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How To Cook The Best Ever Baked Potatoes In Their Jackets And What To Stuff Them With

perfect potatoes in their jackets

How to cook the best baked potato in its jacket.

“Meanwhile we have the great alternative, the British baked potato…. what on earth would ‘baked potatoes’ be in Italian? We will never run out of them because they are available by the sackful up and down the British Isles. Why bother with that ultimate soggy alternative, a cooked aubergine? It has been struggling to become a staple but has only become sludge….I will set about the greatest British bake-off of all, seasonal potatoes, beautifully coloured, and refilled with their mashed up flesh and butter.”

Robin Lane Fox, in The Financial Times, February 2017

Wholly agree (well, not sure about the aubergines….). But butter is important. Serve these with salt and top quality butter…. or try some of the ideas further down this post.

NB these potatoes take anything between an hour and an hour and a half. Allow time.

Method for cooking the best baked potato in its jacket

  1. Heat the oven to 220°C.
  2. scrub the potatoes clean.
  3. make a 2” (4 cm) slit with a knife in the skin.
  4. rub with a bit of olive oil and sprinkle with a little flaked salt (this draws the moisture out of the skins and makes them extra crispy).
  5. cook them for about an hour to an hour and a half – much depends on the size of the potato, whether you keep your potatoes in the fridge (you shouldn’t), whether your oven is up to speed … and other conditions. If, when you take them out and squeeze them a bit they start to open at the slit, they give a bit, and the skin has gone a little crispy, then they are ready.

Forgotten to put them in the oven in time? Looking for a fuel-saving approach? Try this method.

Obviously cooking potatoes in the microwave isn’t ideal, but many is the time that I have forgotten they were in the plan and it’s five minutes to lunch. This combination method is not a bad compromise. This method uses about half the fuel.

1. Heat the (normal) oven to 220°C if you think you have time.
2. Prick the potatoes four or five times with a fork.
3. If you have two medium-sized potatoes cook them for six minutes on 1000W (full power).
4. Turn over and cook another three minutes, again on 1000W.
5. Score down the centre lightly with a knife – you may find they are now ready, but they will still benefit from a bit of normal baking if you have the time. If you have panting hoards and they are not done simply put them back and go on microwaving until they are done. Otherwise…
6. …..bake in the oven as long as you can – ideally twenty minutes – using baking prongs if you have them.

You can buy these prongs – you impale a potato onto each spike – which will help the potatoes to cook more quickly.

Which potatoes to use for baking

Estima, Marfona or Viking are all good…. also King Edward and Maris Piper. And Picasso….

“Christopher [Lloyd] was the master of the baked potato, and under his tutelage I can to have a great love for them. The first step is to choose the right variety of potato. For us at Great Dixter there can be only one choice, and that is Picasso. It is the right size, with a good, sweet-flavoured skin (not too thick) and fresh-tasting flesh.”

Aaron Bertelsen, The Great Dixter Cookbook

Things to do with jacket potatoes:

Jackie Onassis was a devotee of Beluga caviar and sour cream.

In an ideal world what should you use to cook a baked potato?

You can cook a baked potato in an ordinary oven. You can cook a baked potato on a barbecue (as long as you can bury it in the coals and cook it for long enough). But I agree with James Max in the Financial Times (January 2022) that an Aga is the pinacle instrument for the perfect jacket potato when he says:

“More importantly, the most delicious thing in the world is a baked potato cooked in one. The next best thing is that no matter how much mess you make with spitting oil and fat, the hot box just burns it off, cleaning itself like magic.”

Other quotes


“He thought back on years and years of winter evenings: the kitchen windows black outside, the corner furry with gathering darkness, the four of them seated at the chipped enamel table meticulously filling scooped-out potato skins with butter.”

Anne Tyler, The Accidental Tourist

“He suggests you use the root, ‘roasted under the embers, or otherwise, opened with a knife, the pulp is buttered in the skin of which it will take up a good quantity–season with salt and pepper … the skin has a pleasant crispness’. Baked potato with lashings of butter … John Evelyn [living in the 17th century] really was ahead of his time.”

William Sitwell, A History of Food in 100 Recipes

“Dickon made the stimulating discovery that in the wood in the park outside the garden where Mary had first found him piping to the wild creatures there was a deep little hollow where you could build a sort of tiny oven with stones and roast potatoes and eggs in it. Roasted eggs were a previously unknown luxury and very hot potatoes with salt and fresh butter in them were fit for a woodland king- besides being deliciously satisfying.”

Frances Hodgson Burnett, The Secret Garden

“BAKED POTATO WARS

In New York a battle rages over the best caviar-topped baked tatties, with piano bar the Nines taking on the mighty Caviar Kaspia.”

The Times, June 2023

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