Remember Me
forgot your password?

How to Make Great Homemade Mashed Potatoes

Homemade mashed potatoes are the ultimate comfort food. What is better than a steaming serving of really good homemade mashed potatoes? You know what I mean - mashed potatoes that are thick and smooth and rich and buttery. You take a bite and the creamy texture and rich taste take you right back home to Mom's cooking. Mmm-mmm.

For some of us, however, making potatoes like that is a challenge. Instead of mashed potatoes like Mom's, they turn out tasteless, lumpy and dry. And then we resort to instant mashed potatoes, which are bland and turn out like library paste without the flavor. Or your mashed potatoes are so watery they sort of spread all over your plate - more like wallpaper paste. Ugh!

Even if you're not the sharpest tool in the shed when it comes to cooking, you can make really good homemade mashed potatoes. Choose the right potato and the right tools, and your potatoes can look and taste as wonderful as Mom's.

Types of Potatoes There are several different varieties of potato, and they have different characteristics. Some have more starch than others, and some have different textures. For examples, Yukon Gold potatoes are a high starch potato with a smooth texture. Russets, on the other hand, are high starch, but they have a grainy texture. The "best" mashing potato is a matter of personal preference. Experiment a little until you find the best mashing potato for you and your family. Just be aware that if you had a great success with red potatoes, you may not be able to repeat it if you use another kind of potato.

Equipment What you use to mash your potatoes with makes a difference. You may be accustomed to the slightly lumpy, classic mashed potatoes produced with a wire or stainless steel potato masher. If there are a few small lumps, at least everyone knows the potatoes are homemade. To use a potato masher, you mush up the cooked potatoes with the other ingredients using up and down and back and forth movements. It takes a little work to make really good mashed potatoes with a potato masher.

Some people prefer to use a potato ricer. It makes smoother mashed potatoes. With a ricer, you mush up the potatoes using mostly an up and down motion, forcing the spuds through the holes in the ricer until all the lumps are broken up. Many people swear that a ricer is the only way to make mashed potatoes.

Some people - including those of us who are too lazy to work a potato masher or ricer - like to use an electric mixer. A mixer produces good whipped potatoes. They may be a little dry because a lot of air gets incorporated into the potatoes. That's why purists scorn the mixer in favor of mashing potatoes by hand.

Other Considerations In order to make good mashed potatoes, you have to cook them first. And even before you put the potatoes in a pot, you have to decide whether to peel them or not.

Peeled potatoes produce smoother, creamier mashed potatoes without bits of skin in them. They have a uniformly white color.

On the other hand, when you peel potatoes, you throw away a lot of the vitamins with the peel. Unpeeled mashed potatoes are more visually "interesting" with those bits of peel throughout, and they have a bit more texture, as well as lots more vitamins.

After you decide whether or not to peel your potatoes, you are ready to cook them. Put the potatoes in a pan of cold water, and bring it to a boil. If you boil the water first, the potatoes kind of seal themselves when you put them in, and they don't cook right for mashing.

Use the best ingredients you can when mashing the potatoes. Yes, you can make light, airy, very good and low fat potatoes by mashing with chicken broth. But they won't begin to compare to the creamy texture and buttery flavor you'll get by using real butter and milk or cream.

Additions to Your Mashed Potatoes Once you've mastered making really good homemade mashed potatoes, you can add things to your potatoes for flavor, texture and interest. Some of the things you can add while you are mashing the potatoes are:

· Nutmeg
· Grated cheese
· Parmesan cheese
· Worcestershire sauce
· Cooked parsnips or rutabagas
· Cooked carrots and onions
· Cream cheese
· Roasted garlic

Enjoy experimenting with adding different things. You’ll find combinations that you and your family love. And in a few years, your kids will be trying to make mashed potatoes “just like Mom’s.”

Jack Moorehouse

Get Completed Information and Review Product about Potato Ricer at potatoricer.org

Rate this Article: 0 / 5 stars - 0 vote(s)
Print Email Re-Publish

Add new Comment



Captcha

  • Latest Cooking Tips Articles
  • More from Jack Moorehouse

The Process of Butchery

By: Alex Stapledon | 07/12/2009
Most people enjoy eating steaks. Conversely when you see a cow, are you reminded of your last steak meal? Do you ever wonder about the entire process the raw material of your food undergoes before being lavishly plated on the table? Other lovers of steaks will just eat and leave behind the bloody part to the butcher. However, it is still important to be mindful of how events are carried out to be certain that your food is clean and safe. ...

Cheap Meal Planning Ideas – 7 Tips To Help You Stay On Budget

By: Susanne Myers | 05/12/2009
Meal plans are a great way to help you save money, but you have to do it right. What dishes you choose for your menu can make a big difference in how much money you will spend at the store. Here are 7 tips to help you with your cheap meal planning.

Portable Charcoal Grill- A True Companion To Celebrate With

By: Anna Jones | 05/12/2009
Stop carrying a bulky bag over shoulders; get rid of the feeling of jealousy while working in the kitchen and seeing your friends enjoying the open air party thrown by you only. Don't worry we are here to share your burden and making your holidays, picnics, tours, parties, hunting plans and get together more lively as well as enjoyable than ever.

Add Value To Your Home As You Build an Outdoor Grill!

By: Joey David | 05/12/2009
If you've got even a little amount of handyman talent, it is simply not troublesome to learn how to build an outdoor grill within your backyard. With just a few bricks, a metal grate plus a barbeque plate you are able create your extraordinarily own masterpiece. Nevertheless, it is simply not adequate to simply understand how to build an outdoor grill, you require to build one thing that adds worth to your home. The times of piling a few bricks up, leaning a plate across them plus...

