Jacket Potatoes Recipe

Must Try

Jacket potatoes, also known as baked potatoes, and have been a popular staple of British cuisine for centuries. Potatoes have long been widely available and inexpensive, and they make the basis for an easy, filling, and delicious meal. Topped with whatever you like and served piping hot, crispy-skinned spuds are a dinner winner that’s stood the test of time.

For the best possible baked potatoes, make them the British way.

Choosing the Perfect Potato

The best potato variety I’ve found to use for jacket potatoes is the russet a.k.a. baking potato. When baked, they have the fluffiest interior and the crispiest skin. Yukon gold potatoes will work too, they just won’t crisp up as well and will be far moister on the inside.

In the U.K., they have varieties of potatoes that split the difference between starch and moisture content. The Maris Piper and King Edward potatoes are the ones most commonly used for jacket potatoes, and they’re somewhere between russets and Yukon golds. 

Since we don’t have a perfect analog here in the U.S., you can decide which attribute is more important to you—a moist interior or crispy skin. For me, crispy skin wins. After all, you can always butter up a russet potato to make it as moist as you please. 

When you’re buying potatoes, make sure they’re free of dark spots, gashes, wrinkles, or any tinge of green. For sure avoid potatoes that have begun to sprout. A good potato should feel very firm and heavy for its size. 

Simply Recipes / Coco Morante


How To Bake a Perfect Jacket Potato

Here’s the thing about a good jacket potato—they really can’t be rushed. In my experience, it takes a minimum of 1 hour (and up to 2 hours) to produce a potato that has a fluffy interior and an appealingly crispy skin.

As far as the technique for baking potatoes go, it’s one of the easiest things you can do in the kitchen. Put the potatoes on a baking sheet (lined with foil for easy cleanup if you please), prick them all over with a fork, rub them with oil, salt, and pepper, and bake them in a hot oven for longer than you think you should. That’s really all there is to it. 

Things you don’t want to do:

  • Cover the potatoes in foil: this will cause their skins to steam rather than crisp up.
  • Bake your potatoes unseasoned: you’ll miss out on the best part, the salty/peppery skin is so good! 
  • Underbake your potatoes: give them enough time to develop a crisp skin and super fluffy insides.

Simply Recipes / Coco Morante


British-Inspired Potato Toppings

In Britain, people have been getting creative with their jacket potato toppings for quite a while, and popular combinations go far beyond the usual steakhouse favorites in the US. A couple of street vendors have become famous as of late: The Hot Potato Tram in Preston (a.k.a. Spud Bros), and Spud Man in Tamworth. Their menus provide plenty of inspiration if you’re looking for creative ways to top your spuds. Fan favorites include:

  • Cheddar and Red Leicester cheese
  • Baked beans (the British kind, in a not-too-sweet tomato sauce)
  • Canned tuna (mixed with mayo and often corn kernels, too) 
  • Coleslaw
  • Chili con carne

A generous amount of butter is almost always drizzled or spread onto the fluffy baked potato before other toppings are added.

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