Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|
Purple potatoes in potato salad
Thank you, Ranee!
On Fri, 23 Dec 2005, Ranee Mueller wrote:
> In article >,
> Elaine Parrish > wrote:
>
> > What a neat idea! Are the red potatoes red because of leaving the jackets
> > on? And white by taking the jackets off or do you use a white baking
> > potato?
>
> No, white potatoes, and red all the way through. 
>
> > These blue/purple potatoes... Do they come in varying shades or is this
> > like calling a "red" onion, a purple onion (no difference, just
> > terminology)?
>
> The one's I get are pretty blue, though there are some that are more
> purpley.
>
> > Do they have a name, like "Russet" or "Idaho Baking Potato" or something
> > that I can ask my grocer about?
>
> Our grocer gets these in little three pound bags. You can get the
> seed potatoes from a nursery or a catalogue, though. All Red, All Blue.
>
> > I've been experimenting with vinaigrettes. (I have an "aw, man, where's
> > the mayonnaise????" family <g>). Do you have one you really like with
> > potato salad that you'd share?
>
> I use lots of lemon juice, olive oil, salt and pepper, tons of
> garlic, and dill. I toss the cooked potatoes with that, and scallions
> and pitted and chopped kalamatas (actually, pitted and split in two,
> because I am too lazy to chop them). This is my standard recipe, I
> normally use regular red skinned potatoes at other times of the year.
>
> Regards,
> Ranee
>
> Remove do not & spam to e-mail me.
>
> "She seeks wool and flax, and works with willing hands." Prov 31:13
>
> http://arabianknits.blogspot.com/
> http://talesfromthekitchen.blogspot.com/
>
|