Homemade hashbrowns
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In North America, we have McCain hashbrowns that are tiny cubed potatoes you find in the freezer aisle. In Australia, hashbrowns are hashbrowns patties, and we don’t have the cubes. I haven’t been able to find them anywhere.
I was hit with nostalgia this morning, so I made hashbrowns. Just cut up whatever potatoes I had in to 0.5cm cubes and fried them up in the pan. Fried some onions and capsicum on the side and then added together.
Usually I put in a bit of bacon or sausage, but we’re going to a German restaurant for dinner tonight, so I’m saving my fatty meat allocation for later.
Seasoned with Hy’s seasoning salt.
Reminds me a lot of the Swedish dish Pytt i panna.
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In North America, we have McCain hashbrowns that are tiny cubed potatoes you find in the freezer aisle. In Australia, hashbrowns are hashbrowns patties, and we don’t have the cubes. I haven’t been able to find them anywhere.
I was hit with nostalgia this morning, so I made hashbrowns. Just cut up whatever potatoes I had in to 0.5cm cubes and fried them up in the pan. Fried some onions and capsicum on the side and then added together.
Usually I put in a bit of bacon or sausage, but we’re going to a German restaurant for dinner tonight, so I’m saving my fatty meat allocation for later.
Seasoned with Hy’s seasoning salt.
I love that you recreated these frozen hash browns! I have had them too but forgot about them. Now I will do them too! 🥰 Thanks! Had a thought on the boiling then frying comment. I do this thing with potatoes where I put some water in the pan, just a little, cover and steam them for a bit, then uncover and cook it off and add more oil for the frying part. That might do it too, but in one pan. Not sure if you need this step though for such small pieces.
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The secret to hash browns like that is two step cooking. After cubing, put in a pot of boiling salted water for like 4 minutes. Drain them with a colander and spread out to let some of the excess moisture steam off. After that, fry them as you did and you’ll end up with fluffy on the inside, golden brown on the outside bits of deliciousness. Also make sure your pan and oil are really hot when you start cooking to stop them from sticking to the pan. The oil should just be beginning to smoke when you put the potatoes in.
Thank you for the detailed instructions! I’ll report back the next time I make these. 🫡
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I’m from California and have always seen those cubes ones on menus as “country potatoes.”
Hmm… Maybe it’s just a Lower Mainland BC thing…
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We call them “home fries” rather than hash browns. I prefer them a little larger and crispier but even these are nice.
Exactly what I was thinking (grew up in Ohio, USA)
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Even as a Canadian, I never knew these things were called hash browns. Hash browns have always been those things you can get at McDonald’s (patties, as you called em). I thought these were hashed potatoes.
I love regional differences.
Which part of Canada are you from? Maybe hashbrowns are a West Coast thing…
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You just need some fat in the pan-butter, olive oil, etc. I recommend a little of both as the butter adds more flavor while the oil keeps the butter from burning. Just don’t use extra virgin, it burns easier than plain olive oil.
I did use quite a bit of oil (canola), but I think my fatal mistake was frying onions in the pan first. Should have used a clean pan for the potatoes.

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Reminds me a lot of the Swedish dish Pytt i panna.
That look so good… I didn’t eat beetroot until I came to Australia. I had a housemate serve it to me, and it was actually quite pleasant! Haven’t had pickled beetroot yet, though.
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I love that you recreated these frozen hash browns! I have had them too but forgot about them. Now I will do them too! 🥰 Thanks! Had a thought on the boiling then frying comment. I do this thing with potatoes where I put some water in the pan, just a little, cover and steam them for a bit, then uncover and cook it off and add more oil for the frying part. That might do it too, but in one pan. Not sure if you need this step though for such small pieces.
I’m not sure, but I’m going to keep trying… For the love of potatoes.
Leg us know how you go, I’d like to see how yours turns out. It’ll be delicious regardless! -
That look so good… I didn’t eat beetroot until I came to Australia. I had a housemate serve it to me, and it was actually quite pleasant! Haven’t had pickled beetroot yet, though.
Haven’t had pickled beetroot yet, though.
It’s pretty alright. It’s my favourite way of eating beetroots, which I guess isn’t saying much given that I’m not that into them.
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Haven’t had pickled beetroot yet, though.
It’s pretty alright. It’s my favourite way of eating beetroots, which I guess isn’t saying much given that I’m not that into them.
Even then, you’ve introduced me to them, and I’d like to try them. I’ll do that when I stop over in those countries next! Thanks for sharing.
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I did use quite a bit of oil (canola), but I think my fatal mistake was frying onions in the pan first. Should have used a clean pan for the potatoes.

