A traditional combination of strawberry and rhubarb creates a delicious syrup to drizzle over pancakes, waffles, or strata.
Servings: | 6 |
Yield: | 6 – 1/2 cup servings |
Ingredients
- 6 tablespoons minced shallots
- 2 teaspoons olive oil
- ½ cup low fat, low sodium chicken broth
- 2 teaspoons minced fresh thyme
- ground black pepper to taste
- salt to taste
- 3 small Yukon Gold potatoes
- ½ cup evaporated skim milk
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 400 degrees F (200 degrees C).
- Place the shallots, oil, broth, thyme, pepper and salt in a small casserole dish. Cover and roast until the shallots are very soft and brown, about 45 minutes. Remove the casserole from the oven.
- Cook the potatoes in a large pot of boiling water until soft, about 20 minutes. Drain and place the potatoes back in the pot over low heat to dry.
- Heat the milk over medium low heat. Add it to the potatoes and beat with a mixer. Add the roasted shallots and beat again until potatoes are smooth.
Nutrition Facts
Calories | 76 kcal |
Carbohydrate | 13 g |
Cholesterol | 1 mg |
Dietary Fiber | 1 g |
Protein | 3 g |
Saturated Fat | 0 g |
Sodium | 61 mg |
Sugars | 3 g |
Fat | 2 g |
Unsaturated Fat | 0 g |
Reviews
I prepared the recipe as instructed. They were very tasty but I’d either add another potato or cut back on the evaporated milk as they were a bit thin. Other than that, what a great side dish to any big meal.
For the extra time and effort involved I expected something distinctly different from ordinary mashed potatoes. Time is valuable and shallots are expensive – these potatoes, while decent enough, didn’t warrant either. Bottom line – good, but still fairly average.
Yummy!!! Excellent way to take simple mashed potatoes to elegant! (As a side note, I accidentally missed the broth when cooking the shallots and they still turned out fine – cooked at 350F.) Didn’t have evaporated milk on hand, so I used a little half n half and butter, but felt I could still rate this recipe since the main flavor components were intact. Thanks for sharing this recipe!
Mixed reviews on this one. I liked the flavor of these potatoes, but nobody else in my family (kids or adults) seemed to care for them. Oh well, you can’t please everyone.
These were good. They are on the sweeter side due to the shallots. They were a bit more time consuming due to roasting the shallots. I will probably stay with sour cream and chive mashed potatoes. It was fun to try something new though.
Some of the best mashed potatoes i’ve ever had. The shallots added great, very noticeable, flavor.
Awesome! Love them!
I needed a little lighter mashed potato recipe for Thanksgiving and was drawn to the ingredient list. It was truly do-ahead and super tasty. First I calculated the recipe for ten servings – as written the dish only used 3 small yukon gold potatoes. I used 5 medium. I roasted the shallots, broth, thyme and olive oil before the turkey went in and left it covered on the counter. When the turkey was half done, I chopped and boiled the potatoes, and finished the recipe (using 2% evaporated milk for a little richer dish). Then I held the finished potatoes in my crockpot set on low until dinner. This is an excellent side – no whipping cream, cream cheese, goat cheese, etc. I could see this side with a grilled flank steak. Will make often.
I tested the recipe to see if I wanted to these for Thanksgiving dinner. Everyone agreed that they were good, but not great. I will mostly likely make them again, just not for a holiday meal when there’s a lot going on in the kitchen already.
These were the best mashed potatoes ever!
I honestly don’t think you can make a bad potato anything using Yukon Golds. The color alone is beautiful and they’re almost rich tasting all by themselves. This recipe was wonderful Robyn and I thank you.
Really yummy! Instead of the evaporated skim milk, I added half & half to enhance the creaminess. My two year old, who won’t touch regular mashed potatoes, asked for these leftovers for days! It was a hit when I served them for Thanksgiving dinner!
Great with a beef dish. Would make again.
A lot to go through for onion flavored mashed potatoes.
Mixer is actually optional, if you’d like to make it easier! Just grated yukons on the second largest side of my old fashioned 4 sided grater, once dried. Tukons are so fluffy by the time you add the shallot mixture they seem mashed already & don’t get “gummy” from the mixer. I cut up the skins that didn’t grate & kept in for fiber(although I couldn’t really see where the recipe has you take them off). I will try the shallots via saute until carmelized, as thinking you could cook potatoes the night before, leave in fridge in their jackets, grate them then nuke & add shallot mixture. (Have nuked cooked Yukons easily in past.) In this way it wouldn’t take so long to get dinner on the table after a long day at work. I served with tilapia as DH needs potatoes with fish or chiken to call be satisfied. Does anyone know if fiber is as low as shown? Seems should be higher if skins left on? Truly a fabulous five & deserves more any time you can get potatoes in them without butter! Thank you ever so much!
Thank you Robyn, this turned out perfect, we served with creamy herbed pork chops from this site, and it was a real winner. No changes or tweaks needed!
This is definitely a keeper recipe. I made this tonight and served it with a cajun seasoned grilled steak. Yummy! I used about 1 1/2 pounds of small Yukon Gold potatoes. My husband thought the shallots were strong, so next time I’ll cut back on them by a couple of tablespoons. Though I probably exceeded the initial 6 tablespoons. I thought it was great.
These were great. I paired them with the Stuffed Pork Crown Roast, french green beans and potato crescent rolls all found on this site and it was a dinner to remember. Excellent!
Absolutely delicious! The shallots and fresh thyme give the potatoes a wonderful aroma and flavor. Mincing the shallots is time consuming, but well worth it. My roomates loved it!
I was very disappointed with this recipe. The flavor was very bland and not at all what I expected. I spent more time trying to doctor this recipe up than I did preparing it. I will not be making this again.
This mouth-watering dish was such a hit, I was forced at fork-point to make it three nights in a row. I had to promise to make it again the following week before I was permitted to skip a few nights. The potatoes were so rich, yet fluffy and light and they did an excellent disappearing act. Thanks for this one. It’s a real winner!