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Potato Ribbon.—Potato
ribbon is simply ordinary fried potatoes, in which the raw
potato is cut in the shape of a ribbon. You take a potato
and peel it in the ordinary way. You then take this and,
with not too sharp a knife, peel it like apple, making the
strip as long as you can, like children sometimes do when
they throw the apple peel over their shoulders to see what
letter it will make. You can go on peeling the potato round
and round till there is none left. These ribbons are thrown
into boiling oil, and must be removed as soon as they begin
to turn colour. When piled up in a dish they look very
pretty, and with a little pepper and salt, and a squeeze of
lemon-juice, make an excellent meal when eaten with
bread.
Potato Sauté.—This
dish is more frequently met with abroad than in England,
except in foreign restaurants. It is made by taking the
remains of ordinary plain-boiled potatoes that are not
floury. These are cut up into small pieces about the size of
the thumb, no particular shape being necessary. They are
thrown into a frying-pan with a little butter, and fried
gently till the edges begin to brown; they are served with
chopped parsley and pepper and salt. The butter should be
poured over the potatoes, and supplies the fatty element
which potato lacks.
Potatoes à la Maître
d’Hôtel.—These are very similar to potato sauté,
the difference being that they are not browned at the edges.
Small kidney potatoes are best for the purpose. These must
be boiled till tender, and the potatoes then cut into
slices. These must be warmed up with a spoonful or two of
white sauce (see WHITE
SAUCE), to which is added some chopped parsley and a
little lemon-juice. A more common way is to boil the
potatoes, slice them up while hot, and then toss them about
in a vegetable-dish lightly with a lump of what is called
Maître d’Hôtel butter. This is simply a lump of plain cold
butter, mixed with chopped parsley, till it looks like a
lump of cold parsley and butter. When tossed about squeeze a
little lemon-juice over the whole and serve.
Potatoes, New.—New
potatoes should be washed and the skin, if necessary, rubbed
off with the fingers; they should be thrown into boiling
water, slightly salted, and as a rule require from fifteen
to five-and-twenty minutes to boil before they are done.
During the last few minutes throw in one or two sprigs of
fresh mint, drain them off and let there dry, and then place
them in a vegetable-dish with the mint and a little piece of
butter, in which the potatoes should be boiled to give them
a shiny appearance outside.
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