Bad news. We have just tried rooster potatoes for the first time and found them taste less, will never grow them again.
Good news ..We have a b****y sack and a half of them. :'(
I have decided not to grow Rooster next year, grown next to Desiree and dug up at the same time, seems to be a magnet for wireworm and slugs where Desiree only had slight damage. Haven't eaten any yet.
Thing is that ours were all sound, not a slug in site. Just have to ask around and see if anyone likes them.
Could you tart them up a bit PP a bit of chili, rosemary etc when roasting them.
Horseradish in mash.
Now you're talking, celeriac too.
It's funny how tastes differ. I'd go for Rooster's eating qualities over any other variety of maincrop potatoes any day.
OH don't waste them..!..even bland potatoes taste nice when mashed with bit of cream and nob of butter.. ;)
..and ..potato and leek soup...
Use them up with something flavoursome..potato and squash mash..YUM..
How about roughly mashed potatoes fried with bacon and kale.. :P
Par boiled potato slices layed into caserole dish with garlic and cream.. :P..maybe bits of smoked samon in there too.. :P
;D You won't even notice they were bland.. ;D
You could try to do diet versions of course..but then everything taste bland.. ::)
I think that Nadine has spoiled us. I know that its a second early butit is so good and it stores very well.
If I cannot find anyone to take them off me hands then I will have to resort tarting them up
This is one of our favourite recipes which would nicely disguise bland or mushy potatoes. It's a soup of onions, garlic, chorizo, potatoes and kale.
http://www.bbcgoodfood.com/recipes/3438/kale-and-chorizo-broth
(http://www.bbcgoodfood.com/recipes/3438/kale-and-chorizo-broth)
Thanks for all of your advice. I reckon they would make a good thickener for soups and I will try all of the other things mentioned. I am going to try some strong cheese in the mash tomorrow.
I'm amazed no-one has suggested Jerusalem artichokes in the mashed spuds ! ! ! :o ::) ;D Cheers, Tony.
You have got to be joking. I just want them to be more palatable not to be blown away by them ;D
;D ;D ;D.
I love jerusalem artichokes mashed in the spuds, but I have been banned from even growing them :-[
Like parsnip and tatter mash too later on in the year :D
Im growing jerusalem artichokes for the first time so will try them mashed with spuds but are they really that bad for giving you wind? :o
I usually only grow special spuds that cost loads in the shops like Charlotte & Pink Fir Apples. I did all the things you arent supposed to this year & had fabulous very tasty crops of both. I planted them using a bulb planter (didnt dig or rotovate first), put comfrey leaves in the holes then spud on top. I earthed up with grass cuttings & watered often when we had the very dry weeks. I left them in the soil far longer than advised & didnt get any slug damage. Wierd. My soil is very heavy clay so I wonder if the slugs just couldnt get to them as I hadnt made the soil soft around them. Who knows but I will be using this 'mad' method next year too ;D
x jane
Quote from: Crystalmoon on September 27, 2011, 20:01:46
Im growing jerusalem artichokes for the first time so will try them mashed with spuds but are they really that bad for giving you wind? :o
I usually only grow special spuds that cost loads in the shops like Charlotte & Pink Fir Apples. I did all the things you arent supposed to this year & had fabulous very tasty crops of both. I planted them using a bulb planter (didnt dig or rotovate first), put comfrey leaves in the holes then spud on top. I earthed up with grass cuttings & watered often when we had the very dry weeks. I left them in the soil far longer than advised & didnt get any slug damage. Wierd. My soil is very heavy clay so I wonder if the slugs just couldnt get to them as I hadnt made the soil soft around them. Who knows but I will be using this 'mad' method next year too ;D
x jane
Point 1. YES but soaking in water first helps - but not a lot ;D
Pont 2. Your method is virtually the same as mine- I bought a long handled bulb planter for the spud planting and it is brill :D
Hi pumpkinlover so good to hear Im not the only person who does it this way....the old timers at my tiny lotty site really think Im barmy, they are constantly rotovating & dig huge trenches for spuds, seems such alot of work especially when so many seem to be got at by slugs ::)
I will try soaking the JA before cooking....I wonder if there are any herbs that can be cooked with them that would help stop the wind? x jane
pepermint oil ;) ;) ;)
now I seem to remember sage, parsley and asafoetida all ring a bell as supposed to help with that particular problem ;D
Oops just realised this thread is supposed to be about potatoes- sort of drifted a bit :-[
Quote from: grannyjanny on September 27, 2011, 19:00:56
;D ;D ;D.
Savoury is supposed to stop the wind from beans?
potato and sweet potato mash is good, less starch, too. make potato cakes with some, pansy, good to freeze, stick 'em on fish pie with a cheese topping, chop 'em up with lots of herbs and roast, any spud tastes nice like that ;D
Quote from: Crystalmoon on September 27, 2011, 20:01:46
Im growing jerusalem artichokes for the first time so will try them mashed with spuds but are they really that bad for giving you wind? :o
...
It varies from one person to another. If beans give you wind, then jerusalem artichokes (and even more so chinese artichokes) are likely to embarrass you. It's caused by a carbohydrate called inulin which is difficult to digest.
Since we are off topic, I feel that I can recount a story told to me by my brother. Some years ago he was working in France for a British engineering company. Every three months, the technical director would pay them a visit, and they'd all go out to lunch. But the technical director was an old-fashioned guy from the Black Country, who rejected any food that smacked of "foreign muck". A VERY well cooked steak and frites was about as adventurous as he got.
Eventually he announced his retirement, and he came over to Paris for the last time. The head of the French bureau told him that they'd arranged a celebratory lunch, where for once he could eat French food. But not to worry, they'd chosen things that they knew that he'd like. And absolutely no "blood" in the meat.
Well, he thoroughly enjoyed the huge bowl of jerusalem artichoke soup that was placed in front of him, and even allowed himself to be persuaded to a modest extra ladleful. Main course was lamb (grieviously overcooked just as he would like it) accompanied by copious amounts of most delicious flageolet beans.
Poor chap. He didn't get as far as pudding. The flash to bang time was so short and the result so awful that the restaurant kindly found him a chair so that he could sit outside in the street.
Not laughed so much for weeks ;D ;D
Jerusalem artichokes ..so nice but so lethal.. ;D
;D ;D ;D
A while ago on here I asked if they were as bad as lentils, to which Goodlife informed me that lentils were a pebble dropped in the ocean whereas artichokes were like a tsunami.
Quote from: grannyjanny on September 28, 2011, 15:42:10
A while ago on here I asked if they were as bad as lentils, to which Goodlife informed me that lentils were a pebble dropped in the ocean whereas artichokes were like a tsunami.
;D ;D ;D
Quote from: goodlife on September 27, 2011, 17:15:38
OH don't waste them..!..
Par boiled potato slices layed into caserole dish with garlic and cream.. :P..maybe bits of smoked samon in there too.. :P
Add some onions and cracked black peppercorns to that recipe... !! delicious
Thanks so much for the tips about the herbs to try with the windy artichokes. x jane