I do very similar. Try this, OP. |
Trust me, I can't steam stuff. I've tried. Any time people are "but it's so easy" I know it'll be impossible for me. |
| Try canned potatoes or peel small potatoes and boil gently drain and butter |
What happens when you steam stuff? It’s about as easy as boiling water, so I’m really curious as to where the problem lies. |
I’m the person who suggested the loose recipe above, and I’m a reluctant cook. My preferred way to steam them is by placing them on a rack in my instant pot. Next best option is in the steamer section of my rice cooker. Both methods can be left alone to do their thing. The hardest part for me is deciding how to set the timer. I’ve also steamed them using a steamer basket and a pot of boiling water. This way requires more monitoring— and I like the texture much better using the Instant Pot method. Maybe an issue is getting the right tools to make the tasks easier, OP. I’d say more, but we haven’t yet concluded that cooking the potatoes as I’ve suggested is close to the type of recipe that you’re looking for. |
I bought a steamer and it collapses closed. I couldn't figure out how to keep it opened, so it just sits on the bottom of the pot. |
Like this? https://www.amazon.com/Vegetable-Stainless-Collapsible-Expandable-YLYL/dp/B0BZZ7F6MG/ Check the video in the reviews. |
Who ever eats canned potatoes? Someone had given me some canned potatoes and I tried using them in something or other. I'm not a canned food snob at all but they taste terrible and metallic. |
I used to have a bamboo steamer, but lots of times I steam just by putting a very small amount of water in a pot with a tight lid, cranking up the heat, and watching it closely. |
It sounds to me like you're just talking about baby potatoes or new potatoes (because when they are young they are small and round and have a different texture than bigger ones--the variety affects texture as well, but generally they are sort of smoother or waxier and I would say a more delicate flavor. The skin is much thinner and you don't need to peel them. I think commonly red potatoes (skins are red) or other non-russets (russets are used for baked potatoes) although I've only ever had them from a garden. You can boil them, the thing to remember with that is you put the potatoes in the cold water and then heat water and potatoes together, unlike noodles where the water is already boiling, this helps them cook more uniformly (instead of the middle still cold when the outside is cooked and starting to get soft and soggy). Not sure about the time, since I never pay enough attention to that, but if they are baby potatoes I wouldn't wait more than 10 minutes once boiling to test-poke the tip of a sharp knife (with a pointy tip) and see if it goes in easily, better than a fork which might cause the potato to break apart). Then just drain off the water, add butter, salt, pepper, and herbs like parley or rosemary. https://www.recipetineats.com/baby-potatoes-with-butter-herbs/ |