse. I hate the idea of butter and sugar on that potato pancake, which I think is more like a crepe.
I'm thinking of trying latkes. Need side ideas before I pull out the grater and devour the available info.
Of course traditionally you would serve sour cream and/or applesauce with your latkes.
I just made potato pancakes the other night for dinner and put some chive sour cream and leftover gravlax on top. That was an excellent combination that could easily be replicated with store bought smoked salmon.
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#4
Posted 29 November 2005 - 02:44 PM
#5
Posted 29 November 2005 - 02:52 PM
All eight:

Traditional Potato and Onion:

Zucchini and Leek:

I'll be making many many latkes over the next month - orders are coming in already, and I try to have some in the showcase at least once a week.
I'm of the 'it doesn't have to be potato to be a latke' thinking. One of my favorites is a wild rice and mushroom latke - but I use zucchini, sweet potato, apple, cauliflower, cottage cheese, green onion, cooking onion, corn, feta, spinach and leeks in some of mine.
I like my potato pancakes hot out of the frying pan with sour cream. Apple sauce only when being eaten with a meat meal.
Edited by Jason Perlow, 29 November 2005 - 04:54 PM.
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#6
Posted 29 November 2005 - 03:21 PM
They are also a great sidedish for saucy German/Austrian dishes like sauerbraten. The sauerbraten doesn't need any last minute attention and thus frees up time for making the potato pancakes.
The critical question in our family circle regarding potato pancakes is "smooth" or "rough" referring to the size of the potato shreds. My dad's Austrian mother made them smooth (and he always mentions this,
My basic recipe:
4 cups grated potatoes
Add
2 beaten eggs
1 cup flour
1 tsp salt and 1 tsp pepper
1/4 cup milk (or more if batter is too thick)
Sometimes I grate a little onion and add that in as well.
Fry up in an iron skillet and serve fresh out of the pan. (They are very tasty fried up in lard, but I'll usually use vegetable shortening).
-- Gabriel Garcia Marquez, 1962 "Big Mama's Funeral"
#7
Posted 29 November 2005 - 03:38 PM
A big Greek salad, with chicken if desired
Latkes with sour cream and homemade applesauce
Broiled grapefruit with candied ginger
Stroopwafels or butter cookies and coffee/tea
It was a fun dinner for a few friends around Hanukkahtime.
You know, latkes ain't the only potato pancakes out there. 2 weeks ago, I made a big rosti and ate it with ketchup as my dinner. Yes, that was the whole dinner. I had a bad potato craving!
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#8
Posted 29 November 2005 - 03:54 PM
Yes, that was the whole dinner.
I do that a lot, too-a big plate of them just with sour cream. Potato pancakes are one of my top 5 all time foods.
Pam, will your column with the 8 kinds be linked to your website? I'd love to hear more about the different kinds.
#9
Posted 29 November 2005 - 03:58 PM
Susan,I know I'm in lefse country. I hate lefse. I hate the idea of butter and sugar on that potato pancake, which I think is more like a crepe.
My grandfather emigrated from Norway, and my mom had home made lefse when she was growing up. Later she and my father moved to a small town in WI with lots of third and fourth generation Norwegians.
The first time my mom went to a lutefisk and lefse dinner, she did as she had always done growing up at home. Wrap the cod in the lefse with a little melted butter and eat it like a burrito. Everyone else at the table stared in horror. They couldn't fathom that anyone would eat lefse as anything but a dessert.
Anyhoo, I apparently loved lefse a little too much as a small child, one time eating it until I threw up. I haven't been able to stomach it since.
-Erik
#10
Posted 29 November 2005 - 04:12 PM
I have even made them sort of Japanese style by mixing them with shiso and drizzling ponzu on top.
I am really looking forward to this!
