How to rice potatoes

How to rice potatoes - Delicious cooked rice with assorted stewed vegetables

I was wondering if anybody know a method to rice potatoes without them turning into mashed potatoes. When I do it to raw potatoes, they mush or just stay too crunchy and with cooked potatoes, just forget about it. What I am looking for is discrete, small bits of potato that will still have a pillowy mouth feel.

One avenue that I haven't tried yet is starting from mashed, but I can't figure out a way to segregate the bits so that they won't reform into mashed potatoes once a fork hits them.



Best Answer

What an interesting idea. Essentially you're looking to make rice out of potatoes, yes?

I can see a couple of options. You could make potato orzo (a small pasta that looks like rice) I suppose; googling recipes for potato pasta should point you in the right direction.

You could also, I think use the reverse spherification method. Make mash as you normally would, and then put it through a ricer into an alginate bath. This should preserve the individual 'grains'. You will need to have milk and/or cream in the mash to ensure there is enough calcium for the alginate to react with.




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How to rice potatoes - Tasty rice with stewed vegetables on plate



How do I rice potatoes without a ricer?

An alternative to the ricer is a food mill, which is a hand-crank machine that forces the food through small holes in a sieve. If you don't have a ricer or a food mill, you can make do with a colander, using the back of a large spoon or a smaller bowl with even pressure to push the potatoes through.

Can you rice raw potatoes?

A ricer provides the gentlest touch for the fluffiest mash. More aggressive than a ricer, a food mill will still produce fluffy results\u2014and a super-smooth texture.




More answers regarding how to rice potatoes

Answer 2

A technique I discovered to keep my potato salad from turning to mush is to add vinegar to the cooking water (I also add some sugar and quite a bit of salt to balance it out). The amount of vinegar really depends on how firm one wants the potatoes to remain. One to two tablespoons of cider vinegar per quart of cooking water is the range I use. You might have to experiment because too much and the potatoes will actually be too hard to push through the ricer.

I recently read a Cooks Illustrated article that suggested the same trick and they gave a scientific explanation why it works.

Now, there are a couple of problems for your application. One is the vinegar really flavors the potatoes, which works well for potato salad, but may not work for your application. Two is that I cut the potatoes up into the size I want for the salad before I cook. This wouldn't work for ricing. It remains to be seen if you can get enough surface area on the potatoes for the vinegar to reach and still be big enough to rice well.

Answer 3

How about grating the potatoes as one would do for a rosti? This recipe suggests 'cutting into matchsticks', but I think life is way to short for such ventures. Just use a grater!

Rosti is pancake-like as its allowed to flatten into a mass. If you blanch and then stir-fry your gratings in clarified butter (ghee) and keep them moving they'll stay separate. Like little crunchy, soft-in-the-middle nano-chips. ;-)

Answer 4

You need a potato ricer to do this. This is one https://www.amazon.com/OXO-Grips-Stainless-Steel-Potato/dp/B00004OCJQ

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Answer 5

Perhaps tiny potato gnocchi would suit your purposes? Of course, this would be a time consuming process. If you have a pasta extruder you could shape via the extruder rather than by hand, or make spaghetti via a roller and cut it.

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