How to Keep Summer Cooking Sizzling

By: Lecordonbleu | 04/12/2009
Ah, the lazy days of summer. The sun is out, the birds are chirping, and the sweet smell of summer cooking wafts in the warm air. Like a drawl to anxious chatter, the late nights and hot weather of summer bring a slow, relaxed feel to any hectic dinner routine. Summer cooking trends are some of the most loved traditions of the season, but burgers and buns can get boring. Instead of making the same old dish, try the following summer cooking tips and add variety to your summer cook-out.

A Barbecue Sauce Tale

By: Jefferson Collier | 04/12/2009
My Uncle liked to tell tall tales. My favorite story was about my grandfather's accident. I liked the story because he woke up from a coma when he smelled barbecue sauce.

Enjoy Indian cuisines for their varied ingredients

By: harry | 03/12/2009
Indian cuisines come in varied tastes and aroma. This is because of plethora of ingredients used in cooking the food that not only enriches the taste but is healthy as well. you can choose a dish on the basis of the ingredients used for cooking it if you wish to have them in food for the day.

Stainless Steel and Waterless Cookware -- A Buyer's Guide

By: Karen Griffin | 02/12/2009
Stainless steel cookware is a wonderful choice for use in your kitchen – just look at what the professional chefs use in restaurants and on many cooking shows on TV. Advantages of and guide to terms for stainless steel cookware in general and waterless cookware specifically.

Use Glisten Dishwasher Cleaner to clean the inside of a stainless dishwasher

By: Jack Moorehouse | 05/12/2009 | Kitchens
If you are looking for a great way to clean the interior of your stainless steel dishwasher keep reading! We use well-water in our home and our stainless steel dishwasher gets loaded with hard water and mineral stains after about a month of heavy use. I found a great product at Kroger in the dishwasher detergent aisle called Glisten Dishwasher Cleaner that does a great job getting the tough stains out and keeps your dishwasher sparking clean. Here is how you use it.

My Experience Using Glisten Dishwasher Cleaner

By: Jack Moorehouse | 04/12/2009 | Tools & Equipment
First of all I need to explain, I am a guy and I do not have much to do with using our dishwasher. We purchased our dishwasher roughly 9 years ago and we have never done anything to clean the inside of the machine. It has a stainless steel interior and I guess I never thought that this type of interior would need cleaning. After all, the dishwasher splashes around extremely hot, soapy water, so it stood to reason (in my own mind anyway) that the dishwasher pretty much cleaned itself.

How Important Vertical Bike Rack

By: Jack Moorehouse | 03/12/2009 | Tools & Equipment
If you have hobby to ride a bicycle but you do not have enough space on your home/garage to put your bike, vertical bike rack is probably the most appropriate solution for you, this is an ingenious way of storing 2 or more bikes vertically on the wall with adjustable storage shelves for other miscellaneous items in the garage. By using a vertical bike rack, you will still have enough space to put your favorite bike without worrying about your bike be scratched with other items in your garage.

Some Way TO Maximize Your Foley Food Mill

By: Jack Moorehouse | 03/12/2009 | Kitchens
Some way to use the foley food mill : 1. Make applesauce. For many people, the foley food mill's number one use has been to make applesauce. ANd today's young cooks who relish the natural tangy taste of homemade applesauce are discovering how easy it is with a foley food mill. No need to peel or core the apples. Remove blossom ends and stems. Cut apples into quarters and place in a saucepan with just enough water to prevent sticking (2 tablespoon for 2 pounds apples). Cover and cook over low

Cheap Vertical Bike Racks

By: Jack Moorehouse | 02/12/2009 | Equipment
Using vertical bike racks is a safe way to prevent your bike from being stolen. Bike racks are devices to which a bicycle can be attached in order to prevent theft. Bike racks can be attached to any automobile such as a car, truck, trolley, or bus for transporting bicycles. Usually, bike racks are found on the fronts of buses and trolleys.

Keep You Money in Your Pocket by Using a Foley Food Mill

By: Jack Moorehouse | 30/11/2009 | Kitchens
As you look over your grocery bill, you will be surprised to find how much money you waste on things like preserves, sauces and gravies. Well maybe waste is not the right word, perhaps we should be saying getting ripped off. The price that you pay for these times is far more than if you would make them yourself with a food mill.

No Kitchen is Complete Without a Foley Food Mill

By: Jack Moorehouse | 30/11/2009 | Kitchens
Kitchens today are loaded with modern conveniences, but sometimes you need to go back to basics and use things like a food mill to make a better meal. Walk into any professional chef's kitchen and you are going to see one tucked away in the corner somewhere and the person who probably uses it the most is going to be the chef himself.

Foley Food Mill - Choosing Between an Electric Food Mill and a Hand Powered Food Mill

By: Jack Moorehouse | 30/11/2009 | Kitchens
A food mill is a great way to add a home cooking touch to any meal. By taking the food processor out of the equation, you are preparing food like they have for years and allowing the true flavors to come out. The question is whether an electric food mill or hand powered one is right for you.

Submit Your Articles Free: Signup
Article Categories




Use of this web site constitutes acceptance of the Terms Of Use and Privacy Policy | User published content is licensed under a Creative Commons License.
Copyright © 2005-2008 Free Articles by ArticlesBase.com, All rights reserved. (0.48, 5, w1)