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P is For Potatoes: Pommes Anna with Sweet Potatoes

This French classic takes five ingredients.

Gregory Schaefer

By Gregory Schaefer
Los Angeles, CA, USA | Sun Nov 22, 2009 06:00 AM ET

pommes anna


Gregory Schaefer

This dish is simple to make but the key to this is getting razor thin slices of potatoes. Again, I recommend a mandolin, but a veggie peeler will do the trick, just be careful. Traditionally, this is to be done with white potatoes (like a russet) but I love the way the sweetness of the sweet potatoes comes through and melds with the thyme and the butter. It's so fragrant.

Pommes Anna with Sweet Potatoes
3 lbs sweet potatoes
1 stick butter, melted
Several sprigs of fresh thyme
Salt and pepper

Method

1. Preheat the oven to 400 degrees.

2. Use a mandolin to slice the sweet potatoes as thinly as possible. I leave the skins on but do not use pieces that are nothing but skin.

3. On the show I use a cast iron skillet, but any pan will work for this. A pie pan is a great idea. Brush a little butter into the bottom of the pan and in a circular motion, fan a single layer of sliced potatoes across the bottom.

4. Brush these with more butter and throw about ½ tsp fresh thyme leaves on top. Cover this with another layer of potatoes in the same pattern. Brush that with butter, add more thyme, and add a good pinch of salt.

5. Take the palm of your hand and press down on the potatoes (a little compression as you go helps keep things together). Our end result will be a nicely compressed, flat cake of potato goodness.

6. You are going to keep layering like this, fan after fan of potatoes, butter, thyme, salt, potatoes, butter, thyme, and salt again.

7. Compress down after every two or three layers of potatoes are down. Do this until you are out of potatoes (or energy).

8. Pop it into the oven and bake for about 45 minutes. Check it at 30 minutes and if the top is browning too much cover it with a piece of aluminum foil (this is particularly important if you opt to do this with white potatoes).

7. When a knife or fork pierces through the potato cake easily, you know it is done. Carefully place a plate over your pan and flip it over, the cake should come out and onto the pan and look, smell, and taste wonderful.

Watch the video:

Organic A to Z: P is for Potato


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