1 + ½ pounds potato
½ cup milk
3 cups flour
Teaspoon salt
1 oz butter
4 tsp baking powder (one for the recipe and three to convert regular all purpose flour to self-rising)
Boil half of the potatoes and mash them as you would for normal mashed potatoes however do not add milk or butter.
Take the other half of the potatoes and shred them fine. Mix this with the milk and then slowly mix together both potato mixtures.
Sift the flour and baking soda together, mixing them completely before slowly adding this to the potato mixture, mixing until it is thoroughly mixed. Add flour if it is coming out too thin.
Mix the mixture until it becomes a rough dough. Either make one large loaf or split into four 4 inch discs for personal loaves. Cut a cross into each loaf for decoration and bake at 400 degrees for thirty minutes. It should rise and brown evenly. For additional browning you can coat the top of the loaves with either melted butter or with an egg wash (roughly beat one egg in a cup and use a pastry brush to brush the tops of the loaves with the beaten egg. This promotes browning.)
½ cup milk
3 cups flour
Teaspoon salt
1 oz butter
4 tsp baking powder (one for the recipe and three to convert regular all purpose flour to self-rising)
Boil half of the potatoes and mash them as you would for normal mashed potatoes however do not add milk or butter.
Take the other half of the potatoes and shred them fine. Mix this with the milk and then slowly mix together both potato mixtures.
Sift the flour and baking soda together, mixing them completely before slowly adding this to the potato mixture, mixing until it is thoroughly mixed. Add flour if it is coming out too thin.
Mix the mixture until it becomes a rough dough. Either make one large loaf or split into four 4 inch discs for personal loaves. Cut a cross into each loaf for decoration and bake at 400 degrees for thirty minutes. It should rise and brown evenly. For additional browning you can coat the top of the loaves with either melted butter or with an egg wash (roughly beat one egg in a cup and use a pastry brush to brush the tops of the loaves with the beaten egg. This promotes browning.)
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Yeah I've met the one with raw and cooked potato in it. I like the added cheese in mine and I love making big boxtys nice and hot with melting butter. I often get into the Irish cooking because of my friend, Irish stews, various potato dishes etc and of course boxty. I love that much of the Irish cooking really is this wonderful comfort food.
One day I want to try to make a boxty using either all sweet potato (Kumra) or a mix of regular spuds and sweet potato. I reckon it would not only spice up the taste making a sweetish version but if you didn't mix the two potatoes too much you would also get coloured portions that would look cool.
*hugs*
One day I want to try to make a boxty using either all sweet potato (Kumra) or a mix of regular spuds and sweet potato. I reckon it would not only spice up the taste making a sweetish version but if you didn't mix the two potatoes too much you would also get coloured portions that would look cool.
*hugs*
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