Pommes Persillade Recipe | The Feedfeed (2024)

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Potatoes + garlic + parsley = the perfect trifecta. I learned this valuable sentiment a couple weeks ago during the sautéing chapter of my journey through culinary school at the Institute of Culinary Education. We’ve been medium dicing (AKA cutting into perfect ½-inch cubes) potatoes since the first week of school, and finally we had the opportunity to see how this particular comes to life in a dish. I was not disappointed!

The key to getting potatoes that are soft and creamy on the inside with a golden brown, crispy exterior is by par-cooking them in boiling water before sautéing them. This ensures that the potatoes are fully cooked through on the interior, and you don’t have to worry about burning the outsides while you’re pan-cooking them in hot oil. Make sure the water that use to par-cook the potatoes is heavily salted and cold.

Another reason why this recipe works like a charm is all in the precise medium dice cut. While I understand that prepping potatoes in this way is tedious (and slightly annoying, if we’re being honest), but there actually is good reason for prepping the potatoes in this way. Uniform cuts promote even cooking, so by taking the time to create even cubes, you will likely end up with a dish where all of the potatoes are cooked to perfection, rather than a mixture of undercooked and overcooked potatoes. You feel me? If you don’t want to peel the potatoes or cut them into ½-inch cubes, you don’t have to, just try to get your potatoes cut into the most uniform pieces possible. I understand that you’re not preparing this dish for Gordon Ramsey, so there’s no need to drive yourself insane over precise cuts. Try a medium dice, though! The chef in you will be impressed and PROUD!

While we’re talking about this specific cut of potatoes, I should mention that there’s a ton of extra ‘tater scraps when the spud is diced up like this. Don’t worry, these scraps are anything but garbage. You can toss them into an omelet, frittata, or stir fry, or you can spread them on a baking sheet with oil, salt, and pepper, and quickly roast them up for a starchy snack. There’s no reason to waste a potato, in my humble opinion.

Once you’ve got your ‘taters cubed up, it’s time to get cooking. Make sure that your garlic and parsley are minced before you start sautéing. It all happens super fast, so you want to be ready when it’s time to add the garnishes. This dish has endless potential. Serve it with a hearty cut of steak, top it with a fried egg, or just grate an excessive amount of Parmesan cheese and call it a day. You earned it, chef.

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  • Recipe Card

Prep time 10mins

Cook time 15mins

Serves or Makes: 4

Recipe Card

ingredients

  • 4 medium russet potatoes, peeled and cut into ½-inch cubes
  • 1/2 cup fresh Italian parsley, minced
  • 1 large clove garlic, minced
  • Canola oil, or vegetable oil, for satueing
  • 2 tablespoons unsalted butter
  • Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper, to taste
  • Parmesan cheese, freshly grated, for garnish

Method

  • Step 1

    Place potatoes in pot of heavily salted, cold water and bring to a boil. Once boiling, remove from heat, drain and transfer potatoes to a parchment lined baking sheet. Let cool slightly.

  • Step 2

    Meanwhile, combine garlic and parsley in a small bowl and set aside.

  • Step 3

    Heat enough oil to completely coat the bottom of a large skillet over high heat. Pat potatoes dry with a paper towel to remove any remaining moisture. Once oil is barely smoking, carefully add potatoes. If potatoes are too crowded in the pan, you will need to work in batches. Move potatoes around so that all sides are cooked evenly. Cook until potatoes are crispy and golden brown on the exterior, about 8 minutes. Carefully pour off any excess oil in the pan. Turn heat to low and add butter. Toss until melted, about 1 minute. Take pan off heat, add parsley mixture and stir to combine. Season with salt and black pepper. Top with Parmesan and serve immediately.

Pommes Persillade Recipe | The Feedfeed (2024)

FAQs

What is the difference between Persillade and Gremolata? ›

Gremolata is a mixture of chopped parsley, garlic, and lemon zest. Persillade (pronounced “per-see-odd”) is simply chopped parsley and garlic. Although these are not technically sauces, I use them as a fresh bright finish to sprinkle over roasted or braised meats, pastas, and anything grilled.

What does pommes persillade translate to? ›

Pommes Persillade (Potatoes with Parsley and Garlic) Read reviews! Crispy diced potatoes tossed in melted butter, garlic, and parsley is the ultimate side dish.

What does the French word persillade mean? ›

per·​sil·​lade. ¦persē¦äd, -sə¦yäd. : dressed with or containing parsley.

What does persillade taste like? ›

What Persillade Sauce Tastes Like. Persillade sauce is traditionally made with fresh rather than dried parsley, so naturally it has a bright, herbaceous flavor. Persillade sauce also calls for raw garlic rather than roasted garlic or garlic powder, making the flavor more pungent.

What do the French call fried potatoes? ›

In France and other French-speaking countries, fried potatoes are formally pommes de terre frites, but more commonly pommes frites, patates frites, or simply frites.

What does France call French fries? ›

While historians dispute when and where our beloved fries originated, calling them french fries is uniquely American. In France and Belgium, they are simply "pommes frites" or fried potatoes. Chunks of fried potatoes in Spain are patatas fritas, and the Brits know them simply as chips.

What is pommes de terre Robuchon? ›

Can mashed potatoes be forever memorable? Oui! Especially if the recipe comes from “Chef of the Century” Joël Robuchon. With just four ingredients – potato, butter, milk, salt – his legendary Purée de Pommes de Terre recipe takes the humble potato and turns it into something impossibly elegant and silky and oh so rich.

What are German Pommes? ›

[ˈpɔməs] plural. (inf) chips pl (Brit), (French) fries pl.

What is another name for a gremolata? ›

gremolata (also called gremolada) is an Italian chopped herb condiment or dressing made with lemon zest, chopped parsley, and garlic.

Is gremolata similar to chimichurri? ›

Chimichurri Offers A More Assertive Flavor Than Gremolata

Both sauces are herbal in nature, sharing the freshness of chopped parsley with garlic's pungent earthiness as a central flavoring. However, the condiment's further additions greatly alter the resultant character.

What's the difference between chimichurri and gremolata? ›

A big difference here is the absence of oil, as gremolata doesn't have any olive oil and chimichurri does. This makes gremolata less of a condiment-style sauce and more along the lines of a flavor-enhancing garnish.

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