Tangy, Garlicky Mashed Potatoes

Although still a starchy side dish, potatoes taste lighter when mashed with vinegar instead of cream and can be easily altered for vegans. Learn more at TwiceasTasty.com.
The garden has been tucked away, with one final visit this week to pluck spinach blanketed by our first real snow. We’re finishing off the last of the box-ripened tomatoes too, and my meals have started to feature dry-stored fruit and vegetables: apples, cabbage, carrots, beets, squash, and potatoes.

The mashed potatoes recipe that I share this week in my Twice as Tasty column for the Flathead Beacon lands nicely on a Thanksgiving or other holiday table. Although still a starchy side dish, potatoes taste lighter when mashed with vinegar instead of cream. The vinegar, roasted garlic, and chives pack flavor into these potatoes, so vegetarians can skip the turkey or beef gravy or contrast the tang with rich mushroom gravy or tart homemade cranberry sauce. To make these mashed potatoes vegan—and extra fluffy—use extra-virgin olive oil instead of butter.
Learn to make Tangy, Garlicky Mashed Potatoes

Homemade Pan-Fried Potato Gnocchi

It can be easy to write off certain recipes as too much work, but sometimes the effort really is worth it. That’s how I feel about gnocchi. Learn to make Homemade Pan-Fried Potato Gnocchi. Learn more at TwiceasTasty.com.
It can be easy to write off certain recipes as too much work, but sometimes the effort really is worth it. That’s how I feel about the detailed recipe for gnocchi that I share this week in my Twice as Tasty column for the Flathead Beacon. When I crave gnocchi, only the scratch-made version satisfies me.

Gnocchi take both hands-on and rest time, and even with a large batch, the results only last a couple of meals—although they do freeze well. Once I start the project and get my hands right in the dough, I find it soothing to feel how it comes together and to repeat the roll, cut, and imprint process until I have dozens of neat rows of dumplings lined up on baking sheets.

Potato gnocchi also became more fun to make when I found just the right balance of ingredients and techniques to use my homegrown potatoes yet keep them light and fluffy. When testing showed that a local chef’s recommendation to pan-fry the dumplings produced less gummy gnocchi than boiling, along with a lightly crisped surface, making gnocchi became one of my favorite rainy day kitchen projects.
Learn to make Homemade Pan-Fried Potato Gnocchi

Potato, Mushroom, and Spinach Curry

Keep whole spices in your kitchen to grind at home in small, fragrant batches and have a ready unground supply for curries, pickles, and more. Learn more at TwiceasTasty.com.
Many of my most popular workshops began as requests from readers, including one of my favorites: Indian Spices: Marvelous Masalas. The techniques I share apply to all sorts of spices, whether you’re making a spice mix for pumpkin pie or one for a curry. You can get a taste of these techniques in the recipe I share this week in my Twice as Tasty column for the Flathead Beacon.

The blend of spices that go into this curry recipe often feature in preground masalas, but here the whole spices are mixed directly into the dish for bright bursts of flavor. Whole spices hold onto their flavor far longer than ground ones, so transitioning to keeping whole ones in your kitchen not only lets to grind them at home in small batches that stay fresh and fragrant but also gives you a ready unground supply for curries, pickles, your own spice blends, and more.
Learn to make Potato, Mushroom, and Spinach Curry

Bagna Cauda-Style Mashed Potatoes

As the first perennial edibles show off their bright green tops, I snip handfuls onto whatever I’m using up from last season’s harvest. Learn more at TwiceasTasty.com.
This time of year, I’m always pairing what remains of last season’s harvest with the first of spring’s perennial edibles. As they push through the ground and show off their bright green tops, I can’t help but snip a handful at a time onto whatever I’m trying to use up from dry storage or the freezer.

That approach to homegrown produce applies to this week’s Twice as Tasty column for the Flathead Beacon. In my unheated mudroom, the last of the potatoes that we dug and cured in October have begun to sprout in their storage box, an old, lidless cooler with a few shims in the bottom to allow air circulation and a towel thrown over the top to keep the light out and the potatoes from turning green. They’re still firm and ideal for mashed potatoes. The final garlic heads and onion bulbs are also trying to sprout but haven’t softened. All it takes is a sprinkling of the emerging onion tops cut from perennial walking onions to make the storage vegetables worthy of a spring meal.
Learn to make Bagna Cauda-Style Mashed Potatoes

Golden Onion and Potato Frittata

Visualize frittata as a crustless quiche or open-face omelet that relies on a few core ingredients but can be filled with an array of flavors. Learn more at TwiceasTasty.com.
I was served my first frittata, an Italian dish, by a Spanish woman while I was visiting a Greek island. I loved the meal so much—and it’s affordable price on a backpacker’s budget—that I ate frittata daily during my stay.

Visualize this baked egg dish as a crustless quiche or open-face omelet. When I make it today, the core ingredients remain the same each time I enjoy it. I share that basic recipe this week in my Twice as Tasty column for the Flathead Beacon, but it’s just the start to what you can put into a frittata. During my initial weeklong frittata fest, the chef layered tomatoes and basil, peppers and greens, or eggplant and summer squash over this base, always with feta mixed in. At home, I might use mushrooms, arugula, asparagus, spinach, carrots, and chard, swapping in whatever cheese seems to fit best.
Learn to make Golden Onion and Potato Frittata

Beer-Infused Potato Chowder

Colorful potatoes look pretty when chopped, but expect their bright tones to alter mashed and blended dishes. Learn more at TwiceasTasty.com.
When I made a batch of potato, beer, and cheese soup so that I could take photos for my Twice as Tasty column for the Flathead Beacon, I immediately knew I’d have to write about my favorite potato varieties: The photos showed the rosy tone imparted by throwing a couple of my favorite red-fleshed potatoes into the pot.

Ever since we started growing them, we’ve been fans of Terra Rosa potatoes for their prolific plants, creamy flesh, and long storage life, with their pure red coloring inside and out a fun bonus to growing and eating them. They look so pretty alongside white-, yellow-, and purple-fleshed varieties when chopped into a potato salad or breakfast hash. But expect their bright color to also shine through in homemade gnocchi, mashers, and this week’s beer and cheese chowder recipe.
Learn to make Beer-Infused Potato Chowder

Potato Salad with Pickles and Creamy Dressing

Pickled vegetables and a mild, creamy dressing present a dichotomy of flavors as a complementary pairing. Learn more at TwiceasTasty.com.
In the early 2000s, I lived in St. Petersburg, Russia, for close to a year. I’d been traveling through Europe and northern Africa for much of the year before that and was drawn to the local flavors in each country and region I visited. Russia presented an interesting dichotomy: a love of all things pickled yet little tolerance for anything spicy or powerfully flavored.

The salad and dressing recipe I share this week in my Twice as Tasty column for the Flathead Beacon shows how this dichotomy can be a complementary pairing, which is perhaps one reason both tangy and mild flavors were so popular in Russia. In contrast, the blend that many Westerners know as Russian dressing, which often contains chili sauce, horseradish, and other hot or sharp flavors, would have been too much for my Russian friends. They even found my homemade mac and cheese, with its dash of mustard powder, too spicy. But the tangy combination of pickled vegetables and sour cream in this potato salad was just fine.
Learn to make Potato Salad with Pickles and Creamy Dressing