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Potato Latkes and Apple Sauce


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  • Author: Peter Berley via Alana Lowe & Paul Helzer
  • Total Time: 50 minutes
  • Yield: 3-4 1x

Description

Potato latkes are a Jewish food, also known as potato pancakes. This piece also includes an incredibly simple and tasty applesauce recipe. Enjoy them together.


Ingredients

Scale
  • Applesauce (makes about 2 quarts):
  • 5 pounds red apples (cortlands are best but can also use
  • McCoons, Empires, Galas or others)
  • Latkes (makes 10-12):
  • 2 pounds russet potatoes, peeled and coarsely grated
  • 1 cup onion, coarsely grated
  • 2 eggs, lightly beaten
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • fresh ground black pepper
  • 1 cup ( or more ) vegetable oil or shmaltz

Instructions

  1. Applesauce:
  2. Wash the apples. Halve core and slice into 2 inch chunks (do not peel)
  3. Place the apples in a heavy pot and bring to a simmer over high heat, give them a few stirs to prevent scorching.
  4. Lower the heat and cover the pot. Cook gently until they turn soft and juicy, about 30-40 minutes.
  5. Puree the apples in a hand cranked food mill.
  6. Serve alone, atop latkes or any way you like!
  7. Latkes:
  8. Fill a large bowl with cold water.
  9. As you grate the potatoes and onions transfer them to the water (this prevents them from turning brown).
  10. Drain the potatoes & onion mixture and place in a large to a clean towel. Ring out as much water as you can. You can also do this by hand in batches.
  11. Transfer the potato-onion mixture to a large bowl and stir in the beaten egg, salt and pepper to taste.
  12. Heat a large skillet with 4 tablespoons of oil until hot but not smoking.
  13. Fill a 1/2 cup measuring cup with potato mixture and press out excess liquid back into the bowl.
  14. Add the mixture to the pan and flatten into a 3 inch round with a spatula.
  15. Fry 3-4 pancakes at a time or whatever amount will fit comfortably in the pan without overcrowding it.
  16. Cook until golden brown on each side. Drain the pancakes on brown paper. Season with a little salt.
  17. Serve immediately or drain on a wire rack and keep warm in a 300 degree oven.

Notes

Applesauce
If an apple (or pear) is on it’s way out, getting soft or over ripe, it’s a good time to sauce it.
When making applesauce, use a heavy pot – in a thin one, apples will burn before they sauce.
In addition to the pink color the skins provide, Peter keeps the skin on his apples for the pectin, which is just under the skin of apples. Pectin has a thickening effect on the sauce.
You can add cinnamon once the apples are cooked, but that doesn’t go so well with latkes.
Your applesauce will keep for 1-2 weeks in the fridge without any preserving method.

Latkes
For this recipe, do not use extra virgin olive oil. Extra light pure olive oil, safflower or canola oil are best.
Once pan is hot, keep flame low.
You can make the grated potato mixture a day ahead. Keep it in the fridge with plastic directly on the grated mixture so no air gets to it.
If preparing latkes for a crowd, you can keep them in warm oven around 200.
If you are vegan, can use flour instead of egg to help bind the latkes.

  • Prep Time: 20 mins
  • Cook Time: 30 mins