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#11
Posted 29 November 2005 - 04:16 PM
I have some leftover mashed potatoes from last night; I might turn them into potato pancakes a la Tee Jaye's (a sub-Denny's chain of restaurants in Ohio, home of the Barnyard Buster). I was also thinking of making korokke with them - do those qualify as potato pancakes?
#12
Posted 29 November 2005 - 04:18 PM
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Then I made it over to that million dollar bash
#13
Posted 29 November 2005 - 04:27 PM
#14
Posted 29 November 2005 - 04:53 PM
Susan,I know I'm in lefse country. I hate lefse. I hate the idea of butter and sugar on that potato pancake, which I think is more like a crepe.
My grandfather emigrated from Norway, and my mom had home made lefse when she was growing up. Later she and my father moved to a small town in WI with lots of third and fourth generation Norwegians.
The first time my mom went to a lutefisk and lefse dinner, she did as she had always done growing up at home. Wrap the cod in the lefse with a little melted butter and eat it like a burrito. Everyone else at the table stared in horror. They couldn't fathom that anyone would eat lefse as anything but a dessert.
Anyhoo, I apparently loved lefse a little too much as a small child, one time eating it until I threw up. I haven't been able to stomach it since.
-Erik
Now that's interesting. I grew up with a Norweigan stepfather and we attended Sons of Norway events for years, including many a lutefisk or meatball dish. Lefse was always served along with dinner, and we used them just as you describe: much like a tortilla. I've eaten them hot off the griddle with butter (oh, my, were they ever good!), but have never seen them presented as a dessert item in any way.
Now I'm jonsing for lefse and cultured butter.
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#15
Posted 29 November 2005 - 04:56 PM
Depends! What's korokke?
Its the Japanese transliteration of "Croquette" from English to Japanese Romaji spelling. Like "Aisukurimu" is for Ice Cream.
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#16
Posted 29 November 2005 - 05:06 PM
I am a fan of the not-so-very humble latke and will be joining in the greatest Cookoff since the Kansas Land Rush ...
Are there any parameters, Chris, or is it very freeform and casual in its requirements?
#17
Posted 29 November 2005 - 05:22 PM

Latkes must be potatoes. Made with other veg they are fritters.
We never solved the vexed question of whether the potato in hash browns should be grated or small cubes, smashed...
Edited by jackal10, 29 November 2005 - 05:23 PM.
#18
Posted 29 November 2005 - 05:35 PM
Latkes must be potatoes. Made with other veg they are fritters.
Only you, jackal, would lie in wait and, at the crucial moment, leap from the bushes waving your nearly perfect latkes! No fair!
You have thrown down the potato gauntlet and we have no other choice but to launch our own latkes in your direction ... engarde!
Made with other veg they are fritters?? Did someone say Fritter??
#19
Posted 29 November 2005 - 05:49 PM
Mentioned are:
Mashed Potato Types (most common in Britain and US)
Grated Potato Types:
Hash Browns
Rosti (coarsely grated, bacon and onion somtimes added)
Bavarian Style (called Kartoffelpuffer)
Very finely grated potato, with a small amount of flour, egg and onion.
German Style (Reibekuchen, etc)
Similar to Bavarian-style but potatoes more coarselly grated.
They are used as part of a savoury coarse, or served as a sweet sprinkled with sugar or garnished with fruit. In the Rhineland, they are made small, more about fritter size, and served with a fruit sauce, such as apple or now even cranberry sauce. German purists try to avoid putting any flour or egg in. They are known by several names, depending on the region of the country and the dialect. Names include: Baggers, Kartoffelpuffer, Kröppelscher, Reibekuchen and Reivkooche. In reality, this isn't just German style, but applies to most of Eastern Europe.
Latkes (Jewish Style): traditionally grated potatoes, eggs, onion and matzo meal and fried in goose fat
The Eastern European version of Latkes, served with applesauce or sour cream, is the one most familiar in Europe and North America. There are actually many other varieties though: in Syria meat is added, in the Balkans cottage cheese is put inside, in Algeria they are made with couscous, in Hungary garlic is added, and in Morocco, Jews there add sesame seeds and coat them with sugar after frying.