The other common trap you might be hitting is trying to turn them too early.
Once most foods (but potatoes especially) sear properly, they’ll release their hold on the pan and you won’t lose the skins/outer layer quite as easily.
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Even then, you’ve introduced me to them, and I’d like to try them. I’ll do that when I stop over in those countries next! Thanks for sharing.
All good!
For checking out the true Classics of Swedish cuisine, look for dishes belonging to the Husmanskost-family. Pytt i panna is one, meatballs is another, fried pork with onion sauce is one of my all-time favourites.
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The other common trap you might be hitting is trying to turn them too early.
Once most foods (but potatoes especially) sear properly, they’ll release their hold on the pan and you won’t lose the skins/outer layer quite as easily.
I tried that, actually… It was the burning smell that alerted me that something was wrong
So perhaps it is that I fried onions in the pan just prior, or I haven’t prepped the potatoes properly. I ended up with a lot of forbidden potato in the sink drain, lol (?). -
All good!
For checking out the true Classics of Swedish cuisine, look for dishes belonging to the Husmanskost-family. Pytt i panna is one, meatballs is another, fried pork with onion sauce is one of my all-time favourites.
Thank you!! I’ve copied this down and put it in my notepad of travel tips. If I’m going to Sweden, I will try all of the foods! Except maybe surströmming. I have a pretty strong gut and smells don’t usually bother me, but I have seen so many videos online, and I feel like they’re over exaggerating for the views… But maybe I am underestimating it. 🥲
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Which part of Canada are you from? Maybe hashbrowns are a West Coast thing…
I’m from Ottawa, but admittedly, I didn’t talk to many of my friends and neighbours about potatoes so I don’t really have a good sample to base my assumption on. It could very well have been just my family, haha.
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Thank you!! I’ve copied this down and put it in my notepad of travel tips. If I’m going to Sweden, I will try all of the foods! Except maybe surströmming. I have a pretty strong gut and smells don’t usually bother me, but I have seen so many videos online, and I feel like they’re over exaggerating for the views… But maybe I am underestimating it. 🥲
Surströmming is an interesting case. Most of the country does not eat it, and it’s not the kind of thing you usually go pick up in a restaurant - eating Surströmming is an occasion, one that warrants a special feast that you arrange at home and invite friends and family to.
Most of the videos online (intentionally) eat it wrong. Don’t open cans indoors, don’t drink the liquid and don’t eat the fish themselves without anything accompanying them.
To eat surströmming properly, you want to first open the fish and clean out the bones, then make them one component in a flatbread sandwich (hard flatbread is traditional) along with butter, potatoes, chopped red onions, sour cream, and chives. They should then be accompanied by large quantities of snaps, hard liquor consumed as shots.
Surströmming is kind of like fish sauce - the production method is similar, they both smell kind of wild, and taste very different from what they smell. I also think they serve similar culinary functions - surströmming is in my opinion best thought of as a condiment adding interesting flavours to the dish they are used in.
The smell is ghastly though. I was not a fan of the Surströmming parties my parents hosted as a kid, and tried my best to stay clear those days.
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I did use quite a bit of oil (canola), but I think my fatal mistake was frying onions in the pan first. Should have used a clean pan for the potatoes.

Or just add more oil before doing the potatoes. You could also oil the veg before putting it in the pan, then the pan just needs enough oil to coat it. Personally, I would just do the potatoes and onions at the same time, depending on the size of my equipment and how much I need to make.
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I’m from Ottawa, but admittedly, I didn’t talk to many of my friends and neighbours about potatoes so I don’t really have a good sample to base my assumption on. It could very well have been just my family, haha.
Oh, same. Tbh, all it says is “hashbrowns” on the bag, so that’s what they were to me, haha.
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Surströmming is an interesting case. Most of the country does not eat it, and it’s not the kind of thing you usually go pick up in a restaurant - eating Surströmming is an occasion, one that warrants a special feast that you arrange at home and invite friends and family to.
Most of the videos online (intentionally) eat it wrong. Don’t open cans indoors, don’t drink the liquid and don’t eat the fish themselves without anything accompanying them.
To eat surströmming properly, you want to first open the fish and clean out the bones, then make them one component in a flatbread sandwich (hard flatbread is traditional) along with butter, potatoes, chopped red onions, sour cream, and chives. They should then be accompanied by large quantities of snaps, hard liquor consumed as shots.
Surströmming is kind of like fish sauce - the production method is similar, they both smell kind of wild, and taste very different from what they smell. I also think they serve similar culinary functions - surströmming is in my opinion best thought of as a condiment adding interesting flavours to the dish they are used in.
The smell is ghastly though. I was not a fan of the Surströmming parties my parents hosted as a kid, and tried my best to stay clear those days.
That’s really interesting, thanks for sharing! If it’s something sort of kind of similar to fish sauce, then it might be too bad for me. I would love to try, but I couldn’t commit to buying one for myself because I’d hate for it to go to waste if I didn’t like it. I’d feel awful.

Maybe I’ll save it for when I get invited to an event, haha. My best guess that it adds a strong savoury flavour? I’m thinking the Aussie equivalent is Vegemite where a little goes a long way.