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I was picking potatoes randomly from the supermarket without much thinking, and some potatoes take more time to bake properly.

So on what basis should I pick potatoes, potatoes for baking?

I'm not referring to the baking/roasting question, which discusses what type of potatoes to use.

pramodc84
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2 Answers2

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There are two basic kinds of potatoes: starchy and waxy.

The difference is actually in the amount of starch in them. Starchy potatoes, such as Russet or Idaho potatoes are best for baking, since the starch will allow it to be nice and fluffy after it's baked. They don't hold their shape particularly well when cooked. If you cut into a baked potato, it should be crumbly and dry.

Waxy potatoes include most fingerling potatoes, and most red potatoes. They hold their shape better when cooked, so they are good for soups and stews and potato salads.

Yellow-fleshed potatoes such as Yukon Gold or Yellow Finn are in between, and so can be used for either purpose. Purple potatoes also seem to have medium starch, and so can be used for both.

According to one cookbook I have (Moosewood Restaurant New Classics), there are two ways to determine which is which. If you cut the potato in half, the blade will have a film or a foamy residue on the knife. These potatoes may also stick to the knife because of the starch.

The rules for the brine is to make it of 11 parts water to 1 part salt. A high-starch potato will sink (it's denser) and a low-starch one will float.

Here's a good overview.

Now as to choosing ones that will bake well, it really depends on size. You want potatoes that will bake evenly, so try to choose ones of similar size. I bake my potatoes directly on the oven rack so that the hot air can move freely around them. Try to give them lots of room for that. Also, if you wrap them in aluminum foil, they'll steam and won't give you the nice crunchy skin. (And I'd avoid any potatoes with irregular shapes -- the smaller diameter ones may cook before the larger ones.)

Large potatoes take about an hour to bake at 350F. Lots of small ones may take a bit less time -- experiment with your oven and your potatoes. I'd start squeezing slightly after about 40-45 minutes. If they yield when squeezed, they're probably done.

Martha F.
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You need to use larger potatoes with a high dry matter content to get fluffy baked potatoes. Large King Edwards are sold here in Sweden as baking potatoes.

To assess the dry matter content of other potato varieties, I believe you have to weigh the potatoes using a spring scale both in and out of water (to get a ratio). I also believe there is a method that involves putting a potato in a salt water solution to see if it floats. I'll post an update with the details, provided I can find them.

Chris Steinbach
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  • [Here is the weight-in-water method](http://agriculture.vic.gov.au/agriculture/horticulture/vegetables/potatoes/potatoes-measurement-of-specific-gravity), it calculates the potato's SC which I guess is highly correlated with dry matter content. For the salt water method see the bold paragraph at the end of [this page](https://idahopotato.com/dr-potato/idaho-potatoes-and-specific-gravity). The idea is to make a brine solution of a known target SC then whether the potatoes float or not tell you if they are higher or lower -- this method doesn't tell you the potato SC, it only gives a threshold. – Jason C Feb 06 '17 at 18:00
  • Also as for the brine mixture, [Wikipedia](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brine#Properties) lists densities of various concentrations of salt in water at various temperatures. It also provides an equation that can be used to approximate it. To convert density to specific gravity, [divide the calculated density of the solution by the density of water at some temperature](http://www.calculator.org/property.aspx?name=specific%20gravity). Or just convert it to g/cm^3 and drop the units (equiv to water at 4C). – Jason C Feb 06 '17 at 18:05
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    (Or if you just want to go nuts in a potato field / make the grocery store employees really angry, [these guys make a slightly destructive dry matter field test kit](http://martinlishman.com/potato-dry-matter-measurement/)). – Jason C Feb 06 '17 at 18:09