The Best Hasselback Potatoes
A cast iron pan helps make these gorgeous, simple potatoes crisp right up.
By Mary Heffernen
There are few side dishes both easier or more impressive-looking than hasselback potatoes. There are also few ways to make a potato that are more delicious. Combining the best features of both roasted and fried potatoes, hasselback potatoes' fanlike shape creates a perfect housing for oodles of butter, which help each slice turn crispy in the heat. And yet the inside of the potato still roasts, becoming fluffy and delicious. Though the technique, named after the restaurant Hasselbacken, which popularized it, originated in Sweden it has been popular in the U.S. for decades.
The trick to hasselback potatoes is cutting the slices evenly, without slicing through the whole potato. Ideally, you want to leave between 1/8 and 1/4 inch of the potato on the bottom, so the whole thing holds together.
This may seem difficult, but here's a smart trick: Place two wooden spoons or chopsticks alongside the potato, lengthwise, on a cutting board. This will allow your knife to cut down to the exact same place each time, without going too far.
The other trick to getting the potatoes as delicious as possible is to reserve about half the butter, and to drizzle it on halfway through the baking process. This allows the potato to absorb a little bit more of that fat when it's hot, essentially frying as it bakes.
Though you can certainly make this dish on a baking sheet, we've found that it's a perfect recipe for your cast-iron skillet. Skillets hold and radiate heat well, and the high sides keep all that butter where it belongs — next to the potatoes.
This recipe comes from the Ranch Raised Cookbook by Mary Heffernan of Five Marys Farms in Fort Jones, California. Though you can use any spices you like — garlic, thyme, and rosemary are classics — these potatoes taste great with the spice rub that she uses on the grilled turkey she makes every Thanksgiving, and where these potatoes are a staple side dish.
Feel free to substitute in your favorite baked potato toppings as well! While we recommend sour cream as a base, you can also top this with bacon crumbles, chives, shredded cheese, chili, salsa, or whatever your heart desires!
Advertisement - Continue Reading Below
Yields:
6 serving(s)
Prep Time:
20 mins
Total Time:
1 hr
Ingredients
- 5 Tbsp.
unsalted butter, melted and divided, plus more for pan
- 6
medium russet or Yukon Gold potatoes (about 2 pounds)
- 2 tsp.
spices, such as M5 Spice Rub, divided
- 2 Tbsp.
chopped fresh flat-leaf parsley
Sour cream, for serving
Directions
- Step 1Preheat oven to 425°F. Grease a 12-inch cast-iron pan with butter. Cut each potato crosswise into 1/8-inch-thick slices without cutting all the way through to bottom and leaving about 1/4 inch of potato intact (this will help them hold together). Arrange potatoes in pan 1 inch apart. Brush with 2 1/2 tablespoons butter. Sprinkle with 1 teaspoon spices.
- Step 2Cover pan with aluminum foil and bake 30 minutes. Remove foil and drizzle potatoes (which should have opened up slightly) with remaining 2 1/2 tablespoons butter and 1 teaspoon spice rub. Bake, uncovered, until potatoes are crispy on edges and soft in the middle, 15 to 20 minutes. Garnish with parsley. Serve with sour cream alongside.
Advertisement - Continue Reading Below
How Long to Cook a 20-Pound Thanksgiving Turkey
A Guide to Roasting the Perfect Bird, Every Time!
40 Thanksgiving Greetings to Write in a Card
13 Best Precooked Turkeys for Thanksgiving 2024
Advertisement - Continue Reading Below
Advertisement - Continue Reading Below