It's a pretty solid consistency, not that great for baking. More of the waxy kind, like a red potato. This morning we had them sauteed up with onions. My favorite way to eat them is in something called crash hot potatoes... you take new potatoes and boil them whole until they're fork-tender. Then drizzle a baking sheet with olive oil. Set the potatoes on the sheet and "smash" them once or twice... not to smithereens, just enough to expose the inside to the air and leave the spud whole. Then drizzle with more olive oil, maybe some rosemary and salt. Bake at 450 degrees until crispy. The kids love them. And boiling the new potatoes whole before crashing them retains all of the color! So you can have them in white, red, yellow, and purple. The kids love them.
Ron, are you coming into Reno any time in the next few weeks? I can save some for you to try. We still have at least 6 plants of them to harvest.
Awesome, thank you! Those look very interesting. Yes, I will be coming up that way sometime soon. I was there weekend before last taking a studio monitor to Maytan Music on Center St. to be repaired. When they are finished with it I will need to go pick it up. That's right in your neck of the woods.Ron, this is what they look like fried up: The color morphs a bit to a blue, but it's still pretty striking.