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preparing new potatoes
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I love new potatoes but hate having to scrape them. Some new potatoes aren't too bad but some others have really difficult peel to scrape off. I usually get New Jersey Royals. Does anyone now of a good alternative to scraping or an easy way of doing it.
I don't want to boil them with the skin on and then peel as by the time I peel the skin off my potato has gone cold.
Any suggestions much appreciated
I don't want to boil them with the skin on and then peel as by the time I peel the skin off my potato has gone cold.
Any suggestions much appreciated
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HI happy_face,
Ditto to the answers about leaving the peel on, (once cooked it comes away easily - for your salad), but additional to Ethel's gloves, (if you can't get them), try a small veg brush (a nail brush will do), it only needs a gentle rub.
Looks like its all round to Yvonne's for lunch next week!!
Ditto to the answers about leaving the peel on, (once cooked it comes away easily - for your salad), but additional to Ethel's gloves, (if you can't get them), try a small veg brush (a nail brush will do), it only needs a gentle rub.
Looks like its all round to Yvonne's for lunch next week!!
I think Yvonne M should from now on be referred to as Barbara Good ;-)
I'd love to grow my own veg but I haven't got a garden to grow in I'm afraid.
I have found the gloves on Google. It's a Danish company who makes them and as luck would have it I'm going to Denmark in August so I shall pick up a pair.
Until then I might just try the hard brush effect.
Thank you all for your answers
I'd love to grow my own veg but I haven't got a garden to grow in I'm afraid.
I have found the gloves on Google. It's a Danish company who makes them and as luck would have it I'm going to Denmark in August so I shall pick up a pair.
Until then I might just try the hard brush effect.
Thank you all for your answers
No Y, not at all.
We have a PYO nearby and until we gave up the car we used to pick lots of different fruit: blackcurrants, raspberries, plums, gooseberries, blackberries, loganberries and redcurrants. I made lots and lots of jams - packed with fruit, unlike some shop bought varieties that appear to have the fruit thrown in from the attic. Now alas, I rely on Rhubarb (and Ginger), apricots and plums in the shops, to make my own jam.
I hate dusting!! Quite enjoy 'hoovering' tho!!
We have a PYO nearby and until we gave up the car we used to pick lots of different fruit: blackcurrants, raspberries, plums, gooseberries, blackberries, loganberries and redcurrants. I made lots and lots of jams - packed with fruit, unlike some shop bought varieties that appear to have the fruit thrown in from the attic. Now alas, I rely on Rhubarb (and Ginger), apricots and plums in the shops, to make my own jam.
I hate dusting!! Quite enjoy 'hoovering' tho!!
Yvonne - no you're definitely not boring. We don't have an enormous back garden but grow as many of our own veg as possible. As well as the veggie plot, I have beans and tomatoes growing along another fence, interspersed with geraniums, climbing cucumbers, and all the decorative lettuces and parsley so although it's a quirky garden, it's very productive with its annual dose of manure. And we freeze a lot of our beans and make lots of bags of purree with our tomatoes for soups and sauces. And most of the shrubs in our front garden consist of soft fruit bushes as I ran out of space in the back garden and these provide fruit for jam and fruit compotes..Even the compost heap is used for growing a few potatoes.
scraping new potatoes removes the flaky or top later of skin. If you do the job correctly the translucent layer of skin is exposed and the potato looks peeled but it still has its skin on so none of the goodness is lost. This is why scraping and not peeling new potatoes is the way to go. However when you have to do large volumes a soft brush that leaves the under-skin in tact works on most varieties.
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