Cast-iron Garlic Herb Potatoes Recipe - Savory Spin (2024)

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I have partnered with Kansas Farm Bureau to bring you a recap of day 3 of The Farm Food Tour and this easy, melt-in-your-mouth,Cast-iron Garlic Herb Potatoes – delicious for dinner with a side dish ofSausage And Beans and Fried Baked Chicken.

Cast-iron Garlic Herb Potatoes Recipe - Savory Spin (1)

Bittersweet was the word of the day on Day 3 of The Farm Food Tour.

In case you haven’t had a chance to catch up on Day 1 or Day 2 of this farm tour around Kansas organized by TheKansas Farm BureauandKansas Soybean Commission; in September I went on an epic 3 day adventure around 7 farms, along with a handful of other bloggers.

By the time day 3 rolled around, I was dog tired. I was squeezing in a daily morning workout before we started our tour, so early mornings and the late nights were taking their toll. I missed my kid and my dogs and couldn’t wait to see them but at the same time, I didn’t want the tour to end. I wanted to visit more farms and listen to more passionate farmers share their faith, anecdotes and words of wisdom. I wanted to hear more about where the food I love came from and how it was produced. I met some beautiful souls on the tour and I wasn’t sure I was ready to say farewell… so bittersweet became my word of day 3.

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Our first stop on Day 3 was at The Big Well, which is the largest hand dug well in Greensburg. Now, The Big Well doesn’t have a lot to do with farming but it is a Kansas landmark and it had some heartbreaking and inspiring stories to tell inside it’s walls – including ones about when a category 5 tornado hit Greensburg in 2007.

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After trekking around and down The Big Well (that’s one of our fearless tour leaders and our jovial bus driver on the bottom left, in the above picture), we boarded the bus and headed to The Kitchen, a restaurant in Wichita that is owned and operated by a #FarmFoodTour veteran! Amidst an array of delicious and intriguing menu items (I had the grilled lettuce with bacon #droolcentral), The Kitchen also has gigantic pieces of chocolate cake – that somehow tasted moist and delicious 24 hours later, even after having weathered a plane ride and car trip back to Athens, Georgia from Kansas.

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After lunch it was off to visit Dalebanks Angus Farms.Dalebanks Angus is a fifth-generation ranch nestled in the southern Flint Hills of Kansas run by Matt and Amy Perrier. As a big-city loving gal, I had unfounded notions about hormones and antibiotics in everything from meats to milk. However, Matt Perrier had a candid discussion on how antibiotics and hormones are used only out of necessity, just like we’d take them if we were ill.

We got to roam around the Perrier’s farm and listen to stories on sustainability, on how the animals are herded, how they are accounted for (nope, drones are not employed at Dalebanks Angus currently but who knows what the future holds), and how they are examined. One of my favorite quotes from Day 3 was Matt Perrier saying “you put on a pot of coffee and wait for $hit to happen” when describing a typical day in a farmers’ life.

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On this tour I was constantly amazed at how calmly and casually farmers seemed to deal with daily adversity, how they dug into their faith and dependence on God to tackle everything from ruined crop harvests to lost cattle to failing machinery.

Amy France (who rode along as our personal farmer on the tour) once mentioned how they were about to harvest a large crop, but unexpected bad weather came through the night before and ruined their morning’s harvest, and while she worried about balancing the books, her husband reminded her that God will provide, as he always does. This is what I believe too, but these farmers I met don’t just believe it, they live it – every single day. All this in addition to their wealth of knowledge about their cattle and/or crops and how to further take care of them, still humbles me and leaves me speechless when talking or thinking about the 2018 Farm Food Tour.

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After Dalebanks Angus Farms, we headed to Juniper Hill Farms run by Scott Thelman, which is home to several vegetables from watermelons to soy beans that are shipped off overseas to be used in the production of tofu. Scott Thelman and our resident farmer, Amy France, engrossed me with a lively and engaging discussion on the pros and cons of growing GMO vs non-GMO crops just before our last dinner together.

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And, what an epic dinner it was! Dinner was on the patio of the main house where Doctor Thelman (Scott’s father) lives at Juniper Hill Farms. It started off with appetizers of herbed burrata, homegrown veggies, home-baked bread and graduated to a meal of wine, salad, beef and some delicious herb potatoes I couldn’t stop eating, and a dessert of a ridiculously delicious rhubarb strawberry pie.

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It was those potatoes that inspired the Cast-iron Garlic Herb Potatoes you see here today.

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These Cast-iron Garlic Herb Potatoes are soft in the middle with a slightly crisp skin. Aromatic and flavorful from the mix of garlic, onions, rosemary, tarragon, oregano, and parsley, it was so hard to pass on thirds of these potatoes! Yes, that means I had a healthy seconds serving too!

My cast-iron skillet has been getting a workout as I have made and remade these potatoes more times that I can remember – not only are these potatoes simply divine, but we also ate the crusty bits of roasted onion, garlic and herbs at the bottom of the pan as well!

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Enjoy these Cast-iron Garlic Herb Potatoes with these Sausage And Beans and these Fried Baked Chicken together or enjoy them separately. Together they make one delicious and comforting everyday meal, and separately, they can be a delicious side at your Thanksgiving, Christmas or Holiday table.

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I would love to know if you’ve make this recipe or any other recipe from this blog so please do rate the recipe and let me know your thoughts on it in the comments below.You can alsoFOLLOW MEonFACEBOOK,TWITTER,INSTAGRAMandPINTERESTto get recipe ideas and inspo!

Cast-iron Garlic Herb Potatoes Recipe - Savory Spin (12)
Cast-iron Garlic Herb Potatoes Recipe - Savory Spin (13)

Yield: 4-5 servings

Prep Time: 10 minutes

Cook Time: 40 minutes

Total Time: 50 minutes

These Cast-iron Garlic Herb Potatoes are soft in the middle with a slightly crisp skin. Aromatic and flavorful , these make a delicious addition to your everyday and/or holiday dinner table.

