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  1. How To Cook Potatoes In Microwave For Potato Salad Recipe - Yahoo Recipe Search

    Potatoes au Gratin
    Yummly
    This potatoes au gratin recipe is a savory staple to have in your side dish repertoire. Made with sliced potatoes in a creamy sauce, these au gratin potatoes are then covered with a generous layer of Manchego cheese and baked until melted and golden on top. Savory, creamy, and cheesy, these potatoes pair wonderfully with steak or pork, roasted vegetables, or a big green salad. This dish is incredibly versatile and goes well with just about anything. It's the ultimate comfort food — a true crowd pleaser. This recipe makes a perfect side dish for weeknight dinners or to serve on a special occasion, such as with a roast for your Christmas feast or with ham for Easter dinner! The best part? This tasty potato recipe has a much shorter cook time than many traditional gratin potatoes recipes due to an untraditional tool — the microwave! This elegant yet easy recipe can be on the table in less than an hour. With just 15 minutes of active prep time, it can even be assembled in advance and cooked later. All you have to do is prepare the recipe as directed, then cover it tightly with plastic wrap, store in the refrigerator, and cook fully before serving. ## What Is The Au Gratin Cooking Method? While "au gratin" sounds fancy, it's actually not complicated at all. In fact, “to gratinée" means simply to give a dish a golden-brown top. Since many au gratin dishes call for lots of cheese, some people think that the term is French for “with cheese.” However, you don't necessarily need to use cheese. Whether made with cheese, breadcrumbs, or both, browning happens during the cooking process and can be accelerated by passing the dish under a broiler. ## Potatoes Au Gratin Vs. Scalloped Potatoes You may be wondering about the difference between scalloped potatoes and au gratin potatoes. They’re very similar, and in fact, many people use the names interchangeably. You may see variations in recipes: some use onions, while others use shallots; some use Gruyere cheese, and others use cheddar cheese. Don't get hung up on the name, and choose a recipe that sounds good to you! The results are basically the same: sliced potatoes cradled in a creamy sauce. ## Variations Have fun with this recipe! Make it your own with some of these delicious options: _Use different cheeses._ If you prefer a sharper flavor, try a sharp cheddar cheese or gruyere cheese. You can even sprinkle in parmesan cheese or try provolone for a milder flavor. There's no rule on just how cheesy your potatoes can be! _Use a variety of potatoes._ This dish calls for russet potatoes, which are mealy potatoes with a high starch content that are excellent for baking. For something different, try red potatoes — waxy potatoes with a low starch content that hold their shape well during cooking. You could also try a Yukon gold potato, which has properties of both waxy and mealy potatoes. _Add vegetables._ Boost the nutrition of this dish — and add a new dimension of flavor — by adding onions, turnips, or carrots. Roast the vegetables ahead of time, then layer in with the potatoes. You can also add fresh herbs such as parsley, oregano, or basil. _Add meat._ Diced ham, ground beef, or sliced bacon would all be great additions to this dish. Fully cook the meat ahead of time, then add into the potatoes and prepare as the recipe directs. _Thicken the sauce._ If you'd prefer a thicker cream sauce, add 2-3 Tbsp. of all-purpose flour to the whipping cream. _Substitute heavy cream._ Another way to slightly thicken the sauce is to swap heavy cream for whipping cream. They're very similar, but whipping cream is slightly lighter — it has about 6% less fat than heavy cream. _Top with breadcrumbs._ if you want to add extra texture to this dish, sprinkle breadcrumbs over the top of the potatoes and cheese before cooking. You don't need much, just a light layer will work. Never make potatoes au gratin from the box again now that you have this recipe!
    Dutch Baby Toaster Oven Suzette.
    Food52
    Well, I have been going through a food cooking revolution over the last two years. Firstly, I moved to an Assisted living community. I have a glorified toaster convection oven, a two burner stove and a 700 watt microwave and less than 4 square feet of counter surface. Then I began to develop a wide variety of food allergies and intolerances that I never had before, and certainly do not fit current known categories like gluten-free (can't eat tapioca or potato starch) but also have limited tolerance of gluten or lactose. In my community they prepare meals for us, most of which have something that I cannot eat. The most challenging has been desserts. I simply can no longer eat most baked goods. Can't really figure out why. But the combination of wheat flour and white or brown sugar I no longer tolerate. Likewise honey, or maple syrup. And I have never tolerated stevia or monk fruit sweeteners. But I can tolerate white and brown sugar as long as they have not been baked with flour in any way, particularly with white flour. So what is a girl who loves to bake to do, and in reduced kitchen size and equipment as well? So I came up with this recipe for a dutch baby, that has no added sugar as the basis for a lot of different ingredients. I even have a chocolate one! for chocolate desserts. I add the sugar AFTER it comes out of the oven, so that the sugar is not cooked, but melts into the butter on the pancake. Please note that as toaster ovens vary greatly, the cooking time can vary as much a 15-20 minutes. Also, serving size depends on your crowd. My husband and I eat this in one sitting. But it really can be 4 moderately generous servings. The batter is very forgiving. I made the batter one morning, and then refrigerated it, intending to bake it that evening for dinner, but didn't get back to it for 5 days. Came out perfect! I have not made this with non-dairy milk, as I don't like most of them. Feel free to improvise/modify. So decide what you want to make? Dinner salad with nice airy base? Or to support that welsh rarebit? Or spring mushroom medley in sauce. Or how about a sweet dessert like, berries and cream or spring rhubarb sauce or perhaps, something chocolate like chocolate mousse or maybe, add cocoa powder to the batter and serve with a rich vanilla ice cream. Here I wanted to use up a nice navel orange. So I thought of crepe suzette. Ever tried to make crepes? Never had much luck myself, but this worked great. So this recipe is a non-alcoholic take on Crepe Suzette using my toaster oven and a Basic modified dutch baby recipe. And accommodating the fact that I cannot eat baked sugar and flour together. Bits and pieces of this recipe were taken from Epicurious for the basic idea, but have been greatly adjusted and modified to meet my dietary needs, no alcohol, and use of toaster oven in place of regular oven. The Dutch baby pancake is modified from their savory recipe and the orange sauce, a modification of their poached oranges recipe with candied peel and ginger.