Author Notes: With a decade of experimentation making latkes, my favorites are made from a combination of russet potatoes, sweet potato, parsnip, yellow onion and fresh ginger. I like the addition of fresh milled pepper and fennel. Peanut oil is best for frying these if you want that golden crunchy brown on the outside without such fear of charring. If you have allergies, you want to use a substitute oil with a high smoke point. Of course there is always schmaltz; I probably shaved years off my life using a goose fat version, for frying, while I lived in Germany, but I am staying away from that now. I also love serving these with sour cream and homemade applesauce. If you have kosher company, (or are kosher) you can’t mix sour cream with the use of animal fat….so another good reason to stay away. – Sagegreen —Sagegreen
Food52 Review: We love the lacy, tangled appearance of these deep golden latkes. The mix of sweet potato, unpeeled Russets and parsnip keeps the pancakes from being stodgy, and the fennel and fresh ginger tickle your tongue in the most pleasant of ways. It may seem like Sagegreen calls for an awful lot of flour, but there’s no trace of that raw flour taste once these guys are fried. These latkes are great with sour cream and applesauce, but they’re also pretty addictive with nothing more than a shower of fine sea salt. – A&M —The Editors
Serves: 4-6
Ingredients
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1
sweet potato, pared (about 1 cup)
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1
parsnip, pared (about 1/2 cup)
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1
yellow onion (@1/2 cup)
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2-3
russet potatoes (or yukon gold) (@2 cups)
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1
inch fresh ginger, peeled and grated (@1 oz)
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1
teaspoon kosher salt
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1/2
teaspoon fresh milled ground fennel seed
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1/2
teaspoon fresh milled black pepper
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2
eggs, beaten
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3
ounces flour
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peanut or other high smoke point oil
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homemade applesauce for serving
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sour cream, fage, or creme fraiche for serving
Directions
- Hand grate the sweet potato, onion, and parsnip using the large holes into a large bowl first. I think hand grating is the only way to go for these.
- Wash and scrub the russet potatoes very well, leaving the skins on. Remove any imperfections. Grate these last into the bowl with the other vegetables. Add the salt, pepper, fennel, and ginger. Let rest a few minutes.
- Using a colander (or cheesecloth if you prefer) wring all the excess moisture from the mix. Repeat, then return to the bowl. You can also squeeze handfuls of the mix in your hands to help.
- Mix in the beaten eggs and flour.
- Generously coat the bottom of a heavy pan with peanut oil (or other suitable oil). The oil need not be deeper than 1/8 inch, if even that. If you prefer thicker latkes, then you might have up to1/4 inch oil. Heat to medium high until a drop of liquid would sizzle in the pan.
- Working in small batches ladle the mix to the heated pan to form 5-7 latkes with about a 3 inch diameter and about a 1/4 inch thickness after pressing down gently on the mix with a spatula. Fry each one on one side until golden brown, then flip and cook the other side until golden. Try to keep the depth of oil as low as possible, but make sure the vegetables cook through- soft on the inside, crunchy on the outside. Drain on paper towels. You should have 15-20 latkes from this recipe.
- Serve warm with generous dollops of sour cream and preferably homemade heirloom applesauce.
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Photo by Bobbi Lin
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A tableau of ingredients: sweet potato, russet potato, parsnip, ginger, flour, onion, egg and fennel seed.
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When making latkes, the key is to get everything measured and ready before you grate.
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This may look like a lot of flour, but it's just right.
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The parsnip and sweet potato get peeled, but the Russets just get a good scrub.
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Use the coarse side of a box grater, or your food processor's grating attachment.
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Merrill found that parsnips are a bit tougher to grate than potatoes.
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When you grate the onion, make sure to keep your face away from the bowl — you don't want any stray onion juice in your eye!
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The russets go last, as they are quickest to brown.
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Amanda takes over for a bit.
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In go the fennel, salt, black pepper and fresh ginger (also grated, but on a microplane).
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After a few minutes, the vegetables release a lot of their liquid, and it's time to squeeze! Four hands are better than two for this job.
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First egg, and then flour are folded into the potato mixture.
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Sagegreen calls for peanut oil or another oil with a high smoking point; we used canola.
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A few minutes on each side, and the pancakes should be golden brown.
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