Not Your Mama’s Tater Tots

Jan
27

I have a love-hate relationship with tater tots. What’s not to love about a fried bundle of shredded potato deliciousness? Except that all the tater tots I’ve ever had came frozen and seasoned with a sprinkle of cardboard flavoring. (Cardboard Season-All, find it in your grocer’s baking aisle!) For some reason, it never even occurred to me to make tater tots from scratch.

Oh, my. Homemade tater tots are a whole ‘nother world. This, yes this, is a true fried bundle of potato deliciousness.

I was watching an episode of “Best Ever” (I think!) on Food Network where they were at a restaurant making tater tots from scratch when the light bulb went off over my head. Hello, you can MAKE tater tots. They don’t have to come stamped out in regimented order from a factory, frozen, with cardboard flavoring.

They didn’t provide a recipe in the episode, but they showed the process, and after watching it, I worked on recreating my own rendition.

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How to make Homemade Tater Tots:

2 pounds potatoes
1 cup cheese, grated
1/2 cup finely diced onions
1 tablespoon flour
1 teaspoon garlic salt
1/2 teaspoon pepper
1/2 teaspoon cayenne
2 eggs (optional)
1 cup seasoned bread crumbs (optional)
oil for frying

Peel potatoes; cut in half and parboil about five minutes. Drain and cool potatoes then shred with a grater (using the large holes).
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The parboiled potatoes will be very sticky-starchy, but this sticky-starchiness is the real binder when you form the tots, so don’t curse it too badly. Parboiling the potatoes does a few things. Partial cooking helps them cook the rest of the way quickly when you fry them up, and it also brings out the starch. If you overcook them before forming the tots, you’ll lose that starchiness and have to use some other binder, such as an egg. (Which you can do. In fact, they did that on the show. And you can, too, if you want to! I preferred to make them without adding any egg, and parboiling is sufficient to allow them to cook up when you fry them.)
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Place the shredded potatoes in a mixing bowl and combine with all the other ingredients except the bread crumbs. Vary and adjust the seasonings to your tastes. If you don’t like onions, don’t use ’em! You can leave them out entirely, or use something else–peppers or even crab or shrimp or bacon. The world is your tater tot! Make them however you like. And really, what’s NOT good with potatoes? Anything will do. Just don’t overload on the add-in. The sticky-starchy of the potatoes is the binder, remember, and too many other ingredients will make your tots crumble. And who wants a crumbled tot? (Okay, I had one or two that crumbled because it was a spoonful or two where the onions were a bit heavier in the mixture–because apparently I didn’t mix them up well enough–and I fried them up and they were still delicious. But we’re trying to make tots here.)

Note: I used mozzarella for the cheese, but you can use cheddar or whatever you have on hand. You can leave the cheese out, also, but for the love of Pete, WHY?

Scoop a large spoonful at a time out of the bowl to form the tots. This is going to be messy, so just be one with the tot and get on with it. Squeeze the mixture in your hand and the starchiness of the shredded potatoes will come together to hold its shape.

At this point, you can go ahead and fry them as they are, or dip them in an egg wash then in bread crumbs. I tried them both ways, and they’re delicious both ways. I decided I liked the extra step of the bread crumbs for the added texture. Up to you. (Do NOT dip them in a milk wash–they fall apart immediately. Use an egg wash. I used two whole eggs, whisked.)

Test tots–the one on the left is shaped but not breaded, the one on the right is shaped then dipped in egg wash and bread crumbs:
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Test tots fried:
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Since I decided I liked the breading, I went on and prepared the rest of them that way.
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In either case, fry tots in a skillet in hot oil, a few minutes per side. Drain on paper towels.
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You can freeze these, of course, and have your own homemade frozen tots! You can freeze them before frying, or after frying. If you freeze them after frying, you can heat them later in the oven on a crisper sheet. If you freeze them before frying, be sure to place them in a single layer on a pan and freeze into little tater tot rocks then you can dump them all into a freezer bag and they won’t stick together.

I haven’t eaten tater tots in a long time because I just can’t stand the frozen ones from the store, so I’m happy that tater tots are back in my life!
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See this recipe at Farm Bell Recipes and save it to your recipe box.
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Comments

  1. Louise says:

    What a wonderful idea! I had never thought of making them at home either. Gonna have to make these. Thanks. It’s GREAT to see you back to posting every day. We love you. :wave:

  2. wkyangel says:

    Oh wow! I’ve been a tater tot junkie from way back! This will be a hit at my house for sure! I agree with Louise, it’s so good to see you back at the blog, you’ve been missed!

  3. beforethedawn says:

    Thank you Suzanne for going to all this trouble to help keep frozen store tots out of our lives. These look so good! I love tater tots, but we rarely eat them, never thought to make them either.

  4. Joell says:

    :happyflower:
    Love, Love Love!
    We love tots, it is the only frozen poato product I ever buy, we like the extra crisy version so this recipe if perfecto!
    Thank you.

  5. yvonnem says:

    You amaze me Suzanne, the way you can figure out a recipe for just about anything! I still need to try out the bean cakes from a previous post. :hungry:

    I too am so glad you are back to regular posting. I really, really missed you! :heart:

  6. Joell says:

    :happyflower:
    I am thinking that this recipe would be good for potato cakes, making flatter patties and frying them in a cast iron skillet.

  7. bonita says:

    cook’s Country/ATK did a version of tots wherein the tot mixture was lightly pressed into a lined 8 x 8 pan, chilled, then turned out and cut into 8 x 8 squares. Cuts down on crumbles.

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