How To: Make Hasselback Potatoes (& Other Amazing Baked Spuds)

Make Hasselback Potatoes (& Other Amazing Baked Spuds)

Potatoes are one of cheapest, most nutritious whole foods that you can make and eat. Is it any wonder you can find budget-friendly, low-fat potatoes in every cuisine in the world?

I love simple baked potatoes, but it's always good to change it up. Here are some of my favorite ingenious ways to dress up and enjoy the humble potato.

#1. Hasselback Potatoes

If you've never had Hasselback potatoes before, then you have been missing out. They combine the crispiness and flavor of sautéed or fried potatoes with the creamy softness of baked potatoes. Thank the Swedes for this amazing idea.

Ingredients

  • 4 large Russet potatoes (or Yukon or other starchy potato type)
  • 3 tbsp butter
  • 1 tbsp olive oil
  • Sea salt
  • Pepper and/or herbs to taste

Instructions

  1. Preheat your oven to 425°F degrees.
  2. Scrub and dry your potatoes, leaving the skin on.
  3. Melt the butter and mix with the olive oil.
  4. Place the potato in a large spoon and cut it several times. You want to make thin slices that never go through the entire potato.
  1. Put in a baking dish and drizzle each potato with ½ tbsp of the butter and oil mixture.
  2. Bake for 30-40 minutes, or until the potatoes start to open a bit.
  3. Drizzle each potato with the remaining butter and oil mixture.
  4. Bake for an additional 30 minutes.
  5. Add pepper and herbs to taste.

#2. Hasselback-Inspired Cubed Potatoes with Sriracha Cream Cheese

Follow the directions above with half the amount of butter. Cut the potatoes into cubes instead, taking care not to slice through the bottoms.

Whisk together 2 tbsp of softened cream cheese with 1 tbsp Sriracha. After the potatoes are done, drizzle them with the Sriracha cream cheese topping.

#3. Samosa Baked Potatoes

Spice up your potatoes with all the flavor of Indian samosas with this recipe created by FromAway. Onions, curry, ginger, and mustard transport the everyday potato to another world.

Image via From Away

#4. Breakfast Potatoes Stuffed with Eggs & Bacon

The holy trinity of breakfast foods—eggs, bacon, and potatoes—come together in this neat idea from Gimmesomeoven. Cute and tasty.

Image via Gimmee Some Oven

#5. Lazy Poutine Potatoes

One of my favorite things about visiting Montreal is the poutine, which is the fancy French way of saying fries topped with gravy and cheese curds. Top your baked potatoes with mozzarella and gravy for an easy, satisfying version of poutine.

Image via Cook the Story

Up Your Potato Game Even More...

There are many other ways to elevate your relationship with potatoes, including how to peel a bag of potatoes in a minute, weirdly practical uses for potatoes, why instant mashed potatoes are a pantry essential, and how to make fluffier mashed potatoes without butter or milk. What are your favorite potato hacks?

Just updated your iPhone? You'll find new emoji, enhanced security, podcast transcripts, Apple Cash virtual numbers, and other useful features. There are even new additions hidden within Safari. Find out what's new and changed on your iPhone with the iOS 17.4 update.

Photos by Naomi Imatome-Yun/Food Hacks unless otherwise specified

5 Comments

Wow. I love potatoes but because I have rheumatoid arthritis and night shades are not good for us. But I eat them any way. You have presented some very interesting ways to serve the baked potato. The thing about baked potatoes is they are easy to fix for one person. I'll be trying these ways of fixing them. The one thing I disagree with you about is having instant potatoes in the pantry. To my taste there is few things worse

Lazy Poutine - Good way to use string cheese too. Just slice them up.

Good idea. String cheese is always a winner.

Use a wooden spoon to keep the edge of the knife sharp.
I love hasselback potatoes.

Hasselback potatoes origin.

The original hasselback potatoes don't have the skin. Also breadcrumbs, salt and pepper is sprinkled on the top. Only butter and no oil.

This recipe comes from the Swedish restaurant Hasselbacken that was changed to a restaurant school in the 1940, and the hasselback potatoes was invented by students at the new school.

And yes, use a wooden spoon when cutting.

Share Your Thoughts

  • Hot
  • Latest