Sweet Potato Parsnip Latkes with Feta and Leeks Recipe on Food52 (2024)

Make Ahead

by: deensiebat

November22,2010

4.7

3 Ratings

  • Prep time 30 minutes
  • Cook time 30 minutes
  • Serves 4 as a light meal

Jump to Recipe

Author Notes

I was recently working on an article extolling the virtues of the classic potato latke, and wanted to contrast its perfect simplicity with some ridiculously nouveau-whatever variation. So I wrote that stripped-down basic recipes, with care paid to technique, can hold their own against the frou-frou trimmings of a latke with say... caramelized leeks, hashed parsnips, feta and sweet potatoes. And then I looked at what I wrote. Challenge accepted! No, they're not my grandma's latkes. But oh my are they good. They're sweet yet earthy, studded with delicious briny and savory accents. Happy Hannukah! - deensiebat —deensiebat

Test Kitchen Notes

WHO: deensiebat is a trusted Food52-er from the Pacific Northwest, whose vegetable-heavy diet has lead to some of our favorite recipes.
WHAT: Russet-less latkes that just became a new holiday tradition.
HOW: Caramelized leeks are mixed with grated sweet potatoes and parsnips, crumbled feta, egg, matzoh meal, and nutmeg. It's a loose, dry mix, but lightly smooshing the cakes together before they hit the oil ensures they'll hold together.
WHY WE LOVE THEM: Four assertive flavors -- feta, leeks, sweet potatoes and parsnips -- melt together into sweet, savory, completely addictive pancakes. To dress them up, sprinkle on extra feta or swipe with creme fraiche, or go all out with a crisp apple relish or tiny pile of lemony salad. —The Editors

  • Test Kitchen-Approved

What You'll Need

Ingredients
  • 1 tablespoonbutter or olive oil
  • 2 medium-sized leeks, washed and thinly sliced
  • 1 poundsweet potatoes (usually about 1 large)
  • 1 poundparsnips (number will vary depending upon size)
  • 1/2 teaspooncoarse salt
  • 1/4 teaspoonground white pepper
  • 1 pinchground nutmeg
  • 4 ouncesfeta, crumbled (a creamy French or Israeli style is nice)
  • 2 eggs, lightly beaten
  • 1/4 cupmatzo meal
  • 3/4 cupcanola oil for frying (amount will vary depending upon how many skillets you want to have going)
Directions
  1. Melt the butter (or heat the olive oil) in a saucepan over a medium heat. Add the leeks and a pinch of salt and sauté, stirring occasionally, until the leeks have softened and are beginning to color (about 10 minutes).
  2. While the leeks are cooking, wash and peel the sweet potato and parsnips. Grate on the coarse holes of a box grater, and place in a large bowl (if you have no patience for hand-grating, you can use the shredding disk on a food processor, but place about ¼ of the mixture back in the bowl of the processor with the regular blade and pulse a few times). Add the salt, pepper, nutmeg, feta, egg and matzo meal. Stir to combine. Mix in the cooked leeks.
  3. Pour the canola oil to a depth of 1/2-inch in a frying pan—you can use the pan used for the leeks, and additional pans if you’d like to make quick work of it. Heat the oil over a medium flame until hot—if you drop in a shred of the latke mixture, it should bubble vigorously. Shape about 3 tablespoons of the latke mixture into a round shape (I like to pack a 1/4 cup measure mostly full), and place in the oil. Flatten slightly to form a small pancake. Repeat as many times as your pan space allows. Cook the latkes until well-browned, 5 to 7 minutes, then flip and brown the other side. These latkes are more delicate than standard potato pancakes (especially when warm), so be delicate. When the second side has cooked, place on a plate lined with brown paper, stacking as needed. If you want to be extra-good, now and then strain out any rogue bits that have floated into the oil before they burn (or leave them in, for a taste closer to what grandma would have made). Serve. Or...
  4. If you’re not serving at once, layer the cooled latkes in a sealed container with parchment between the layers, and freeze. To serve, preheat the oven to 375° F. Place the latkes on a cookie sheet (you can place them on a rack on top of a cookie sheet for a crisper result, but usually the sheet is fine for me), and cook until they have colored a bit more and are heated through and sizzling (10 to 15 minutes).

Tags:

  • Jewish
  • American
  • Potato
  • Feta
  • Leek
  • Nutmeg
  • Parsnip
  • Sweet Potato/Yam
  • Make Ahead
  • Serves a Crowd
  • Hanukkah
  • Vegetarian
Contest Entries
  • Your Best Potato Pancakes

See what other Food52ers are saying.

