Homemade hashbrowns
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I hear you. Iām blessed with more choices for potato ingestion than I need or deserve in the supermarket aisle. a benefit of living in middle-America, I suppose. Iāve heard that you can approximate them by squeezing as much moisture as possible out of grated potato using a cheesecloth or tea towel, and then freezing the shreds before frying them off in a pan, but that degree of foresight and prep work doesnāt factor into most of my breakfasts lol.
Oh, definitely. Iāll have to give your hashbrowns a go next time I have a lazy Sunday. I think Iāve tried this yearās ago, but I canāt remember. I think you mix flour in it so it holds better? Iāll have to research this again. Thanks for the idea!
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Iām in the United States but this term can be regional. There are parts of the country where you donāt know what will show up on your plate if you order āhash browns.ā There are parts that donāt even know diced potatoes are a thing that exist. Itās all rather unstandardized.


Ohhh right. Hmm, maybe more of a Canadian thing, then. I grew up seeing McCain hashbrowns in cubes, so thatās what it is for me. Thanks for teaching me something today.
Maybe Iāll spend a few weekends making different kinds of hashbrowns in the next while! -
You forgot to brown them, those are hashwhites.
Omg
in my defence, they arenāt really browned when I find the commercial ones in the freezer aisle. I did try to brown them, but they started to stick to the pan, so the browned bits separated from the cubes.
I think the McCain ones are flash deep fried so they donāt stick to your pan at home. Iāve only made these a handful of times, so Iām still perfecting it. One day, I will get it right! -
Ohhh right. Hmm, maybe more of a Canadian thing, then. I grew up seeing McCain hashbrowns in cubes, so thatās what it is for me. Thanks for teaching me something today.
Maybe Iāll spend a few weekends making different kinds of hashbrowns in the next while!All hash browns matter.
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Omg
in my defence, they arenāt really browned when I find the commercial ones in the freezer aisle. I did try to brown them, but they started to stick to the pan, so the browned bits separated from the cubes.
I think the McCain ones are flash deep fried so they donāt stick to your pan at home. Iāve only made these a handful of times, so Iām still perfecting it. One day, I will get it right!The secret to hash browns like that is two step cooking. After cubing, put in a pot of boiling salted water for like 4 minutes. Drain them with a colander and spread out to let some of the excess moisture steam off. After that, fry them as you did and youāll end up with fluffy on the inside, golden brown on the outside bits of deliciousness. Also make sure your pan and oil are really hot when you start cooking to stop them from sticking to the pan. The oil should just be beginning to smoke when you put the potatoes in.
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Ohhh right. Hmm, maybe more of a Canadian thing, then. I grew up seeing McCain hashbrowns in cubes, so thatās what it is for me. Thanks for teaching me something today.
Maybe Iāll spend a few weekends making different kinds of hashbrowns in the next while!Iām from California and have always seen those cubes ones on menus as ācountry potatoes.ā
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Ohhh right. Hmm, maybe more of a Canadian thing, then. I grew up seeing McCain hashbrowns in cubes, so thatās what it is for me. Thanks for teaching me something today.
Maybe Iāll spend a few weekends making different kinds of hashbrowns in the next while!Even as a Canadian, I never knew these things were called hash browns. Hash browns have always been those things you can get at McDonaldās (patties, as you called em). I thought these were hashed potatoes.
I love regional differences.
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Omg
in my defence, they arenāt really browned when I find the commercial ones in the freezer aisle. I did try to brown them, but they started to stick to the pan, so the browned bits separated from the cubes.
I think the McCain ones are flash deep fried so they donāt stick to your pan at home. Iāve only made these a handful of times, so Iām still perfecting it. One day, I will get it right!You just need some fat in the pan-butter, olive oil, etc. I recommend a little of both as the butter adds more flavor while the oil keeps the butter from burning. Just donāt use extra virgin, it burns easier than plain olive oil.
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In North America, we have McCain hashbrowns that are tiny cubed potatoes you find in the freezer aisle. In Australia, hashbrowns are hashbrowns patties, and we donāt have the cubes. I havenāt been able to find them anywhere.
I was hit with nostalgia this morning, so I made hashbrowns. Just cut up whatever potatoes I had in to 0.5cm cubes and fried them up in the pan. Fried some onions and capsicum on the side and then added together.
Usually I put in a bit of bacon or sausage, but weāre going to a German restaurant for dinner tonight, so Iām saving my fatty meat allocation for later.
Seasoned with Hyās seasoning salt.
Reminds me a lot of the Swedish dish Pytt i panna.
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In North America, we have McCain hashbrowns that are tiny cubed potatoes you find in the freezer aisle. In Australia, hashbrowns are hashbrowns patties, and we donāt have the cubes. I havenāt been able to find them anywhere.
I was hit with nostalgia this morning, so I made hashbrowns. Just cut up whatever potatoes I had in to 0.5cm cubes and fried them up in the pan. Fried some onions and capsicum on the side and then added together.
Usually I put in a bit of bacon or sausage, but weāre going to a German restaurant for dinner tonight, so Iām saving my fatty meat allocation for later.
Seasoned with Hyās seasoning salt.
I love that you recreated these frozen hash browns! I have had them too but forgot about them. Now I will do them too! š„° Thanks! Had a thought on the boiling then frying comment. I do this thing with potatoes where I put some water in the pan, just a little, cover and steam them for a bit, then uncover and cook it off and add more oil for the frying part. That might do it too, but in one pan. Not sure if you need this step though for such small pieces.
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The secret to hash browns like that is two step cooking. After cubing, put in a pot of boiling salted water for like 4 minutes. Drain them with a colander and spread out to let some of the excess moisture steam off. After that, fry them as you did and youāll end up with fluffy on the inside, golden brown on the outside bits of deliciousness. Also make sure your pan and oil are really hot when you start cooking to stop them from sticking to the pan. The oil should just be beginning to smoke when you put the potatoes in.
Thank you for the detailed instructions! Iāll report back the next time I make these. š«”
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Iām from California and have always seen those cubes ones on menus as ācountry potatoes.ā
Hmm⦠Maybe itās just a Lower Mainland BC thingā¦
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We call them āhome friesā rather than hash browns. I prefer them a little larger and crispier but even these are nice.
Exactly what I was thinking (grew up in Ohio, USA)
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Even as a Canadian, I never knew these things were called hash browns. Hash browns have always been those things you can get at McDonaldās (patties, as you called em). I thought these were hashed potatoes.
I love regional differences.
Which part of Canada are you from? Maybe hashbrowns are a West Coast thingā¦
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You just need some fat in the pan-butter, olive oil, etc. I recommend a little of both as the butter adds more flavor while the oil keeps the butter from burning. Just donāt use extra virgin, it burns easier than plain olive oil.
I did use quite a bit of oil (canola), but I think my fatal mistake was frying onions in the pan first. Should have used a clean pan for the potatoes.

