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This is Why You Should Stop Boiling Mashed Potatoes in Water

While you can still boil potatoes, how you do it makes all the difference:

Step 1: Start with Cold, Generously Salted Water
Use 1–2 tablespoons of kosher salt per quart of water—it should taste like mild seawater.
This seasons the potatoes from the inside out.
Step 2: Don’t Overcook
Cook just until a knife slides in with gentle resistance (about 15–20 mins for Yukon Golds).
Overcooking = mush = glue.
Step 3: Drain & Dry Thoroughly
After draining, return potatoes to the hot pot over low heat for 1–2 minutes, stirring gently.
This evaporates excess moisture—the #1 secret to fluffy mash.
🔥 The Game-Changer: Steam Instead of Boil
For even better results, skip boiling altogether:

Place potato chunks in a steamer basket over simmering water.
Cover and steam 15–20 minutes until tender.
Why it’s better:

No water contact = no flavor or starch loss
Potatoes stay drier = creamier mash with less dairy
More consistent texture (no waterlogged centers)
🧈 Bonus Pro Tips for Perfect Mashed Potatoes
Use Yukon Golds: Naturally buttery, creamy, and less starchy than russets.
Warm your dairy: Cold milk or butter cools the potatoes and causes uneven texture. Heat it gently before adding.
Mash, don’t blend: Use a potato masher or ricer—never a food processor or blender (they overwork starch = glue).
Season in layers: Salt the water, then adjust at the end.
❤️ The Bottom Line
You don’t need to stop cooking potatoes in water entirely—but how you do it matters. By salting the water, avoiding overcooking, and drying the potatoes well (or steaming instead), you’ll transform your mashed potatoes from mediocre to fluffy, flavorful, and luxuriously smooth.

So next time, give your spuds the respect they deserve. Because great mashed potatoes aren’t just a side dish—they’re the soul of the meal.

Have you tried steaming your potatoes? Did it change your mash game?
Share your tips below! And if this saved your holiday dinner, pass it on to a fellow home cook who believes mashed potatoes should always be perfect.

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