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How To Keep Your Instant Mash A State Secret

easy mashed potato

easy mashed potato

“In the end I always want mashed potatoes. Mashed potatoes. Nothing like mashed potatoes when you are feeling blue. Nothing like getting into bed with a bowl of hot mashed potatoes already loaded with butter and methodically adding a thin, cold slice of butter to every forkful. The problem with mashed potatoes though, is that they require almost as much hard work as crisp potatoes, and when you’re feeling blue the last thing you feel like is hard work. Of course, you can always get someone to make the mashed potatoes for you, but let’s face it: the reason you are blue is that there isn’t anyone to make them for you. As a result most people don’t have nearly enough mashed potatoes in their lives, and when they do, it’s almost always at the wrong time”

Nora Ephron, Heartburn

 

Acutely observed….. but wrong!

If you’re on your own, cheating at mashed potatoes will just make you smug.

If however, you are making mashed potatoes for others, then it’s the eleventh commandment,

“Thou shalt not be found out!”

that you have to obey.

With this cheats’ recipe, for people who hate peeling and fiddling around with mashers etc, you WON’T BE.

I wholly agree with the aliens in the advertisement below who are falling about at the mere idea of it all. It is SO simple, if you use cup measures, and the tin of evaporated milk, there isn’t even any weighing, measuring…no cooking. What’s not to like?

Make sure you get out a couple of real potatoes and put them well in sight.

Just don’t tell your guests…. and don’t tell your doctor.


Other uses for Smash? In France, a cool individual was caught by police sniffing white powder off his mobile phone. Taken ‘down to the station’ he confessed to sniffing cocaine. But he was freed after tests showed that his coke was mashed potato powder.


Recipe for state-secret instant mash

Serves 3-4

Ingredients

Method

  1. All you have to do is mix the whole lot together with a fork. Heat in a microwave for three minutes on 850 power, stirring in the middle. You may find it is still a bit solid, or you may prefer your mash a bit sloppier, in which case just add a bit more boiled water or milk or cream – but do this right at the end when you are sure of the consistency. You can add liquid but you can’t take it away!
  2. There are lot of optional, cold ingredients to include, see below for ideas – if the mixture gets too cold, simply heat up again in the microwave, or, stirring briskly, in a saucepan on the hob.

What else can you add to mashed potato?

Try:

“It comes with a small silver terrine of white gloop, which she informs me is pommes aligot.
Pomme à la go?
Quickly cooked apples?
Why didn’t I listen properly in French?”

Grace Dent, Hungry

….or lobster.

If you want to sample a professional version of this, go to Parsons. The Infatuation Instagram feed tells us:

“This lobster mash is the kind of thing that Henry VIII probably ate for elevenses after napping on a mound of peacock feathers”.

Add spring onions and it makes it into Northern Irish champ

Quotes about mash

“What happens in this type of environment is that people tend to come back to comfort food, the food that reminds them of how they grew up,” said Rafael Oliviera, international zone president at Kraft Heinz….

…Data from market researcher Kantar showed the rise was particularly sharp for old-fashioned foodstuffs such as suet, instant mashed potato and canned meats, all of which more than doubled in the week to March 22 from a year earlier.”

Judith Evans in The Financial Times, 25 April 2020

“Nigella Lawson succeeded in persuading many people that it wasn’t quitting, but engaging in, the kitchen that could liberate you. ‘What I’m doing here,’ she once said, ‘is seeking to offer protection from life, solely through the means of potato, butter and cream. There are times when only mashed potato will do.’”

William Sitwell, A History Of Food In 100 Recipes

What to do with leftover mash

You can make leftover mash into potato cakes.

Get some vegetable oil – sufficient to shallow fry ((2 cm/½” deep minimum) – to nearly smoke point. If you have about a cup of mash, add in a finely chopped shallot, some salt, pepper, and maybe some dried herbs, about three tablespoons of plain flour and an egg. Mix the lot together. They need to be stiff enough to form into potato cakes that will stay together, so if the mix is still a bit loose add another tablespoon or so of flour.

Put a generous quantity of flour on a board, and form the mix into small (6cm/1½” diameter) cakes. Shallow fry, turning when golden on the bottom.

Serve with smoked salmon, crème fraîche and lemon segments. Or, as they do in LA:

“The furthest I’ve ever travelled for a hangover was a 90-minute taxi from north-east Los Angeles to République, a café near the La Brea Tar Pits. In part, the LA traffic was to blame for the length of the journey. But it was all about the potato pancake with creamy hollandaise and soft poached eggs. I needed a cure. The pancake was it.” 

Rosanna Dodds, The Financial Times, December 30 2022
how to make potato cakes

Famous smash advertisement

Smash won awards for its 1970s instant mash ads starring gobsmacked Martians watching humans peeling potatoes

Do you still really want to make real mash?

The best method is to follow the instructions of Agnes Jekyll, writing in Kitchen Essays in the 1920s.

“…a purée of mashed potatoes, not that stiff and tasteless compound so often offered, but the French variety made by boiling and draining the potatoes, and then mashing them in a saucepan lightly rubbed with a clove of garlic and mixed with a liberal amount of butter, and either boiling milk, or, as some cooks prefer, with a little stock from the soup-pot, which makes it a little browner; and this need be hardly thicker than a well-made apple sauce.”

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