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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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Wayne Boatwright wrote:
> On Sun 10 Apr 2005 04:07:34p, h.e. sea wrote in rec.food.cooking: > >> Resin baked potatoes are a South Carolina Low Country specialty, and >> I remember them from my childhood visits to Murrells Inlet, but no >> matter how hard I search on the internet, I can't find a way to make >> them. I have found a couple of old news articles which mention >> something about a worker accidentally dropping a potato in pine >> resin which was being boiled to make turpentine, but this doesn't >> sound very safe. >> Has anyone else had resin baked potatoes or know how I can make them >> at home? >> >> Thank you so much for any help you can offer me, >> Heather > > It's "rosin" not "resin". You'll find plenty of hits searching for > "rosin potatoes". These were very popular when I lived in Memphis in > the 1950s. Here'a an example... > > In a cast iron kettle (or rosin cooker) put 2 to 5 pounds raw rosin > and bring to boil. Scrub potatoes completely. Idaho Bakers are > preferred. Drop in potatoes. When done, they come to the top. Remove > with tongs and wrap in 5 or 6 thicknesses of newspaper. Roll up and > twist each end. To serve, slice open newspaper and potato together > with a sharp knife. Be careful, overheated rosin could possibly > combust and burn. They used to serve these at Cracker Barrel (for all I know they still do). They wrapped theirs in brown paper, not newspaper. Jill |
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