How to Make Your Potatoes Crispy (2024)

Most often, then, the solution to evenly cooked potatoes is cooking them twice: First, boil, steam, or steam-roast (a fancy term for cooking them with water in the oven) until they’re mostly tender but not fall-apart finished. Second, brown the outsides and finish cooking the interiors on the stovetop or in the oven.

3. Let them cool, if you can bear it.

Not only does that initial cook guarantee that your potatoes will ultimately emerge 100% tender, it also allows the starches in the potato to soften and expand. Then, when that potato cools, the starch recrystallizes, giving you, in the words of J. Kenji López-Alt in The Food Lab, “a dehydrated layer of gelatinized starch [...,] much like when you fry a french fry.” The clumped starch mixes with the fat—more on that below—to form a “potato-oil paste” that “acts almost like a batter for fried foods, creating an extra layer of crispness as the potatoes roast.”

Sure, if you’re trying to go from raw potato to dinner in under an hour, you might not have time to let your potatoes cool. But there’s also power in the knowledge that the bowl of boiled potatoes in the fridge from Sunday can become orbs of crispy goodness on Wednesday and will actually yield better results. (Now that’s what I call meal planning!)

4. Rough them up.

The math is simple: More surface area = more opportunities for starches to mingle with fat = more contact between hot pan and your potato = crispier all over. So while you can slice potatoes cleanly or leave them whole, the potatoes that are rough around the edges produce the crispiest results.

You’ve got options for how to create that craggy, uneven surface. If you’re using pieces of russets, like in Chris Morocco’s Burnished Potato Nuggets, toss them vigorously in the still-hot pot after you’ve boiled and drained them: Not only does this motion dry them out, it also releases starch and damages their smooth surface. The effect is potatoes so crispy, you’d almost think they were battered or breaded. When you’re working with small potatoes, as in Molly Baz’s Crispy Smashed Potatoes with Walnut Dressing, split their skin and expose their creamy interiors by smooshing the whole spuds under the weight of a baking sheet or heavy pan.

5. Add lots of fat.

Now’s not the time to skimp on the fat (even if you’re using an air fryer!). As Harold McGee explains in On Food and Cooking, fat—be it oil, lard, duck fat, ghee, coconut oil—plays two key roles: It helps the food get hotter, making it brown and cook through more quickly, and it participates in the molecular reactions (think caramelization and the Maillard reaction) that create a distinctly richer flavor. Fat for the win! Coat your potatoes well in your fat of choice, keeping in mind that low smoke-point fats, like butter, are not ideal for high heat situations and should be added towards the end.

6. Get your pan H.O.T.

Whether you’re going to be using the stovetop or the oven, give your potatoes a head start by adding them to a hot pan. Let your cast iron hang out for a few minutes over high heat or——a great trick for any roasted vegetable where burnished edges are the goal—place your baking sheets in the oven while it gets up to temperature.

7. Step away from the spatula.

A particularly difficult tip for all of us pickers and prodders (poke, poke, poke) but an important one: In order to develop crisp edges, your potatoes must have sustained contact with the hot surface. In other words, no touchy! Give the potatoes time to get nice and familiar with that sheet tray or skillet—in a single layer, please!—before scooting them around. If your potatoes threaten to stick (drats!), take a deep breath and step away for a minute or so: They’ll release when they’re ready and if you force them, they just might leave all of those crispy edges you’ve worked so hard to achieve behind. And we all know the pan will never appreciate them as much as you will.

Graduation:

How to Make Your Potatoes Crispy (1)

Smashed and Loaded Crispy Potatoes

Cooking potatoes twice—once in water, and a second time in hot oil—is hands-down the best way to achieve extra-crispy potatoes at home.

View Recipe

How to Make Your Potatoes Crispy (2024)
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