My feed
Premium

Please
or
to access all these features

For related content, visit our food content hub.

Food/recipes

Need an Americans help - shredded potatoes........

19 replies

Gwenick · 02/03/2005 16:10

I subscribe to an American menumailer which is fabulous (been using it for about 6 months now) and most of the American items I've managed to find reasonable substitutes for - however I'm stumped on this one

I need a package of frozen shredded potatoe??? closest thing in the UK please?????

OP posts:
Report
Frizbe · 02/03/2005 16:13

Could you just grate your own? or maybe costco do them frozen (quite a good source of American food stuffs! also selfridges at Birmingham if your after pancake mix, goldfish crackers etc) duno if this helps?

Report
snugs · 02/03/2005 16:16

Do they really sell frozen shredded potato in the US? Have they not heard of graters?

What's the recipe Gwenick (nosy emoticon) ?

Report
Gwenick · 02/03/2005 16:17

the recipe's for a Beef and Potatoe pie (seems I've got to use it 'from frozen' in the recipe rather than fresh [frown] ). I would post it here but I'll have my subscription cancelled if I'm found out!!

OP posts:
Report
snugs · 02/03/2005 16:21

Hmmm, shredded potato (assuming they just mean grated) will have an awful lot of water in it I would have thought, so maybe you need the extra moisture of using it from frozen.

You've got me all intrigued now.

Report
Gwenick · 02/03/2005 16:31

this is what it is..........anything I could use instead??

OP posts:
Report
serenequeen · 02/03/2005 16:40

mashed potato? rosti? i've never seen anything like that here.

Report
snugs · 02/03/2005 16:57

That explains the moisture problem then - they bake it all out first.

Never seen anything like that here Gwenick. I would be tempted to try using grated potato (you could maybe spread it on a baking tray and shove it in the oven for awhile first?) or get frozen rostis and break them up.

Report
Gwenick · 02/03/2005 17:05

Thanks guys - might try the Rostis' thing

no doubt an American will come on here once I've submitted my shopping to Tesco and tell me something I can use instead

OP posts:
Report
crunchie · 02/03/2005 17:08

Is is as a topping to a pie? Or instead of pastry? If it is a topping I would used grated potatoes as is. If it is as a pastry I would grate potatoes, sqeeze out all water, add an egg and a tbsp or two of plain flour. Season well. Then squish this mixture around a dish as pastry (it is a latke recipe without the grated onoins!!) It shouldn't need precooking

Report
Gwenick · 02/03/2005 17:10

it's for part of the filling

OP posts:
Report
crunchie · 02/03/2005 17:13

OK I know you can get frozen mashed potato at Adsa and Iceland. However I would probably subsitute with raw potato grated, water squeezed out.

Report
crunchie · 02/03/2005 17:19

OK looking around it sound like it is a bit like hash browns, you could try this too. Or try fying your own grated potato. However that defeats the object of simplicity

Report
Gwenick · 02/03/2005 17:19

also creates washing up

OP posts:
Report
californiagirl · 02/03/2005 18:59

I'm American, living in America, and I've never seen those potatoes. Live and learn, I suppose. I must admit I don't spend a lot of time looking at the potato section of frozen stuff, since if I do I might be tempted to buy Tater Tots, which I loved as a kid but which are evil. You could always grate potato and bake it for 50 minutes.

Report
Ameriscot2005 · 02/03/2005 19:14

I've seen shredded potatoes in America but never been tempted to buy them. You use them if you want to make rosti or hashbrowns. You should be able to adapt your recipe using fresh grated potatoes, suitably paper-towelled to mop up excess moisture.

It's amazing the convenience foods you can get in America - and people buy them too!

Report
kittykat75 · 16/02/2019 08:22

Hi there what's the name of the menumailer you use please
thanks x

Report
cdtaylornats · 16/02/2019 22:33
Report
user1471439310 · 21/02/2019 04:57

In the U.S. it is frozen hash brown potatoes by the brand name of
Ore-ida. They use it a lot in a casserole.

Report
Madagoo · 23/10/2019 12:49

Grate the potatoe into a bowl and add some salt. Mix and leave for the water to come out. Transfer the grated potatoes into a either a clean tea-towel or muslin cloth and ring out the excess water. At this point shake over a little garlic powder to flavour and mix. This is the hash-brown mix used for either HB’s or else for the topping to braised beef.

Report
Please create an account

To comment on this thread you need to create a Mumsnet account.