Hand drawn image of Potato

Potato

Solanum tuberosum

We choose the potato varieties that taste best and allow them to grow slowly to develop maximum flavour. The variety changes every week, each with their own cooking virtues.

Image of Potato being produced

In the kitchen

How to store Potato

Potatoes like to be kept dirty and in the dark. Leave them in their paper bag and store somewhere cool; they keep for several weeks. However new and salad potatoes do prefer the fridge.

Prep & Cooking tips

Peeling will depend on the dish you plan on cooking – never for baked, always for mashed. Put potatoes in a sink full of water and leave for a few minutes to let the mud loosen and settle on the bottom. Then either scrub or peel, depending on how you’re going to use them.

Waxy varieties are best boiled, used in salads or sliced for gratins. Floury potato varieties are spot on for mash, chips, roasting and baking. Potatoes are wonderful at soaking up surrounding flavour. If boiling, season the water with salt and consider adding a few aromatics such as bay, garlic and thyme to the water too. You’ll be amazed how much flavour they take on.

Easy ideas

1. Season at the start

Don’t underestimate how well potatoes soak up flavour and seasoning from their surroundings. If boiling them for mash or the early stages of a roasty, make sure you season the water with salt. Aromatics such as garlic, bay and thyme will have a noticeable impact on the final flavour, too. Likewise, if baking them sliced in a gratin dish, make sure the cream or stock you use is seasoned well before you add it. Even a humble baked potato will benefit from a rub of salt after it has been washed; it makes for a crispy, moreish skin.

2. Use your leftovers

Leftover spuds in all their forms can be put to good use in a thrifty kitchen. Old roasties can be sautéed in a pan as the backbone of a breakfast hash; a few mushrooms, chopped bacon and a fried egg to finish. Mash can be refashioned into fishcakes or a clumsy bubble and squeak with a few wilted greens; you can even freeze it until you are in desperate need of a topping for your cottage pie.

3. Perfect partners

It is hard to think of much that a potato couldn’t pair well with. There are, however, some things with which they shine. You can’t go wrong with dairy in all forms; if you have ever eaten tartiflette or dauphinoise you’ll be in no doubt. Fresh herbs, too, be it a few sprigs of rosemary in the roasting tray of some chopped parsley in your mash. Don’t shy away from the garlic; just think chips and aioli.

4. Leftover roasties

If by any chance you have some leftover roasties, they can be put to good use in a thrifty kitchen. They can transform into a clumsy bubble and squeak with a few wilted greens; or, chopped and fried, they’ll form the backbone of a breakfast hash, alongside some onions, mushrooms, spinach, and a fried egg to finish.

Goes well with

Spices (Caraway, Cayenne, Cumin, Nutmeg, Saffron)Anchovies

Herbs (Chives, Dill, Lovage, Parsley, Rosemary, Tarragon)

Dairy (Butter, Cream, Hard cheeses)

All meat and fish

Capers

Eggs

Garlic and onion

Lemon

Mustard

Potato recipes

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In the field

  • Neil and Gary Farley stand beside their tractor on their farm in Devon.

    Meet the grower: Neil & Gary Farley , Cullompton, Devon

    Located on sandy land, the Farleys’ farm is perfect for potato growing – it’s their biggest crop at about 70 acres – followed by the root veg, beetroot and the artichokes.

  • James Foskett standing in a field on his farm holding a freshly picked crop of bunched carrots.

    Meet the grower: James Foskett , Woodbridge, Suffolk

    James Foskett farms a rainbow of ten different organic vegetables, including green beans and peas, tasty sweetcorn cobs, bunched carrots, onions and radishes.

UK seasonality

We start the season with new potatoes in early May, moving to salad potatoes in July. For the rest of the year we use maincrop varieties that change as the season progresses.
jan
feb
mar
apr
may
jun
jul
aug
sep
oct
nov
dec

Potato varieties

  • Picture of All-rounder varieties

    All-rounder varieties

    These multi-purpose spuds will serve you well cooked most ways. Varieties include Marfona, Robinta, Romano, Orla, Valor, and Maris Piper.

  • Picture of Floury varieties

    Floury varieties

    Use for the very best roasties, as well as baking, mashing and chips. Varieties include King Edward, Cosmos, Desiree and Sante.

  • Picture of Waxy varieties

    Waxy varieties

    Boil and use in salads. Varieties include Colleen, Charlotte, Lady Crystal, Lady Felicia, Jersey Royal, Maris Peer, Pink Fir Apple, Nicola and Novello.

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