Potato Types
Potato Glossary: Potato Varieties & Dishes ~ A & B
BAECKOFFE
A French meat stew dish from the Alsace region of France. Its name translates to “baker’s oven” in German. Baeckeoffe consists of sliced potatoes, beef, lamb, leeks,onions and pork, marinated overnight in wine. The dish usually seasoned with garlic,marjoram, parsley and thyme. The dish is said to have been prepared by women on Saturday evenings before church, and left with the baker until they would pick it up on Sunday afternoon.
|
BAKED POTATO |
![]() Baked potato. Photo © Idaho Potato Commission. |
|
BANGERS AND MASH
BATATA HARRA |
![]() Bangers and mash. Photo by Kelly Cline | IST. |
|
BLUE POTATO
BUTTER POTATO
Continue To Page 5: Potato Types C To J
|
![]() |
Types Of Potato C To J
CHEESE FRIES
A popular snack dish in the U.S., cheese fries are French fries, drizzled with cheese (in restaurants, Velveeta is often used). Added toppings include bacon bits, chili and sour cream.
CHIP or POTATO CHIP
Chips are very thin slices of potato, usually deep-fried. They can also be baked. Per the history of potato chips, they originated at a resort in Saratoga Springs, New York, where a patron repeatedly complained that his potatoes weren’t crisp enough. The frustrated chef sliced the potatoes paper-thin and fried them to a crisp. They turned out to be a huge hit, and potato chips became America’s favorite snack food. Here’s a recipe to your own homemade potato chips.
|
CRISP
CROQUETTE EARLY POTATO |
![]() Potato croquettes. Photo by Deramaen Rama | Wikimedia. |
|
FINGERLING POTATO |
![]() French Fingerling potatoes. Photo © Idaho Potato Commission. |
GNOCCHI
Pronounced NYO-kee, these are potato dumplings served with a sauce. While made with potato instead of wheat flour, gnocchi are still considered pasta. The word “pasta” means paste, and gnocchi are made from a paste of potatoes. Here’s a gnocchi recipe.
|
GOLDRUSH POTATO HACHI PARMENTIER |
![]() Goldrush potatoes. Photo courtesy Gurneys.com. |
|
HASH BROWN or HASHBROWN |
![]() Hash brown or potatoes. Photo courtesy Mortons The Steakhouse, which makes terrific hash browns. |
|
IDAHO POTATO
JACKET
JACKET POTATO |
![]() The classic Idaho potato. Photo © Idaho Potato Commission. |
|
KENNEBEC POTATO |
![]() Kennebec potatoes. Photo courtesy Gurneys.org. |
LARATTE or PRINCESS LARATTE
POTATO
Laratte potatoes area type of fingerling potato, small and creamy with golden flesh. They were introduced to America from France, and were traditionally used by Frenchrestaurants.
|
LATKE or POTATO PANCAKE
LONG WHITE POTATO |
![]() Potato latkes. Photo by Kelly Cline | IST. |
|
MASHED POTATO |
![]() Mashed potatoes. Photo © Idaho Potato Commission. |
These have more starch and lower moisture, and have a mealy texture, which results in fluffy mashed potatoes. There are also instant mashed potatoes, but they don’t hold a candle to the real thing.
NEW POTATO
New potatoes are immature potatoes harvested in the spring and early summer. Their skin is thinner and more delicate than mature potatoes, and they are very easy to peel. These are creamy, low in starch and high in moisture and low in starch (they haven’t had the time to convert their sugar into starch). New potatoes have a shorter shelf life than mature potatoes and must be used up quickly. “True news” potatoes, available at farmer’s markets, are freshly dug immature potatoes with uncured skins.
Potato Types: O To Z
| OKINAWA or OKINAWAN SWEET POTATO
A purple-fleshed sweet potato used extensively in Hawaiian cuisine. The outside is tan in color, similar to a russet potato; but the flesh is a bright magenta color. They can be cooked like any sweet potato: baked, boiled, candied, mashed, roasted, scalloped or steamed. Look for them in Asian markets. The Okinawa sweet potato is not related to the purple yam, ube, which is popular in Filipino cuisine and creates dishes of intense purple color. |
![]() Okinawa sweet potatoes. Photo courtesy Melissas.com. |
It is a member of the sweet potato family: order Solanales, family Convolvulaceae, genus Ipomoea, species, I. batatas. Its subspecies is Ipomoea batatas cv. Ayamurasaki. The white potato is of the same order, but diverges from the sweet potato at that level. The taxonomy of the white potato is: order Solanales, familySolanaceae, genus Solanum, species: S. tuberosum.
The potato is a starchy, tuberous crop from the perennial plant Solanum tuberosum, a member of the nightshade family, Solanaceae. The genus Solanum also includes the tomato, among other plants. Potatoes grew wild in the Peruvian Andes, were introduced outside the Andes region 400 ago, and used as hog feed by Europeans for fear they were poisonous like some other members of the Nightshade family. Thanks to the efforts of a French medical officer*, they have become an integral part of much of the world’s cuisine: Potatoes are the world’s fourth-largest food crop, following rice, wheat and maize (corn).
