Potato wedges
Appearance
(Redirected from Potato wedge)
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Course | Hors d'oeuvre, side dish |
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Main ingredients | Potatoes |
Potato wedges are irregular wedge-shaped slices of potato, often large and unpeeled, that are either baked or fried. They are sold at diners and fast food restaurants, and are usually seasoned with a variety of spices, commonly paprika, salt and pepper.
In Australia, potato wedges are a common bar food that are often served with a sauce. Consumers may use sour cream, sweet chilli sauce, ketchup, or some combination of these. In Ireland, spicy potato wedges are a common item served at hot deli counters.[1]
Other names
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- In some regions of the United States, particularly Idaho, Oregon, Washington, Montana, Minnesota, Nebraska, Northern Utah, and Northeast Ohio, a popular variation of potato wedges are known as jojos.[2] Jojos are potato wedges that are battered, seasoned, and either deep-fried in the same vat as fried chicken, or pressure-fried.[3]
- In Germany, they are known as Kartoffelspalten ('potato clefts'), wilde Kartoffeln ('wild potatoes'), Westernkartoffeln ('Western potatoes') or Kartoffelecken ('potato wedges').[4]
- In Czechia, they are known as americké brambory ('American potatoes').
- In Slovakia, they are known as americké zemiaky ('American potatoes').
- In Russia, they are known as картофель по-деревенски ('village-style potatoes').
- In Georgia, they are known as მექსიკური კარტოფელი ('Mexican potatoes').
See also
[edit]References
[edit]Wikimedia Commons has media related to Potato wedges.
- ^ McDonald, Brian (2008-05-12). "Top breakfast baguette rolls into Irish history". Irish Independent. Retrieved 2019-02-03.
- ^ Al-Hatlani, Alana (August 7, 2019). "Potato wedge? French fry? Not quite. How the jojo became a Pacific Northwest staple' long history". The Seattle Times. Retrieved 3 December 2024.
- ^ Price, Nikki (2009-09-25). "A fry with MoJo: The Coast loves its JoJos". Oregon Coast Today. Lincoln City, Oregon. Archived from the original on August 17, 2011. Retrieved 2009-09-26.
- ^ "Potato-Wedges" (in German). EDEKA.