Also mentioned are:
Lefse (Norwegian Potato Pancakes)
Buñuelos de papa, Tortitas de papa (Spanish Potato Pancakes)
-- Gabriel Garcia Marquez, 1962 "Big Mama's Funeral"
#20
Posted 29 November 2005 - 06:21 PM
My mom always makes potato pancakes when she serves up her pork roast, dumplings and sauerkraut
Like others have mentioned, we also top them with sour cream.
But the real secret to their appeal is the way they soak up the pork-enhanced juice from the saurkraut.
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#21
Posted 29 November 2005 - 07:22 PM
Kiliki: If you pm me your email, I can send you the recipes.
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#22
Posted 29 November 2005 - 08:24 PM
Of course, with Channukah approaching I may just stick with the standard dealio. My preference is for small, crispy lacy ones- topped with sour cream and salmon roe. It may take a few days before I know which way the wind is blowing on that one, but I'm definitely in for the cookoff.
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#23
Posted 29 November 2005 - 08:51 PM
I was drooling at work over Pam's pictures and had to run home and make potato latkes for dinner.
#24
Posted 29 November 2005 - 09:24 PM
Well, During channukah I will have guests take photos, and you all say that it is never too late to join, right? This year I've planned something UNUSUAL for one of the nights of Channukah, and it involves potato pancakes!I adore my kiddle and want to thrill her to no end by combining her favorite cuisine with potato pancakes... Stay tuned...
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#25
Posted 29 November 2005 - 09:27 PM
I was taught to grate the potatoes into ice water, allow to soak for 20 - 30 minutes, then lift them carefully from the water, leaving the starch behind, then rinsing them and drying them in a towel before adding the remaining ingredients.
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#26
Posted 29 November 2005 - 09:49 PM
To squeeze dry or not the potatos?
Matza meal or flour?
Will only russetts do?
Im looking at a recipe in my file from an old issue of MSL. There is a recipe for parsnip latkes and they suggest a pear sauce in place of apple sauce. The recipe includes parsnips and potato. These sound good.
#27
Posted 29 November 2005 - 10:33 PM
after following those 30 steps to make them, I would be anything but kind and certainly not gentle!
#28
Posted 29 November 2005 - 11:59 PM
My mom had her own very decided opinions on how to do potato latkes. She did the shred-by-hand-on-box-grater routine. She used plain old russets, and didn't blot them dry in any way. Some matzoh meal and an egg or two to hold them together. Fried in enough oil so that, when the pan had a load of latkes going, they were all immersed just half-way. The secret art is learning just how long to wait before flipping them to cook the second side--if you try too soon, they disintegrate; if you wait too long, of course, they burn.
I've never messed with my mom's recipe before, but now I'm feeling a little inspired. Suddenly I'm thinking that embedding some gribenes in potato latkes would be a most lovely thing. (Plus it would give me an excuse to make gribenes, plus then I would have schmaltz instead of oil to cook the latkes in.)
By the way, y'all have heard the classic parody version of "Oh Hannukah", right? The one that avers that Mrs. Maccabeus' potato latkes gave her husband the chutzpah to defeat the Syrians, but cooking the latkes resulted in the shortage of oil for lighting the temple menorah?
#29
Posted 30 November 2005 - 01:58 AM
Like pancakes they get eaten as fast as they can be produced
I have been known to eat 17 in one sitting...
#30
Posted 30 November 2005 - 07:53 AM
So, before I delve into making potato pancakes, what should I serve with them?
Warning: Culturally incorrect content follows.
Ketchup!
While I'm still partial to my TexMex latkes, I added a handful of Parmigiano to a batch the other night. Very tasty.
Jim
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Also tagged with one or more of these keywords: Cookoff, Dessert, Breakfast
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