Это предварительный просмотр рецепта "Homemade tater tots (Secret Recipe Club)".

Рецепт Homemade tater tots (Secret Recipe Club)
by Julianne Puckett

Homemade tater tots: Don't bother to buy them frozen -- you can make them easily from leftover mashed potatoes.Homemade tater tots

It's time once again for another reveal day for the Secret Recipe Club (SRC).

Here's how the SRC works: each month I am assigned another member's blog (a

different one each month). I then pick any recipe from that blogger's

site, make it and write about it here. There's also a link hop at the

end of the post so that I (and you) can check out all the other

participating blogs and their great recipes.

The blog I got to explore and cook from this month is Finding Joy in My Kitchen, written by the very prolific SnoWhite, who notes that her blog is all about "finding joy in cooking wholesome meals." Believe me, if you're looking for some good wintertime comfort food, you will have lots of choices from SnoWhite.

I love that Sno started her blog simply to show her mother, living far away, what she was cooking; my blog started similarly after I moved away from North Carolina. See how the SRC brings cooks together?

As Sno's site has so many great recipes (example: eight, count 'em EIGHT, different lasagna recipes!), it was definitely difficult for me to decide which one to choose. But I've recently been cooking out of The Homemade Pantry: 101 Foods You Can Stop Buying and Start Making (as part of the From Scratch Club's virtual book club), which has me focused on making my own version of foods that we often buy pre-packaged.

So when I saw Sno's recipe for homemade tater tots, I knew I'd found my match!

This is one of the only recipes I can honestly say I made twice before posting about it -- but that was largely because I made way too many potatoes and didn't want to waste them. But that did give me an opportunity to perfect my technique a bit (and make a lot of extra tots, which freeze nicely).

I adapted Sno's recipe just bit; she used crushed cornflakes for the breading while I used crushed potato chips, to try to get more of that original tot fried flavor and texture (without the frying). Additionally, I found a had to use a little bit of egg white on the potato balls to really get the chip crumbs to stick well.

Sure, you could use a food processor, but then you'd miss the workout!

I loved the timing of all this, too, because I recently posted about making homemade burger buns. Together with these tots, you could have your own healthier version of a fast-food joint, right in your own kitchen.

And, as if you weren't already stuffed enough from Thanksgiving, this tot recipe would be a great use for leftover mashed potatoes.

Check the fridge, stat!

Homemade Tater Tots (adapted from Finding Joy in my Kitchen)

Note: These tots freeze well.

Ingredients:

Directions:

Put the potatoes in a large pot and cover by a few inches with water. Bring to a boil and cook until tender.

Drain the potatoes and cool slightly (so you can handle them). Push the potatoes through a ricer (if you don't have a ricer, just use a potato masher to mash them finely) into a large bowl. Mix in the flour and salt and pepper to taste.

Preheat the oven to 400 degrees and prepare a baking sheet (I line mine with parchment paper).

Set up an assembly line for yourself: potatoes, egg white (in a small bowl), potato chip crumbs and baking sheet. Take one spoonful (just your regular spoon) of potato, shape it into a ball or cylinder (balls are easier), use your fingers to coat it with a little bit of egg white, roll the ball around in the crumbs and place it on the tray. Continue to make tots until you've used up all the potatoes or you've just grown sick of making tots.

Bake the tots for about 15-20 minutes or until golden.