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Receta Frying Up Them Fritters.
by Mary Cokenour

These United States of

America were founded on basic principles, one being Freedom. It became a melting pot for immigrants, mainly

from Europe, who were leaving poverty, or seeking sanctuary for religious

and/or political beliefs. This mixture

of peoples from different countries also brought their tried and true recipes

of the former homelands. As families

met, couples married, and created blended families, so did the recipes

intermingle. The East coast was becoming

crowded; the streets were not paved with gold, but a new land was being shouted

about…The West. The Pioneers began the

trek out to the West; to seek their fortunes on open plains, or in the hills

and mountains laden deep with gold, silver and copper.

Along the way, there were

no general stores or restaurants; perhaps a trading post a thousand miles or

so. Provisions were on the wagons;

hopefully the men would be lucky enough to catch fish in the rivers, or shoot

wild game for meat. Now the pioneer

women were resourceful themselves; every scrap of food, from flour to butter to

fruit and vegetables, had to be used up; there could be no waste! In other words, leftovers were not something

to sniff at and turn the head away; they were used and reconstructed into

something new and delicious.

Let’s take one of my old

time favorites, mashed potatoes…a fluffy mass of potato goodness seasoned with

salt, pepper, perhaps an herb or two; rich and comforting with milk and

butter. I can picture it now, sitting in

front of the fire on a cold or rainy day; a steaming bowl of buttery potatoes,

a spoonful resting on the tongue, then slowly slides down the throat. The deep sigh of satisfaction as warm comfort

envelopes, not just the stomach, but the entire body and mind. Alright, you get it, I truly enjoy mashed

potatoes when they are fresh and hot. Ah,

but what about when they become cold, not so nice then…and back to our women

pioneers.

Potato Fritters, British

and Irish Pancakes, Jewish Latke, Polish Placki; name a European ancestry and

you’ll find a version of one of these.

Now while I was researching Utah pioneer recipes, I came across an

article, “A Melting Pot of Pioneer Recipes” by Winnifred C. Jardina at the

Official Website of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Let me quote one paragraph, “Thrift fritters

were a combination of cold mashed potatoes and any other leftover vegetables

and/or meat, onion for flavoring, a beaten egg, and seasonings, shaped into

patties and browned well on both sides in hot drippings.” However, there was no actual recipe within

the articles, and I wondered, how was I to make these without a recipe? I began searching and searching, and I had a

“Duh!” moment; of course, this was what I knew as a potato pancake!

Now it just happened I had

made a roast beef dinner including mashed potatoes and peas; gee, can you guess

what I did with the leftovers?

Ingredients:

sides into the bread crumbs.

In a large, deep skillet,

melt the butter in the oil over medium-high heat. Put 4 fritters into the pan; reduce heat to

medium low and cook for 15-20 minutes.

Carefully lift a fritter to check for brownness before flipping them

over. Fry other side for 15 minutes;

drain on paper towels. Repeat frying the

fritters in batches of 4 as instructed for the first batch. Add more oil and butter as needed.

Makes 16 fritters.

Mary Cokenour

Note: Just because I used a Mormon site to obtain this recipe, does not mean I am Mormon. I don't discriminate; I accept people for who and what they are, and I expect the same treatment; regardless of, well just about anything. Now, of course, if the person is a complete smuck, well then that goes towards the personality, not against race, religion, politics, ethnicity, yada, yada, yada.