Real Food Forever

Real Food Forever

Potatoes and High Heat

Grill plate with large serving of roasted potatoes.
This is the mushroom meatloaf with roasted potatoes and cucumber salad.
These roasted potatoes are about the only potato recipe I make any more except for holiday mashed. Leave the skin on because the most nutritious part of a potato is the skin; which makes the smaller, red potatoes healthier too (more skin). Please try to get small, organic, colorful potatoes, either red or purple. Remember the color pigments in foods play an important role in protecting your cells from damage.

Although I would love to eat fries and chips on a daily basis if they were healthy, we need to be very careful when cooking potatoes to avoid acrylamide. Acrylamide is a chemical used mainly in making some dyes and plastics, and is found in some caulks, food packaging, adhesives, and cigarette smoke. Acrylamide has been shown to cause neurological damage and considerable cancer risk. Unfortunately, it’s also created when cooking very starchy foods like potatoes at high temperatures, therefore, French fries and potato chips have the highest levels of acrylamide.[1] It’s important to be conscious of the chemical reaction of cooking potatoes, cut back, use high-quality ingredients, and consider French fries a junk food not a vegetable.

This recipe idea came from the back section of the book The Fat Fallacy.[2] There are also good recipes for salmon, lasagna, and quite a few other things. I’ll review the book when I talk about fat and how great it is – not doughnut fat, of course, but real food fat. This recipe is also fun for kids to make because they get to sprinkle on all kinds of herbs. Use whichever herbs you like and have on hand; I used them all.

Pan covered with roasted potato ingredients
Here are the potatoes with the herbs sprinkled on top, before baking.

Roasted Potatoes
1-3 potatoes per person depending on the size
Avocado oil
Thyme
Oregano
Rosemary
Parsley
Sea Salt
Preheat oven to 350. Cut the potatoes into small, bite-size pieces. Put parchment paper on a baking pan and spray. Spread the potatoes in a single layer and drizzle them all with oil. Cover the potatoes with as much of the herbs as you like, and sprinkle with sea salt. Bake for 25 minutes. Turn the potatoes and bake for another ten minutes to brown.

 

[1] “Analysis of acrylamide, a carcinogen formed in heated foodstuffs,” Tareke E, Rydberg P, Karlsson P, Eriksson S, Törnqvist M; Journal of Agriculture Food Chemistry, Aug. 2002.

[2] The Fat Fallacy: The French Diet Secrets to Permanent Weight Loss, Will Clower, Harmony, 2003

 

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