Potatoes

How to make Potato Waffles

Crisp potato waffles with a fluffy middle and grid texture.

What it is

Potato Waffles in the kitchen

Potato Waffles belongs in the component guide library rather than the country recipe library because it is a method, base, side, topping, sauce or frozen dessert that can support many dishes.

Why make it

Make this when a recipe needs a stronger supporting element: a better side, a more useful sauce, a smarter base or a dessert component that can be paired across cuisines.

Best with

Breakfasts, eggs, beans and casual suppers.

Method

Step-by-step

  1. Step 1

    Prepare the potatoes as follows: grated potato batter spread 1 cm thick. Keep the pieces even because this dish depends on all potatoes finishing at the same time.

    Look for: Potatoes are uniform: grated potato batter spread 1 cm thick. Tip: Use a ruler once, then copy that size by eye. Avoid: Uneven cutting is the quickest route to raw centres and burnt edges.
  2. Step 2

    Use a waffle iron. Bring the cooking surface or oven to hot waffle iron before the potatoes go in.

    Look for: The waffle iron is hot enough that the potato starts cooking immediately. Tip: Preheat longer than you think for cast iron, trays and waffle irons. Avoid: Adding potatoes to a cold pan or oven makes them absorb fat before browning.
  3. Step 3

    Cook the potatoes gently at first so the centres soften before the outside gets too dark. For layered dishes, keep the slices flat and pressed; for fried dishes, leave them still until the first crust forms.

    Look for: Centres begin to yield while the outside is only lightly coloured. Tip: Listen for a steady sizzle rather than aggressive spitting. Avoid: High heat from the start gives dark surfaces with hard centres.
  4. Step 4

    Add the fat, seasoning and aromatics at the point they will flavour the potato without burning: delicate herbs and garlic usually go in after the first browning, while spices need enough fat to bloom.

    Look for: Aromatics smell fragrant and the fat is tinted or glossy, not burnt. Tip: If spices are sticking, add a spoon of water, stock or oil depending on the dish. Avoid: Raw garlic or scorched spices make the whole dish taste harsh.
  5. Step 5

    Continue until the dish shows its correct finish: defined grid with crisp ridges. Adjust the heat if the outside colours before the centre is tender.

    Look for: Defined grid with crisp ridges. Tip: Use a knife, skewer or spatula test rather than relying on the clock alone. Avoid: Stopping at pale beige usually means the potato has not developed enough flavour.
  6. Step 6

    Rest briefly if layered, baked or mashed; serve immediately if fried or crisp. Taste for salt at the end because potatoes mute seasoning as they cool.

    Look for: Texture is settled but still hot; crisp dishes remain dry on the surface. Tip: A final pinch of salt or fresh herbs should land just before serving. Avoid: Covering crisp potatoes tightly traps steam and softens them.
Storage

Make ahead and storage

Storage

Cool on a rack and refrigerate for up to 3 days. Reheat in a toaster, oven or air fryer until hot and crisp.

Make ahead

Cook the waffles ahead and reheat from chilled for a fast side or breakfast base.

Freezing

Freeze cooked waffles between sheets of baking paper and toast or oven-bake from frozen.