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Reminds me a lot of the Swedish dish Pytt i panna.
That look so good⦠I didnāt eat beetroot until I came to Australia. I had a housemate serve it to me, and it was actually quite pleasant! Havenāt had pickled beetroot yet, though.
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I love that you recreated these frozen hash browns! I have had them too but forgot about them. Now I will do them too! š„° Thanks! Had a thought on the boiling then frying comment. I do this thing with potatoes where I put some water in the pan, just a little, cover and steam them for a bit, then uncover and cook it off and add more oil for the frying part. That might do it too, but in one pan. Not sure if you need this step though for such small pieces.
Iām not sure, but Iām going to keep trying⦠For the love of potatoes.
Leg us know how you go, Iād like to see how yours turns out. Itāll be delicious regardless! -
That look so good⦠I didnāt eat beetroot until I came to Australia. I had a housemate serve it to me, and it was actually quite pleasant! Havenāt had pickled beetroot yet, though.
Havenāt had pickled beetroot yet, though.
Itās pretty alright. Itās my favourite way of eating beetroots, which I guess isnāt saying much given that Iām not that into them.
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Havenāt had pickled beetroot yet, though.
Itās pretty alright. Itās my favourite way of eating beetroots, which I guess isnāt saying much given that Iām not that into them.
Even then, youāve introduced me to them, and Iād like to try them. Iāll do that when I stop over in those countries next! Thanks for sharing.
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I did use quite a bit of oil (canola), but I think my fatal mistake was frying onions in the pan first. Should have used a clean pan for the potatoes.

The other common trap you might be hitting is trying to turn them too early.
Once most foods (but potatoes especially) sear properly, theyāll release their hold on the pan and you wonāt lose the skins/outer layer quite as easily.