Technique for peeling boiled potatoes

Technique for peeling boiled potatoes - Person in Black and Purple Jacket in Front of Gray Table Mat

This recipe calls for boiling Yukon gold potatoes with their skins on, then peeling them. I don't really know why, I just decided to follow it.

I find that I am unable to peel boiled potatoes in any reasonable amount of time because they are soft, slippery, and very hot. I have tried:

  • Sticking a fork in one end to hold it down as I peel. Cumbersome and potatoes generally split on the fork while I'm working.
  • Holding the potato in my hand as normal. Result: 1st degree burns, 2nd if I'm really being stubborn.
  • Wearing a silicone oven mitt. Cumbersome and mitt gits in the way.
  • Let them cool. But this takes a long time and also, then they're cold...

So, two questions:

  1. Anybody got any tricks for this?
  2. Why boil then peel, won't I get the same results if I just peel them before I boil them like I usually do when I need cooked, skinless potatoes?


Best Answer

Remove a potato one at a time from the hot water with tongs, placing it in cold water for shock. Wearing dishwashing gloves, while under the cold water pull on the potato skin removing it. Place the skinned potato in a finished container and proceed to the next potato




Pictures about "Technique for peeling boiled potatoes"

Technique for peeling boiled potatoes - Boiled potatoes near traditional Russian salad
Technique for peeling boiled potatoes - A Boy Stacking Peeled Potatoes
Technique for peeling boiled potatoes - From above of plate with juicy fried meat cutlet served with delicious Russian meat salad and boiled potatoes topped with parsley placed on white table



Is there a trick to peeling potatoes?

Stand the potato up on its newly flat surface steadying it with one hand, you can then glide you knife down skimming the edge from top to bottom being careful to take as little of the white flesh as possible. To complete the spud, rotate and repeat this process until you have a completely peeled potato.

How do you peel potatoes properly?

But if you really can't stand eating potato skins, you can certainly peel them after they're boiled. Just make sure to let them cool down first. Regardless of what you've chosen to do with the peel, your potatoes will cook more quickly if you cut them up into chunks before boiling.



Super Quick Potato Peeling! - Life Hack




More answers regarding technique for peeling boiled potatoes

Answer 2

When I cook yukon gold potatoes for a somewhat similar application (minus the eggs and the fish), my family likes the skins on the potatoes, so I don't bother peeling at all, but when it comes time to cut the (still hot) potatoes into chunks, I find the skins don't cut very well. They tend to slide off the potato chunks and clump up into annoying little wads of potato skin clogging my knife. Some of the skin stays on the potatoes, especially the pieces I cut just after cleaning the peeling-fragments off my knife. Result is, in my finished dish, there are many peeled and a few non-peeled potato chunks.

So my advice is, as long as you aren't toooo fastidious about getting absolutely all the peelings off the (yukon g.) potatoes, just use a fairly dull knife, like I do, and much of the skin will come off while you cut the 1" chunks.

Answer 3

If you must do it, there are tools for this.

The tool set consists of a special fork, and a special knife. The fork has 3 prongs arranged circularly, not flat like a normal fork, and they are thin. The potato does not split when speared on it.

The knife looks like a small vegetable peeling knife, slightly curved and ending in a sharp point. You use the point to score the skin and pick up an edge (the blade is short enough that you can reach the point with your thumb and press the skin corner against it to lift, without having to change your grip on the knife), and then pull off as much as you can in one go. Rinse and repeat.

It is not quick work, but not overly frustrating either.

Answer 4

If the skins are ready to come off and it's just the temperature giving you trouble, you should be able to get away with lighter insulation than silicone mitts. I'd try a clean cloth or towel, after letting them sit a moment so the skin isn't too wet. The texture should make it grip fairly well, and it should insulate well enough for the job.

Answer 5

The purpose of boiling with the skin is to keep the moisture content down.

Just let them drain and air dry / cool for a few minutes.

It does not matter if they cool as you are going to heat them in the skillet.

Another option for dry potato is peel, cube, and bake.

Answer 6

Ah well. :-)

  • First: boiling and then peeling will reduce the waste by quite some amount.
  • As far as I can tell, boiling with skin will taste better / the potatoes will loose less starch into the water. (No hard evidence here though.)

To properly obtain cook+peel potatoes:

  1. Cook potatoes to your liking
  2. Remove from cooking water
  3. Place all potatoes into cold water, or just rinse them thoroughly in cold water (1-2min). This:

    • will "Shock" the skin so that it will actually be easier to remove.

      • If you leave the cooked hot potatoes out in the air to cool/dry, I find them much harder to peel.
    • will cool the outside of the potatoes so you won't get burnt.

    • If after a few potatoes the remainder is so hot again it hurts, just rinse again. Or just leave the bunch in a bowl with cold water.

Notes:

  • Yes it's slippery, not not excessively so IMHO.
  • Sharp knife not really required. I find a normal table knife does the job better.
  • Yes, its sticky and a bit of a mess, your hands will get "dirty", but you noticed you're cooking right?
  • Using gloves feels wrong here ;-)

Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

Images: Matthias Zomer, Karolina Grabowska, Artem Podrez, Karolina Grabowska