  • Claire Geiger

  • Erica Seo

  • CarlaCooks

  • Jacqueline Madsen

  • marie.killian.5

Popular on Food52

37 Reviews

Lang November 26, 2021

I didn’t have sweet potatoes so I used Yukons. It all turned out great. Everthing held together and my partner fried an egg to put over the latkes and had brunch. Great recipe.

Claire G. April 30, 2020

I love this recipe so much. I generally like trying new things but this is one that I come back to time and time again. I serve them with a simple garlic yogurt sauce and the leftovers are great the next day.
Thank you so much! This is fantastic.

Erica S. September 21, 2014

We made this for lunch yesterday, it was delish!!!

Erica S. September 21, 2014

We didn't have matzo meal so had to add some flour and an egg, flavor was great tho!

Barb December 18, 2016

I was going to try adding some panko, since I don't have any matzo.

CarlaCooks March 20, 2014

I made these last night and they were delicious! I made a few changes based on below comments and what I had in the fridge. I salted the leeks as they were sautéing. I used a feta-like goat cheese. I used 3 eggs: I whipped them in a big bowl with salt and pepper then added the shredded vegetables. After all of the vegetables and cheese were mixed together with the eggs, I added potato flour a bit at a time. I think I ended up using close to 1/4 cup, but perhaps a bit less. I let the mixture sit for about 10 minutes, then I formed them into compact mounds by hand. I am the world's worst fryer, so I instead baked the latkes; I oiled a baking sheet, placed the latkes o the sheet, and then brushed some olive oil on top. I baked them at 220 C/425 F for about 15-20 minutes. They were really tasty. My husband even asked for seconds. I will definitely make these again.

May March 19, 2014

Tasty, but lawdie, too much of a fiddle, and I now have a frying pan full of floating bits of veg and olive oil - a waste of both.
For the record, I hand-grated both the sweet potatoes and the parsnip, so the goop sort of stuck together, but not really satisfactorily enough to bother with the process again.

winjanet December 11, 2012

I followed this recipe exactly, and while the flavor was great, I could not get the potato mixture to hold together to make the latkes. I tried adding another egg, and then adding more matzoh meal, and nothing worked. I just got hash. Any ideas???

Jacqueline M. December 11, 2012

My first couple fell apart in the pan. As I progressed with cooking them, I found that scooping into the hot oil, then flattening slightly at first with back of slotted pancake turner, then more firmly after they had cooked a couple of minutes, helped them hold together. As soon as the first side had caramelized (5 mins or so in the oil), they were easy to turn and held together well. I just drained all the crispy bits on paper towels and sampled as I cooked!

pupa December 10, 2012

loved them. definitely need to use another egg though!

RoseInTheHood December 10, 2012

I made these delectable latkes last night. Marvelously delicious. Substitions: coconut oil instead of canola when frying; no matzo meal in SLC to be found so used bread crumbs.
They DIDN'T hold together very well at all so next time think I'll add another egg and some type of flour. Wonder if the altitude here has anything to do with it?

Jacqueline M. December 9, 2012

We had these for dinner this evening. They were wonderful! I had a hard time finding parsnips in the store, and what I did find were a bit rubbery. As a result, I had a higher ratio of sweet potato to parsnip, and we added an extra egg. We could not find matzoh meal either, so crushed up some matzoh bread. I had a package of creamy chèvre. We served them with lingonberries and apple sauce. Delicious!

marie.killian.5 December 6, 2012

This looks so yummy and I love sweet potatoes! Making these soon!
Also must love really good olive oil as it certainly loves our bodies and betters our health! http://www.carothersoliveoil.com/store/

piano13 December 5, 2012

My co-op sale booklet has a recipe with the exact same title, same proportions of ingredients! Your nutmeg, feta, & matzo meal (this one uses flour instead) are not included. The co-op recipe serves these with a sour cream-minced apple topping. Your additions sound great! (You didn't write the one for the co-op sale flyer, did you? Just curious!)

veggiemama December 5, 2012

Do you think that goat cheese is a good sub for the feta?

rachael.dotson December 5, 2012

can I roast the SP ahead of time and put through my potato ricer? Would this help with moisture? Bought the dang thing for Thanksgiving and want to use it more than once a year...

GregoryBPortland December 5, 2012

I would think the feta balances the sweetness of the potatoes and the parsnips. To answer another question below, sweet potatoes and parsnips have much less water in them, so squeezing the moisture out of them before proceeding with the recipe once they are grated is not necessary. I'm going to try this recipe. It looks delicious.

