Pommes Dauphine

If mashed potatoes were fried, they'd be pommes dauphine.

pommes dauphine

Vicky Wasik

Why It Works

  • A combination of milk and water in the choux pastry contributes flavor and aids in browning the pommes dauphine. 
  • Rinsing the potatoes before and after cooking removes excess starch, ensuring fluffy, not gluey, mashed potatoes.
  • Using a cookie scoop produces uniform pommes dauphine and makes for easy, mess-free frying. 

Pommes dauphine, or fried potato puffs, fly under the radar in the wide world of potato dishes. Perhaps this can be attributed to a name that isn’t particularly revealing (unless you’ve spent time perusing old-school French culinary tomes) or the fact that it requires making pâte à choux (which can be intimidating to even seasoned cooks, although our recipe is near-foolproof). Regardless of the reason, this classic side dish shouldn’t be missed. My process is straightforward and the results speak for themselves: golden-hued nuggets of fried potato boasting crisp, delicate crusts with fluffy, cloudlike insides. If you need even more help imagining it, think mashed potatoes, but inflated like a balloon and deep fried to a crisp golden crunch.

At a glance, making pommes dauphine is easy: fold choux with mashed potatoes, form the dough into balls, and fry. Here, success hinges on sound technique. Relying on our easy recipe for making choux pastry makes this dish less finicky. Choux serves an important purpose in pomme dauphines. Like in other applications (Parisian gnocchi and chouquettes, just to name a couple), choux is twice-cooked: the process begins on the stovetop, bringing liquid and butter to a boil and adding in flour followed by eggs. (Cutting water with milk, which I call for in this recipe, enhances browning and deepens the flavor thanks to milk’s extra proteins and sugar). This results in a doughy paste (the technical term is panade) with a high water content and limited elasticity. When cooked, the water vapor inside the dough generates steam and causes its gluten structure to expand, trapping those gases and inflating the puffs.  

With that squared away, I pivoted to the potatoes. My tests showed that russet potatoes’ dry, floury texture was ideal in this preparation where lightness is the goal (Yukon Gold potatoes, with their inherently creamy consistency, were not desirable here). To produce the fluffiest potatoes, I use our method of rinsing the cubed potatoes both before and after boiling to remove as much of the starch as possible—that excess starch is one of the main causes of gluey potatoes, so removing it is key. Using a ricer to quickly break down the cooked potatoes results in a smooth, fluffy mash that’s ready to be combined with choux pastry. 

ricing potatoes

Vicky Wasik

However, figuring out the question of how to bring these two parts—the choux and the potatoes—required a bit more tinkering. First off, traditional recipes for pommes dauphine, including the ones from Auguste Escoffier and Fernand Point, two iconic French chefs, rely on a foundation of pommes duchesse―seasoned potatoes enriched with butter and egg yolks. Modern recipes typically do without, instead using mashed potatoes with salt, pepper, nutmeg, and maybe butter. I ran a side-by-side test, frying pommes dauphine made with duchesse potatoes and another with seasoned mashed potatoes. The ones made with duchesse potatoes were noticeably denser and somewhat squishier in texture, likely due to the addition of egg yolks. I settled on seasoning the mash with salt, pepper, and melted butter and skipping the yolks. (If I had to guess, the use of pommes duchesse as the base for dauphine had more to do with efficiencies in old French kitchens, where the duchesse was likely on-hand at all times for various applications—its most famous use is piped into pretty designs and baked—so it was a no-brainer for chefs back then to grab it and fold in the choux for dauphine when needed. Given that we're not working in kitchens where duchesse potatoes are always on the menu, there's no real benefit in making them a requirement now.)

Next, I had to nail down the ratio of choux to potato. Classic recipes call for weighing the potatoes and adding approximately 30% of its weight in choux pastry. Conversely, newer recipes hover closer to equal parts by weight. I found that adding 70% choux produced golden brown pommes dauphine that were airy, not doughy, with a pronounced potato flavor. 

Before I could move on to frying, I ran one last test to see what would happen if I breaded my pommes dauphine with the classic trio of flour, egg, and breadcrumbs, a move which older recipes often call for. After a quick tumble through the breading station, I tossed one into the fryer. When pommes dauphine are fried, they puff, so it wasn’t exactly a surprise to see the coating quickly crack as the dauphine puffs swelled, sloughing off into the hot oil. That's one more classic technique that I'm ditching in my recipe, and frankly, based on my tests, it leaves me wondering how it ever worked for anyone at all.

frying pommes dauphine

Vicky Wasik

To make the frying step both easy and mess-free, I use a 1-tablespoon cookie scoop to swiftly scoop, form, and drop uniform balls of the dough into the hot oil (if you don’t have a cookie scoop, use two spoons to scoop and form the dough into rough balls or quenelles before dropping into the hot oil). Frying in batches at 340°F, a slightly lower temperature than one may be used to when frying, gives the choux pastry enough time to cook through as the exterior browns. Once it’s all fried, you can pile the pommes dauphines into a bowl and serve it alongside a roast chicken or pan-seared steaks. And just like mashed potatoes, pommes dauphine are the perfect vehicle for sopping up generous amounts of gravy. 

