I had noticed a trend in a lot of the dishes I have prepared over the years. The first observation was that I do not typically make a lot of side dishes to go with the main course I am preparing. This was specifically called out to be my Crystal on many occasions. The typical conversation would be something like:
Me: I’m going to grill some steaks topped with a horseradish crumble for dinner.
Crystal: What are you going to make with it?
Me: Maybe some garlic bread
Crystal: No, I mean side dishes
Me: What do you mean?
The second is that often the foods on the plate turn out a bit monochromatic and bland looking. This became more apparent once I started taking pictures of what I make for this blog. I figured both of these observations would be pretty easy to act on, and I could kill both birds with one stone.
I was looking thought a book she got me titled “1001 Foods you must taste before you die” looking for some inspiration. This book contains both already prepared food items, and also ingredients. In the root vegetable section I stumbled upon the Peruvian Purple Potato (page 217 if you are following along at home) and made a mental note to give them a try if I ran across them at the store.
Not too long after I made a trip to Wegmans in order to get two live lobsters to try my hand at making a butter poached lobster I saw on an episode of Master Chef, and to get some turkey thighs or legs to smoke. While I the vegetable section I was excited to see they carried the purple potatoes. Since both lobster and turkey tend to be bland in color I decided to get enough to use as sides in both dishes.
For the Lobster, I made Potato Rafts to set the poached lobster on, and for the Turkey I used them to make mashed root vegetables (turnips and potatoes, topped with honey sauteed carrots). The texture was similar to baby red or Yukon gold potatoes, and the flavor was a little bit sweeter. There was none of the mineral taste I expected from such a dark blue/purple color. The color for the potato rafts was very deep purple, and the mashed potatoes came out more lavender in color from boiling the potatoes first (a lot of the color transferred to the water used to boil them). I could not have been more pleased with the results and will be making them a staple ingredient that adds both needed color to the plate and complementary flavor as a side to many many dishes. Use them anywhere you would use white potatoes. French fries, hash browns, Boil ’em, Mash ’em, Stick ’em in a Stew.











