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  2. 13 tips for preparing and cooking potatoes that chefs think ...

    www.aol.com/13-tips-preparing-cooking-potatoes...

    To freeze potatoes, cut them the way you intend to use them — sliced for scalloped potatoes, grated for hash browns, cubed for home fries — and partially cook them in boiling water.

  3. Can You Eat Raw Potatoes? Our Test Kitchen Doesn’t ... - AOL

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    Get the answer, then stick around for 2 signs that you’ve cooked your spuds to a safe temperature. Skip to main content. Subscriptions; Animals. Business. Entertainment. Fitness. Food. Games ...

  4. Baked potato - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baked_potato

    Cooking over an open fire or in the coals of a barbecue may require wrapping in foil to prevent burning of the skin. A potato buried directly in coals of a fire cooks well, albeit with a mostly burned and inedible skin. A baked potato is fully cooked when its internal temperature reaches 99 °C (210 °F).

  5. 20+ Ways to Cook Potatoes - AOL

    www.aol.com/20-ways-cook-potatoes-010000671.html

    4. Baked Potato Wedges. Potato wedges make any meal seem more complete and nourishing. The wedge shape lets the potatoes crisp on the outside while the inside stays soft, for a pleasurable ...

  6. Gratin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gratin

    Slices of boiled potato are put in a buttered fireproof dish, sprinkled with cheese, and browned in the oven. Sliced raw potatoes may also be baked in a liquid or sauce that steams them and forms a golden crust on top. [8] In the US, the dish is referred to variously as funeral potatoes, potatoes au gratin, scalloped potatoes, or au gratin ...

  7. Carryover cooking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carryover_cooking

    Carryover cooking (sometimes referred to as resting) is when foods are halted from actively cooking and allowed to equilibrate under their own retained heat.Because foods such as meats are typically measured for cooking temperature near the center of mass, stopping cooking at a given central temperature means that the outer layers of the food will be at higher temperature than that measured.

  8. Danger zone (food safety) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Danger_zone_(food_safety)

    [11] [12] To prevent time-temperature abuse, the amount of time food spends in the danger zone must be minimized. [13] A logarithmic relationship exists between microbial cell death and temperature, that is, a small decrease of cooking temperature can result in considerable numbers of cells surviving the process. [ 14 ]

  9. How Many Sweet Potatoes Per Person Do You Need? Here's An ...

    www.aol.com/many-sweet-potatoes-per-person...

    A good rule of thumb is to trust the recipe. A sweet potato casserole recipe might call for three pounds, or about 48 ounces, of sweet potatoes. By Burgess’s estimation, that should equate to 9 ...