January 2022

Recipe Details

Pommes Dauphine

Cook 40 mins
Total 40 mins
Serves 4 to 6 servings
Makes 32 pommes dauphine

Ingredients

  • 1 pound (455g) russet potatoes (about 2 medium potatoes), peeled and cut into 3/4-inch cubes

  • 2 quarts (1.9L) cold water

  • 2 teaspoons (8g) Diamond Crystal kosher salt, plus more to taste; for table salt use half as much by volume or the same weight 

  • 2 tablespoons (28g) unsalted butter, melted

  • Freshly ground black pepper

  • 1/2 recipe Choux Pastry (made with equal parts milk and water), transferred to a small bowl with plastic wrap pressed directly against the choux’s surface (see note)

  • 2 quarts (1.9L) vegetable oil, for frying

Directions

  1. Place potatoes in a medium bowl and cover with cool water. Using your hands, swish potatoes until water turns cloudy, about 30 seconds. Using a colander, drain potatoes, discarding the cloudy soaking water. Return potatoes to bowl, refill with cool water, and repeat process until water runs clear.

    swishing potatoes in water

    Vicky Wasik

  2. Transfer drained potatoes to a 3-quart saucepan and add 2 quarts (1.9L) cold water and salt. Bring to a boil over high heat, then reduce heat to maintain a simmer. Cook until potatoes are tender and offer little resistance when pierced with a paring knife, about 10 minutes. Drain potatoes in colander, then rinse with hot running water for 30 seconds to wash away excess starch.

    drained potatoes in pot

    Vicky Wasik

  3. Return drained potatoes to now-empty saucepan. Heat on low heat, shaking saucepan constantly to evaporate moisture from potatoes, about 1 minute.

    evaporating moisture from potatoes

    Vicky Wasik

  4. Pass potatoes through a ricer onto a rimmed baking sheet, spreading them into an even layer, and allow them to cool slightly, about 2 minutes.

    riced potatoes on rimmed baking sheet

    Vicky Wasik

  5. Transfer riced potatoes to a medium bowl. Using a flexible spatula, stir in melted butter and season with salt and pepper to taste. Add choux pastry, and stir until thoroughly combined, about 1 minute. Cover with plastic wrap, pressing plastic against surface of the potato-choux mixture to prevent a skin from forming. Set aside (mixture can be held at room temperature for up to 2 hours, or refrigerated for up to 8 hours and brought to room temperature before frying).

    combining riced potatoes and choux pastry

    Vicky Wasik

  6. Adjust oven rack to middle position and preheat oven to 200°F (95°C). Set a wire rack inside a rimmed baking sheet and line rack with paper towels. In a large Dutch oven, heat oil over medium-high heat to 340°F (171°C). Using a 1-tablespoon cookie scoop, scoop dough and carefully add to hot oil, dropping portion from as close to the oil’s surface as possible to minimize splashing. (Alternatively, using a spoon, scoop roughly 1-tablespoon of dough, and using a second spoon, gently form into a rough, oblong shape, then carefully add to hot oil). Working quickly, repeat process with 9 more portions of dough (for a batch of 10). Fry, using a spider or slotted spoon to turn pieces as they cook, until puffed and golden brown on all sides, about 3 1/2 minutes. Transfer pommes dauphine to prepared wire rack, season with salt, and transfer to oven to keep warm.

    frying pommes dauphine

    Vicky Wasik

  7. Return oil to 340°F (171°C) and repeat frying with remaining dough, continuing to work in batches of 10. Transfer pommes dauphine to a serving bowl and serve immediately.

    fried pommes dauphine

    Vicky Wasik

Special Equipment

Potato ricer or potato masher, rimmed baking sheet, wire rack, colander, spider skimmer or slotted spoon, Dutch oven, instant-read thermometer, 1 tablespoon cookie scoop

Notes

This recipe uses a 1/2 recipe of choux pastry. To do this, you can either cut the ingredients in half and proceed with the recipe as directed, or make a whole recipe, using the remaining half to make Paris–Brest, éclairs, or choux au craquelin.

Make-Ahead and Storage

Pommes dauphine are best enjoyed immediately.

Nutrition Facts (per serving)
347 Calories
31g Fat
16g Carbs
3g Protein
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Nutrition Facts
Servings: 4 to 6
Amount per serving
Calories 347
% Daily Value*
Total Fat 31g 39%
Saturated Fat 5g 27%
Cholesterol 27mg 9%
Sodium 577mg 25%
Total Carbohydrate 16g 6%
Dietary Fiber 2g 6%
Total Sugars 1g
Protein 3g
Vitamin C 6mg 28%
Calcium 56mg 4%
Iron 1mg 5%
Potassium 382mg 8%
*The % Daily Value (DV) tells you how much a nutrient in a food serving contributes to a daily diet. 2,000 calories a day is used for general nutrition advice.
(Nutrition information is calculated using an ingredient database and should be considered an estimate.)