Maybe I've been watching too many cooking shows, but last weekend I was craving a fancier dessert at home and the thought popped into my head that the perfect accompaniment for my scoop of English toffee ice cream would be an "apple rosti". Every recipe for potato rosti that I have come across simply says to grate par-boiled potatoes, form them into a roughly circular cake and either bake or fry them.Conal
The idea of apple rosti and toffee icecream sounds a dream, but the problem you'll face is that ripe apples have very little starch in them, and it's the starch in potatoes that holds the rosti together. Without starch a rosti simply cannot exist.
The same is sort of true for kumara rosti. Kumara have both starch and sugars present, but because they have a high amount of sugar (they're not called sweet potatoes for nothing) when you fry them they have a tendency to burn, become quite dark, and if you're not careful they can taste a little bitter. Having less starch also causes them to produce a less firm rosti, which isn't a bad thing, but it'll be less successful in many ways than a firm, crispy potato one. I get around this by adding around 25 per cent regular potato to a kumara rosti.
I do the same when making a rosti from other root vegetables such as celeriac, parsnip or beetroot - although the latter needs about 50 per cent potato and a few tablespoons of flour to hold it all together.
If you're set on making an apple rosti you may also be happy to add some potato - which will taste much nicer than you may think. Grate the unpeeled apples coarsely, avoiding core and pips, and squeeze out excess juice but keep the juice. The gratings will turn brown quite quickly but don't worry too much as you're going to fry them anyway and in your case you're topping them with caramel icecream (and might I suggest a dusting of icing sugar as well) so who's going to see it anyway?
Mix the grated apple with an equal amount of grated peeled potatoes, that you've also squeezed out - you can discard the potato liquid. Mix it all together well then add 1 1/2 tablespoons of flour or cornflour per cup of grated mix. You might also like to add some ground cinnamon, allspice, nutmeg or whatever takes your fancy. Mix that all together really well and then begin cooking your rosti.
You can cook them one of several ways. Either form them into compact balls and cook over medium/low heat in small pans to which you've added a tablespoon butter. Once the butter is sizzling add the ball, and press it down flat firmly using the back of a spoon or your fingers if you're brave. The more compact the better the end result.
Once golden on one side, carefully flip over (you may need to loosen it using a small metal spatula - unless you cook in non-stick pans) and cook on the other side till done, adding more butter if it looks like it's drying out. Alternatively, you can cook on one side then carefully flip out on to a baking parchment-lined tray and finish in the oven at 180C. You can also form "patties" and bake on a well buttered tray, brushing each rosti with extra butter but this will be less successful, less likely to have the odd crisp bit that makes a rosti a lovely thing to eat.
Meanwhile, add a few tablespoons of sugar or honey to your apple juice and simmer to make a syrup, which you can then drizzle over the cooked rosti for extra apple-y flavour.
In our Ask Peter series, executive chef Peter Gordon answers your curly culinary questions. If you’re stumped over something food-related, send your question to askpeter@bite.co.nz and keep checking in for answers. You can read more on Peter on his website, have a read of his Ask Peter articles or check out his recipes on our site.