*Convinced that potatoes caused leprosy, the French Parliament banned cultivation of potatoes in 1748. Potatoes as human food had one champion, a French army medical officer named Antoine-Augustine Parmentier. While a prisoner of war, he was forced to eat potatoes and found the “poison” theory simply wasn’t true. In 1772, the Paris Faculty of Medicine finally proclaimed that potatoes were edible for humans, though it took a famine in 1785 for the French to start eating them in earnest.
| POTATO PANCAKE
See latke.
A popular dish throughout the world,potato salad is a side dish that can be served hot, chilled and at room temperature. Chilled, it is a favorite summer picnic and barbecue dish. Potato salad can be dressed with oil and vinegar, mustard vinaigrette, mayonnaise and combinations of these. It is typically made with boiled potatoes. Additional ingredients can range from apples, bacon, celery, hard-cooked eggs, onions or scallions, even cheese. For potato salad, it is best to choose waxy potatoes low in starch to hold the shape: new potatoes, red-skinned potatoes or white-round potatoes. Here’s a recipe for Mediterranean Potato Salad. |
![]() This beautiful potato salad is simple yet sensational: purple and yellow potatoes in a whole-grain mustard vinaigrette with chopped chives. © Svetlana Kolpakova | Dreamstime. |
|
PLE POTATO or PURPLE |
![]() Poutine. Photo courtesy Wandering Chopsticks. |
| POUTINE
Poutine is a popular Canadian potato dish, French fries with cheese curd and gravy. It’s the north-of-the-border version ofcheese fries with ketchup. |
![]() Poutine. Photo by Jonathunder | Wikimedia. |
| RED POTATO or RED JACKET POTATO
This group of potatoes, commonly found in supermarkets, have red skin (the “jacket”) and smooth and waxy white flesh. A firm, smooth and moist potato that holds its shape when cooked, reds are best steamed, boiled, roasted or scalloped. They are popularly used in potato salads and gratins. Varieties include the California Red, Huckleberry, La Soda, Klondike Rose and Red Norland. Red potatoes can be substituted for white in any recipe that requires waxy potatoes. |
![]() La soda red-jacketed potatoes. Photo © Idaho Potato Commission. |
ROSTI
Rosti is a Swiss potato dish. It originated as a breakfast dish, but is now eaten for other meals, and is considered a national dish. It is made with fried grated potato, and is usually shaped in a round pie plate and served in a wedge (although smaller, latke-size rosti are made, as in the photo at top of page). Sour cream is a popular garnish.
ROUND WHITE POTATO
Round White Potatoes are all-purpose, creamy and have a medium amount of starch. They are available year-round, and keep their shape well when cooked.
|
RUSSET POTATO |
![]() A Russet Norkotah potato. Photo © Idaho Potato Commission. |
| RUSSIAN BANANA POTATO
The Russian banana potato has been called the “superstar” of fingerling potatoes. The waxy potato was developed in the Baltic region of the former USSR and is now grown worldwide. It became a favorite potato among discerning chefs, offering a firm, creamy texture and wonderful flavor whether roasted, boiled or steamed.
|
![]() Russian banana potatoes. Photo by Claire Freierman | THE NIBBLE. |
|
SHEPHERD’S PIE
|
![]() Shepherd’s pie. Photo courtesy McCormick. |
| SPANISH OMELETTE See tortilla de patata, below. There are many different shapes, sizes and colors of sweet potato: orange, purple, red and tan varieties can be found. However, none of them is related to the African yam. The sweet potato diverges from the sweet potato at that order level, Solanales. The taxonomy of the sweet potato: order Solanales, family Convolvulaceae, genus Ipomoea, species, I. batatas. The taxonomy of the white potato: order Solanales, family Solanaceae, genusSolanum, species: S. tuberosum. Try this recipe for Sweet Potato Salad. |
![]() Sweet potato. Photo courtesy 5ADay.gov. |
|
TATER TOTS
|
Tater tots. Photo by Marcus Small | Wikimedia. |
|
UBE YAM or PURPLE YAM |
![]() The ube yam. Photo courtesy Burnt Lumpia. |
Why are there so many different varieties of each basic potato type? Hybrids were developed to take advantage of different climates and soil types. Growers now have the benefit of getting the highest yields given their topography and microclimate.
|
WAXY POTATO |
![]() Klondike Goldust potatoes. Photo © Idaho Potato Commission. |
|
YELLOW POTATO YUKON GOLD POTATO
YAM |
![]() On top, Yellow Fin potato. Immediately above, Yukon Gold potatoes. Photos © copyright Idaho Potato Commission. |
|
|
Unfortunately, sweet potatoes were referred to as yams by growers and grocers, as far back as the 19th century, in order to differentiate the white-fleshed variety of sweet potato from the softer, orange variety. The latter became known as a yam (since real yams are white-fleshed, even the analogy is incorrect). Since real African yams had not yet made it to the U.S., there was no confusion at the time. They became popular in the Caribbean and now can be found in supermarkets that carry tropical produce. Now it’s hard to make people understand the difference between sweet potatoes and yams (but we spell it out for you in detail). |
![]() A section of cut yam. |


























Tater tots. Photo by Marcus Small | Wikimedia. 




You must be logged in to post a comment.