Hasselback potatoes
Hasselback potatoes or Potato à la Hasselbacken (Swedish: hasselbackspotatis) are a type of baked potato that is cut about halfway through into thin, fan-like slices.
They can be served as a main course,[1] side dish, or canapé.[2][3] Various toppings can be added, such as caraway seeds, paprika, and bread crumbs.[4]
Origins
Hasselback potatoes may have been created in 1953 by Leif Elisson, a trainee chef at Hasselbacken restaurant on Djurgården, Stockholm.[5]
However, there is a recipe for "Oven Fried Potatoes (Hasselback Potatoes )" in the 1929 "Prinsessornas kokbok" (The Cookbook of Princesses) by Jenny Åkerström,[6] leading to some question as to whether the recipe did in fact originate at the restaurant.
References
- ^ Steafel, Eleanor (12 November 2019). "Rarebit hasselback potatoes with pink pickled onions recipe". The Telegraph. Retrieved 11 February 2020.
- ^ Myers, Dave. "Poached turbot with hasselback potatoes". BBC Food. Retrieved 11 February 2020.
- ^ "Hasselback potatoes". BBC Food. Retrieved 11 February 2020.
- ^ Cloake, Felicity (17 May 2018). "How to make the perfect hasselback potatoes". The Guardian. Retrieved 30 January 2020.
- ^ "About Hasselbacken". Hasselbacken.com. Retrieved 30 January 2020.
- ^ Prinsessornas kokbok: husmanskost och helgdagsmat. OCLC 79999282.
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- Baeckeoffe
- Baked potato
- Fondant potatoes
- Funeral potatoes
- Gratin dauphinois
- Hasselback potatoes
- Jansson's temptation
- Knish
- Kouign patatez
- Kugel
- Kugelis
- Lancashire hotpot
- Panackelty
- Pâté aux pommes de terre
- Pommes Anna
- Pommes boulangère
- Potato babka
- Potato scone
- Potato skins
- Potato waffle
- Potatoes au gratin
- Rappie pie
- Rumbledethumps
- Sweetened potato casserole
- Tartiflette
- Yapchik
French fries | |
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