Last Updated on April 3, 2024 by Real Men Sow
You can’t get much more of an allotment staple than the faithful potato. Low maintenance, high cropping, and versatile in the kitchen, we love them. It’s estimated that the average person in Britain eats nearly 100kg of potatoes a year, whether crisped, chipped, roasted, baked, mashed, or boiled.
So if you are growing your potato it is better to know which type of potato is great in your dinner recipe, to0.
How Many Potato Types Are There
Choosing a potato to grow can be a bit of a minefield. After all, there are over 80 different potato types available in our shops today. So what makes a good chipper over a good masher? I don’t reckon anyone could possibly have tried all 80 varieties, but I’ve had a good go at a few over the last 7 or so years of growing veg. Here are my favourite potato varieties based on the popular cooking methods and recipes we follow here in Britain.
Pick Potato Types Based On Your Cooking Style
Best in Salads: Pink Fir Apple & International Kidney
Up until 2012, I’d never grown Pink Fir Apple, but now I wouldn’t be without them. Boiled, this waxy potato is cracking in a salad, hot or cold. They keep for ages too and are also incredibly productive – just a small row will provide a sackful of these nobbly pink tubers.
And you can’t grow International Kidney. International Kidney is the variety used for the famous ‘Jersey Royal’, and we all love them, don’t we? Grown as an early, International Kidney provides a beautiful, waxy salad potato. Productive in containers or bags too.
Great as Mashed Potatoes: Desiree
You need a smooth potato variety for mashing, and all-rounder Desiree is perfect (and Delia Smith’s favourite potato, no less). I like Marfona too – I grew this potato in my first year on the allotment and noticed that they carried an almost buttery taste, which really lent itself to a good mash.
Winner Potato in the Oven: Estima
A couple of years back, I told allotment head honcho and sort-of-shop manager, Ron, that I wanted to grow some potatoes that were fit for baking. He recommended Estima, suggesting growing half as earlies, and then leaving the rest in the ground to swell up. Ron was right too, and I harvested some real specimens.
I’ve found Ambo good too. My organic farmer friend Sarah grows Ambo for her bakers and sold me the biggest potato I’ve ever seen at the local farmer’s market.
Best if Roasted: King Edward Potato
I don’t know anyone who hasn’t grown the ever-popular King Edward once upon a time. They’re high croppers, reliable as well as being a classic roastie variety due to their fluffy flesh. Being a late maincrop, they’re also a regular on the Christmas dinner menu.
I picked up some Cara from the allotment shop last year, as my plot neighbour swore by them. They’re smaller than King Edwards, but still made a very tasty roast potato, as well as a good chip.
Favourite Chippers: Maris Piper & Golden Wonder
I’m a real sucker for a homemade wedge, and for me, you can’t beat a good old Maris Piper. The combination of golden skin, creamy white flesh, and fluffy texture make them perfect for chips. The plants flower a purple colour, making them an attractive choice to grow too.
Golden Wonder is another super chipper I discovered, albeit by accident. I grew these one year for the novelty factor after I found out that the crisp brand was named after this potato. Like the Maris Piper, Golden Wonder has the all-important fluffy texture which every chip needs.
I wish I liked Fir Apple because they look interesting but baked potatoes are my favourite so, if I had an allotment, I’d have to go with King Edwards.
This next is a shamefacedly copy and paste comment. (I’m doing a last minute rush around to people who might be interested.)
Have you thought about following a tree with Loose and Leafy this year? There’s information here http://tinyurl.com/bv6pzt5 and a Link Box tomorrow (7th March).
Lucy
This salad making me dam crazy,its so healthy and best thing about this is it can be made very very dam easily.
I ‘accidentally’ grew some Golden Wonder a while back. 5 wizened little seed potatoes left on a shelf when I wasn’t thinking of doing spuds that year. They were gorgeous and the skins are so good on jackets.
This year I’m trying some Sarpo Mira because I want to test out the blight resistant claim.