Ingredients

  • 3 tbsp oil (I used EVOO)
  • 24 oz (1.5 lbs) baby dutch yellow potatoes
  • 2 shallots (or can use i small yellow onion)
  • 2 garlic cloves
  • 1/2 tsp chopped fresh rosemary
  • 1/4 tsp dried tarragon
  • 1/4 tsp dried oregano
  • 1 tbsp chopped fresh parsley
  • 1/4 tsp salt (or more according to taste)
  • 1/4 tsp pepper (or more according to taste)

Instructions

  1. Preheat the oven to 450 degrees
  2. Wash the potatoes and roughly dry with a kitchen towel
  3. Chop the shallots and garlic well and make sure the parsley and rosemary has been chopped up too.
  4. Add the oil, shallots, garlic, rosemary, parsley, tarragon, oregano, salt and pepper to a boil and mix well then toss in the yellow potatoes and toss so the herbed oil mixture covers the potatoes well.
  5. Pour the potatoes with oil mix into a skillet and place in 450 degree oven for 35 - 40 minutes or until yellow potatoes are tender when pierced with a fork.
  6. Enjoy warm - and don't forget those tasty bits of toasted shallots, garlic and herbs at the bottom of the pan!
Nutrition Information

Yield 4-5 servings
Amount Per ServingCalories 181Total Fat 8.2gSaturated Fat 1.1gCholesterol 0mgSodium 162mgCarbohydrates 27.1gSugar 1.3gProtein 2.9g

Did you make this recipe?

Please leave a comment on the blog or share a photo on Instagram &/or Pinterest tagging @SavorySpin #SavorySpin

Cast-iron Garlic Herb Potatoes Recipe - Savory Spin (2024)

FAQs

How do you keep potatoes from sticking to cast iron? ›

How to Keep Food From Sticking to Cast Iron
  1. Two words: heat & oil. The most common reason food sticks to cast iron is because the pan is simply too hot. ...
  2. Preheat your skillet for 4 to 5 minutes to establish an even heat before adding your food. ...
  3. Add enough oil to the pan before adding food.
Jan 5, 2023

How do you fry potatoes in a skillet without sticking them? ›

Preheat the pan properly

Before adding your potatoes, preheat the pan over medium heat for a few minutes. Ensure that the pan is evenly heated, as this will create a barrier between the potatoes and the pan's surface, reducing the risk of sticking.

How do you clean cast iron with salt and potatoes? ›

Sprinkle the coarse salt into the pan and instead of using a paper towel, cut a white potato in half and use the cut side to scrub the salt around the pan surface. In addition to the moisture in the potato, there is a natural oxalic acid that dissolves any rust or burned bits.

What is the best oil to season cast iron with? ›

All cooking oils and fats can be used for seasoning cast iron, but based on availability, affordability, effectiveness, and having a high smoke point, Lodge recommends vegetable oil, melted shortening, or canola oil, like our Seasoning Spray.

Why do you Soak potatoes in water before frying? ›

Soaking potatoes in water helps remove excess starch. Excess starch can inhibit the potatoes from cooking evenly as well as creating a gummy or sticky texture on the outside of your potatoes. Cold water is used because hot water would react with the starch activating it, making it harder to separate from the potatoes.

What happens if you don't boil potatoes before frying? ›

Do I need to boil my potatoes first? Trust us: You seriously don't need to boil these spuds (or pre-cook them at all) before pan-frying. Slicing them thin allows them to cook through in the same amount of time that they need to get brown and crispy on the outside.

Why won't my fried potatoes get crispy? ›

This sure sounds a lot like potatoes that have been stored too long, in too cold of an environment before cooking. When potatoes are held below 41°F for too long a period, the starches convert to sugar and it changes the cooking chemistry.

What happens if you don't dry potatoes before frying? ›

Once fries are scooped out of the water, it's essential to thoroughly pat them dry, or they'll wind up limp instead of crisp, thus defeating the whole purpose.

What does putting salt on cast iron do? ›

Add a few drops of warm water, then use your sponge to scrub away the mess. When cleaning a seasoned cast-iron skillet with salt, the crystals act as an abrasive to remove those tougher messes without damaging your pan.

Why do you put salt in a cast iron skillet? ›

Pour 2 to 3 tablespoons of coarse kosher salt into your cast iron skillet. (If you have a smaller pan, one tablespoon will do just fine.) It's important that you use a coarse grained salt—this will provide the traction you need to remove food particles.

Why do you put salt on cast iron? ›

There are several ways to clean a cast-iron pan, but using a potato and salt helps break up residue while you scrub. According to PureWow, to clean your pan, first coat the pan with salt.

How do you keep food from sticking to cast iron? ›

Prior to cooking, add about a teaspoon of oil to your skillet and heat it gradually on the stovetop or in the oven to help reduce sticking. After cooking, allow the cookware to cool, then use a pan scraper to remove stuck-on food, scrub with a nylon brush or nonscratch pad, hand dry, and add a generous layer of oil.

Why do potatoes stick in non stick pan? ›

Czech scientists think they have identified the cause of the irritating problem of food sticking to the bottom of a non-stick pan. It's all down to convection… Despite the use of non-stick frying pans, foods will sometimes get stuck to a heated surface, even if oil is used.

How do you make a cast iron pan non stick? ›

Lightly coat the surface of the pan with a small amount (1t – 1T) of oil or fat of choice. You don't want too much oil, so wipe any excess oil away with a paper towel. The entire pan should be lightly coated with oil or fat, but not dripping. Place the pan in the preheated oven upside down for one hour.

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