Whats4Dinner December 5, 2012

I'm thinking about "vegan"izing this by subbing the egg w/egg substitute and just leaving out the feta (I detest cheese substitutes). Does anyone think these won't taste good without the feta?

Bevi November 28, 2012

Oy these sound delicious - I will make them next week with Nate's brisket, which I have cooked and loved for many years!

Jocelyn G. November 28, 2012

When I make regular latkes, I always squeeze out the excess water (and there's a lot of it). Do sweet potatoes and parsnips not have that issue? BTW, I didn't needs latkes to become any more addictive than they already are, so thanks for this :).

Whats4Dinner December 5, 2012

Hi Jocelyn :-)

sftestcook April 4, 2011

Wow! I just spent this gorgeous spring day frying up latkes due to an overabundance of parsnips in my CSA box, and I'm so glad I found your recipe! These are truly delicious. Hard to stop at eating just six! :)

deensiebat April 4, 2011

I need to remember I've written this recipe whenever I'm dealing with parsnip overload. Isn't frying the solution to all csa overload?

sticksnscones December 3, 2010

I made these last night for dinner. OMG...they were delicious! Don't know if I can ever go back to "straight" latkes again. Thanks for such a great recipe.

deensiebat December 3, 2010

Good to hear of your conversion! I'm making a batch for our latkesplash party tonight...

Sagegreen December 2, 2010

I so glad this got an ep. The combination is great.

deensiebat December 2, 2010

We think alike!

Sweet Potato Parsnip Latkes with Feta and Leeks Recipe on Food52 (2024)

FAQs

What is the difference between potato latkes and potato pancakes? ›

Potato pancakes have a creamy, almost mashed-potato-like center, with a thin, golden, crisp exterior. Latkes, on the other hand, should have a deeply browned crust, with wispy, lacy edges. Latkes also aren't hash browns.

What can leeks be used for? ›

When leeks are sliced or chopped, they can be used in place of onions or shallots in soups, stews, and casseroles. You can also showcase their subtle, sweet flavor in pasta dishes like our Red Lentil Rotini with Silken Leeks and Shiitakes or Vegan Penne with Artichokes, Leeks, and Lentils.

What oil is best for latkes? ›

Vegetable oil or canola oil is usually best, because of its high smoking point. Latkes were traditionally made with schmaltz, or chicken fat, so if you have access to it, you should certainly add it in, because it does contribute to the flavor.

Why do Jews make latkes? ›

These potato pancakes (called latkes) are meant to symbolize the miracle of Hanukkah, when the oil of the menorah in the ransacked Second Temple of Jerusalem was able to stay aflame for eight days even though there was only enough oil for one day. The symbolism comes in the form of the oil in which latkes are fried.

When should you not eat leeks? ›

Avoid leeks with cuts or bruises. The dark green tops of leeks should look fresh. Avoid leeks with yellowing or wilting tops. Choose smaller, younger leeks when you want to eat them uncooked.

Are leeks healthier than onions? ›

Leek values

Leek is richer in some vitamins and minerals compared to onion. In 100 grams of leeks, there are 2.1 g of iron — 10 times more than the amount found in onions. AgroWeb.org data on onions and leeks show that the calcium content of leeks is higher, with the exception of green onions.

What does leeks do for your body? ›

Leeks are an excellent source of antioxidants like vitamins C, K and beta-carotene that have anti-inflammatory and anti-aging benefits. Carotenoids include zeaxanthin and lutein which protect the eyes, reducing risk of cataracts and age-related macular degeneration.

What is another name for potato pancakes? ›

Potato pancakes are associated with almost every European cuisine and are referred to as a variety of names including latkes (Jewish culture), kartoffelpuffer (Germany), bramborak (Slovakia and Czech Republic), draniki (Austria), tattifish (England) and rosti (Switzerland) (“Potato Pancake Background”, n.d).

Are latkes basically hash browns? ›

Latkes are basically Jewish hash browns. Traditionally served around Hanukkah (our Festival of Lights), these shallow-fried potato pancakes can be dressed up or served simply as a perfect comfort food.

Why do they make potato pancakes on Hanukkah? ›

Kolatch, Jews eat potato latkes during the eight days of the Hanukkah holiday “because they are fried in oil, and oil symbolizes the miracle of the cruse of oil which lasted for eight days instead of one. Latkes are called fasputshes or pontshkes by some Ashkenazim.

What ethnicity is latke? ›

Historically, Jews in Central and Southern Europe cooked kaese (cheese) latkes, and Jews in Eastern Europe made latkes from buckwheat or rye flour.

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