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Potato skins, also sometimes referred to as potato jackets, are a snack food or appetizer made of unpeeled potato halves, hollowed and dressed with bacon, cheddar cheese and green onions before being baked again. They are commonly found on the menus of casual dining restaurants in the United States. [1]
The dish is a potato-based dough into which a filling made of chopped beef and onions, whole olives, hard-boiled eggs, cumin and other herbs and spices is stuffed. Once prepared, the obloid mass is dredged in flour and deep-fried. Potato flour is often added to give greater consistency to the
Let the potatoes cool until you can handle them. Cut each potato in half lengthwise. Using a small spoon, scoop out and discard (or reserve for another use) the flesh of the potatoes, leaving a very thin wall of flesh -- less than 1/4 inch thick -- attached to the skin. Put the potato shells on the prepared baking sheet, hollowed side up.
Prepared kishke is sold in some kosher butcheries and delicatessens; in Israel it is available in the frozen food section of most supermarkets. Non-traditional varieties include kishke stuffed with rice and kishke stuffed with diced chicken livers and ground gizzards. [7] There are also vegetarian kishke recipes. [10] [11] [12]
Benedett originally offered the chili in a bowl, along with a split Redondo hot dog and a scoop of rice. Sales were OK, but not great. And so, in a minor stroke of genius, he decided to Trojan ...
Fill the potato skins with bbq pork and top with shredded cheese. Return the potato skins back to the oven and cook until cheese has melted. Top with sour cream, bacon, and green onions. Serve ...
2 medium russet potatoes (about 8 ounce each), scrubbed; nonstick cooking spray; salt; freshly ground black pepper; 3 / 4 cup mild or spicy salsa, such as Pace; 1 cup (about 1 ounce) coarsely ...
Once a potato has been baked, some people discard the skin and eat only the interior, while others enjoy the taste and texture of the skin, which is rich in dietary fiber. Potatoes baked in their skins may lose between 20 and 40% of their vitamin C content, because heating in air is slow and vitamin inactivation can continue for a long time ...