Ingredients
- 1 lb
(450 g) Yukon gold or russet potatoes, peeled and cut in chunks
- Some
form of cod (See note)
- 1
small onion, very finely minced
- 2–3
cloves garlic, minced
- 2
large eggs
- 2–3
tbsp (or more!) chopped parsley (or chives)
- 2–4
tbsp all-purpose flour (as needed to bind - optional)
- 1/2
tsp baking powder (optional, for extra lightness)
- Salt
and black pepper
- Neutral
oil for shallow or deep frying
- Lemon
wedges, for serving
Prep the potato and cod
- Peel,
dice and boil potatoes in well-salted water until very tender,
12–15 minutes. Drain, then return to the hot pot a minute to steam off
excess moisture.
- At the
same time, open the cod tin or jar. (Or poach the cod if
using fresh) (I reserved the cod EVOO and used it to sauté the
onion and garlic, and saved the rest for a dog food enhancement!)
- Drain cod
well, and flake finely with a fork, removing any stray bones.
Make the fritter mixture
- In a
pan, sauté the minced onion and garlic in a little (cod) oil
over medium heat until soft and just starting to color; cool slightly.
- Mash potatoes
until smooth (a few small lumps are fine).
- In a
large bowl, combine mashed potatoes, flaked cod, sautéed onion/garlic,
parsley, salt, and pepper.
- Add eggs
and mix until evenly combined.
- Sprinkle
in 2 tbsp flour and baking powder; mix. If the mixture feels too
soft to hold a loose ball or quenelle, add more flour a tablespoon at a
time until it holds but is still soft and moist.
Fry the fritters
- Heat thin
layer of oil (I used avocado, but could use EVOO) in a heavy pan on medium
heat.
- Using
two spoons or a small scoop, hand form portions (I went football shaped),
and gently lower into the oil, not crowding the pan.
- Fry
3–5 minutes on one side, then flip and smash down a bit with a spatula.
Get both sides deep golden brown and crisp. You’ll likely need to
replenish the frying oil.
- Transfer
to paper towels and lightly salt while hot.
- You
can then put these into a baking dish to reheat or keep warm in the oven
until ready to serve. Theoretically, you could make these a day before and
reheat in the oven.
Note
We had a tin of fancy cod in EVOO and garlic via Meredith
and a small jar of cod in EVOO (Callipo brand from PennMac). We thought this
worked out great and saved us from buying a massive slab of salted baccala and
soaking it for 3 days! Some recipes do use baccala, of course or even fresh cod
can work.
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