Smashed potatoes are a great side dish or snack. Baby or fingerling smashed potatoes, cooked whole, smashed to flatten and crack, then seared on a pan to crisp up. It is one of our favorite ways to have a good potato with a curry gravy. If you’re looking for a different and flavorful way to enjoy potatoes, then these are it!
Smashed Potatoes Recipe
Smashed potatoes have been around for quite a while, but for us our exposure and love of smashed potatoes comes Cristiana Ferrare. She cooked us up a bath when we were photographing her cookbook, A Big Bowl of Love. The next smashed potato adoration source was from LA’s restaurant maven, Nancy Silverton. Her smashed fingerling potatoes served up at Mozza are nothing short of divine. Thus we were inspired to create our own version in 2011 with a healthy dose of curry gravy or curry sauce.l
Video: Smashed Potatoes Recipe with Curry Sauce (Gravy)
Alternative to Holiday Potatoes
We were playing around with recipes to serve up for Thanksgiving and thought of these two ladies and their smashed potatoes. We decided to do our own twist on it and make a curried smashed potato. Highly addicting, we may have to break tradition and not make our Potatoes Au Gratin this year and make these instead. Or maybe just make both. 😉 The curry sauce on top adds a wonderfully savory, saucy and delicious addition to each potato bite. It’s become a favorite in our household when we’re craving potatoes in a different way. If you’re still craving saucy potatoes, these scalloped potatoes are divine.
Smashed Potatoes w/ Curry Sauce
Yield: 6servings
Prep Time: 15 minutesmins
Cook Time: 30 minutesmins
Total Time: 45 minutesmins
We like using small fingerling potatoes because they’re tender and perfect small bites, but any small whole potato will work nicely (Baby Reds, Baby Yukons, etc.)Some coconut milks are thicker than others. If you prefer a thinner curry, add some water or chicken stock to thin to your desired consistency.
Boil potatoes in salted water until they’re tender when pierced with a fork, usually about 10-20 minutes depending on the potato type and size. Drain them and allow to cool to the touch.
Gently press down on each potato to “smash” it and flatten a bit. Be careful to not flatten too much to where it breaks apart losing its shape and becoming too hard to handle.
Heat large skillet and add about 2 Tablespoons of olive oil. Fry both sides of the potato until golden brown. Set aside.
Make the curry sauce: Heat a large oven-safe skillet on medium-high heat and then add 1 Tablespoon of olive oil. Add minced garlic & ginger and cook until fragrant, about 30 seconds.
Stir in 1 Tablespoon curry powder, 14 oz. coconut milk, 1-2 Tablespoons fish sauce, 2 teaspoons chili garlic sauce, and lime zest. Stir until combined (whisking the curry if needed to break up any clumps of curry powder). Bring to a simmer, and gently simmer for about 3 minutes for all the flavors to combine.
Add the 1 Tablespoon lime juice then then taste the curry for flavor and add any salt or other seasonings if desired to adjust the final flavor.
Pour sauce over the potatoes. If desired, squeeze extra lime juice, top with chopped cilantro and enjoy!
This post was originally published in 2011. It’s an oldie but goodie!
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Oh my goodness… this looks so incredible! I’m practically drooling looking at the photos. I love potatoes, love curry.. Never thought to combine the two! Thanks!
Hi! Thank you for this gorgeous post, I love the way you turn a simple dish in a luculiian adventure!
Just a question: I don’t have or use fish sauce, is there another ingredient that I could add in the sauce to give an extra bit of flavour instead of the fish sauce?
Thanks for sharing!
Hi Roberta,
You might try Worcestershire or maybe soy sauce if you want to experiment. Otherwise you could always just leave out the fish sauce. The flavor won’t be quite as dimensional, but will still taste nice.
Good luck!
This is just “smashing!” Get it? I just love this and you’ve given me a new way to serve my smashed mini potatoes. I always smash them like this (I use a pot. Its fun). I love the photos! Awesome guys! Very nice!
I might going to try it tomorrow night for dinner instead of the same old mashed potatoes…They look brilliant! I wonder if boiling them whole and then mash them would do, too. I am trying to keet the amount of fat used on the lower side for various reasons. Thanks for sharing!
Hi Valerie,
That should work fine to boil or even steam the potatoes first. Then just smash them and use a touch of oil to crisp them up. Love to hear how it turns out. Good luck.
What an interesting way to cook potato! It looks so delicious that I can hear my stomach growl!
The smashing picture reminds me of fried tempeh smashed in a mortar containing sambal, which is a common menu in Indonesia.
These….sound….PERFECT! I’ve never been the world’s biggest fan of mashed potatoes. Give me some pan-fried spuds and I’m there. This recipe sounds outstanding!
Oh my goodness… this looks so incredible! I’m practically drooling looking at the photos. I love potatoes, love curry.. Never thought to combine the two! Thanks!
Thanksgiving weekend, wicked children, and now I must make this. Like I really need to eat more! 😀 Hope you had a marvelous Thanksgiving, too.
Looks delicious.
I want to try to make one new recipe a month … if possible one new recipe a week … this is recipe is making the list!
The boiling thing, it worked really well, we were very happy :))
Awesome. Thanks for sharing!
I love those plates, really beautiful and it makes the food really stand out and looks delicious.
Hi! Thank you for this gorgeous post, I love the way you turn a simple dish in a luculiian adventure!
Just a question: I don’t have or use fish sauce, is there another ingredient that I could add in the sauce to give an extra bit of flavour instead of the fish sauce?
Thanks for sharing!
Hi Roberta,
You might try Worcestershire or maybe soy sauce if you want to experiment. Otherwise you could always just leave out the fish sauce. The flavor won’t be quite as dimensional, but will still taste nice.
Good luck!
T & D
Such an interesting and bet delicious way to cook potatoes. And the curry sauce, mmmm. Delicious!
Stunning photos!
This is just “smashing!” Get it? I just love this and you’ve given me a new way to serve my smashed mini potatoes. I always smash them like this (I use a pot. Its fun). I love the photos! Awesome guys! Very nice!
We almost used that phrase in the title ;). Thanks for the sweet comment!
T & D
Happy Thanksgiving to you too! Can wait to see you again.
I might going to try it tomorrow night for dinner instead of the same old mashed potatoes…They look brilliant! I wonder if boiling them whole and then mash them would do, too. I am trying to keet the amount of fat used on the lower side for various reasons. Thanks for sharing!
Hi Valerie,
That should work fine to boil or even steam the potatoes first. Then just smash them and use a touch of oil to crisp them up. Love to hear how it turns out. Good luck.
T & D
What an interesting way to cook potato! It looks so delicious that I can hear my stomach growl!
The smashing picture reminds me of fried tempeh smashed in a mortar containing sambal, which is a common menu in Indonesia.
these look delicious!
I am loving this idea! That curry sauce is sounding amazing right about now.
These….sound….PERFECT! I’ve never been the world’s biggest fan of mashed potatoes. Give me some pan-fried spuds and I’m there. This recipe sounds outstanding!
I can’t tell you how good this looks. It is the kind of “cuisine” my husband loves.