Make-Ahead Potato Latkes (2024)

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ByTiffany Dahle Published: Last Modified:

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Save time with make ahead potato latkes for your Hanukkah celebration or family gathering. This big batch of potato pancakes can be cooked in advance and frozen or stored in the fridge. Reheat them in the oven or air fryer for perfectly crispy latkes.

Make-Ahead Potato Latkes (1)

Warm and crispy potato latkes, or potato pancakes, are a delicious and easy side dish for so many family celebrations because they can be made ahead and reheated just before serving.

This traditional Jewish recipe is often served for Hanukkah celebrations but my family has long loved this tasty potato recipe, especially when they are served with warm applesauce or dollops of sour cream with fresh chives.

Though I am Catholic, my surprising Ancestry DNA test revealed I am over 10% Jewish! I loved sharing this recipe with my kids and talking to them about our family background during a special family dinner.

Pair them with my favorite roast chicken and an easy challah bread from the bread machine for a simple feast.

Jump to:
  • Why This is the Best Recipe
  • Ingredients
  • Prevent the Potatoes From Turning Color
  • How to Shred the Potatoes
  • How to Prepare the Potato Pancakes
  • How to Fry the Latkes
  • Make-Ahead Tips
  • Air Fryer Latkes
  • Serving Suggestions
  • More Jewish Holiday Recipes
  • 📖 Recipe
  • 💬 Comments

Why This is the Best Recipe

My husband is a meat and potatoes kind of guy so we eat a lot of potatoes but I think this is the best make ahead potato latke recipe because:

  1. Easy to Make Ahead: Latkes take some work, get that out of the way in advance!
  2. Freezer Friendly: You can store them in the freezer, just follow my reheating tips.
  3. So Delicious: Crispy on the outside and so yummy on the inside.
  4. Perfect for Entertaining: This makes a nice hearty batch so you'll have plenty to share.

Ingredients

Delicious potato latkes only take a few key ingredients:

Make-Ahead Potato Latkes (2)
  • Russet Potatoes
  • Onions
  • Eggs
  • Flour
  • Baking Powder
  • Salt & Pepper
  • Canola Oil for frying

See the recipe card for full details and quantities.

Prevent the Potatoes From Turning Color

There are two key tricks to ensuring your potato pancakes don't turn funny colors before you're able to cook them.

First, prepare the batter bowl so it is ready for the shredded potatoes immediately.

Add the eggs, flour, baking powder, salt, and pepper. There's no need to mix it together at this point. Just set it aside.

Make-Ahead Potato Latkes (3)

Second, the potatoes need to be the last thing to get shredded so they have the least amount of time in the air.

Shred the onions in your food processor first, then do the potatoes.

How to Shred the Potatoes

Whole potatoes are too large to run through a food processor without a little help.

Peel the potatoes and cut them into quarters. Then process them with the steel grating disc in your food processor.

Pour the grated potatoes and onions into a large strainer in your kitchen sink and press them to remove as much water as you can.

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You'll notice the shreds look like long hash brown strips at this point.

To improve the texture and appearance of the latkes and mimic the hand grated texture, place the steel blade in your food processor bowl and add half of the potato mixture back to the bowl.

Pulse 10 times until the potatoes are more grated and stir them back into the potatoes in the strainer. Press to release and drain the liquid again.

How to Prepare the Potato Pancakes

Once the potatoes and onions have been grated and drained, run them 2 cups at a time through a salad spinner to remove all the liquid you can.

I ran the salad spinner on each portion of potatoes twice, draining the liquid in between turns.

Immediately put the spun potatoes into the prepared egg bowl and repeat the salad spinner with the remaining potatoes in the strainer.

Once all the potatoes are strained and added to the egg bowl, quickly mix everything together with a large spatula until evenly coated with egg and flour.

Make-Ahead Potato Latkes (5)

How to Fry the Latkes

I experimented with baking the latkes on a baking sheet and frying them in a skillet. For the very best texture and golden brown crispness, the frying pan won by a long shot. The baking pan just simply didn't crisp them the way the pan could.

Pour 1/4 cup of canola oil in a large skillet and heat it over medium-high heat until the oil shimmers.

Scoop a portion of the prepared potato mixture with a metal measuring cup and flip it over into the frying pan. Immediately flatten the scoop with the flat side of a spatula to form a round pancake.

Only add as many latkes as you can fit into your skillet with several inches between them. If you overcrowd the pan, they will steam rather than fry and you won't have enough space to flip them over.

Cook for 3 - 4 minutes or until the bottoms are golden brown and crispy and the pancakes are firm enough to flip.

Flip them over and cook on the other side for another 3 - 4 minutes or until both sides are golden brown.

Immediately transfer to a plate lined with paper towel to drain some of the oil.

You may have to add more oil to the pan as you cook the batches of latkes and they absorb the cooking oil. The pan should always have an even coating of oil on the bottom.

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Make-Ahead Tips

Though the recipe is fairly easy to make it does take a bit of time that you may not want to spend in the middle of a holiday gathering.

If you want to make them ahead of time, prepare the latkes completely all the way through the frying step and drain them on the paper towel lined plate.

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Then lay the latkes in a single layer on a large baking pan. If you have more pancakes than will fit on the sheet, add a layer of parchment paper between them so they don't stick together or use a second baking sheet.

Store them in the fridge for up to 24 hours.

How to Freeze the Latkes

You could also completely cook the potato pancakes and store them in an airtight container with parchment or wax paper in between the layers to prevent them from sticking. Thaw in the fridge overnight before using.

How to Reheat the Latkes

When you're ready to reheat them and serve, preheat the oven to 350°F and bake the latkes on a large baking pan in a single layer with some space around each pancakes so the air can circulate.

Cook them for 5 minutes or so until they are heated through and crispy on both sides.

Air Fryer Latkes

The shredded potato batter is initially very soft and would be difficult to cook in the air fryer for the first round, but fried potato latkes reheat perfectly in the air fryer!

Preheat the air fryer to 400°F for 5 minutes. Then add the latkes in a single layer in the fry basket and cook for 4 - 5 minutes or until heated through and crispy.

Do not overcrowd the air fryer basket or the latkes will steam rather than crisp up and may heat unevenly.

Serving Suggestions

Crispy potato latkes are absolutely delicious served with a pinch of salt over the top and a cup of sour cream and homemade applesauce on the side.

My microwave applesauce only takes 10 minutes and is the perfect partner for the potato pancakes.

Since you could reheat the latkes in the air fryer, they'd make a great side dish for my oven roasted chicken with vegetables. You could skip the potatoes in that recipe and just add extra carrots or other root vegetables.

  • Microwave Applesauce
  • Easy Roasted Chicken with Vegetables

More Jewish Holiday Recipes

If you're trying to plan a make-ahead Rosh Hashanah or relaxing Hanukkah dinner, don't miss my other easy recipes that are perfect for a festive family meal:

  • 30 Rosh Hashanah Recipes for a Happy New Year
  • 18 Festive Hanukkah Recipes for Busy Nights

📖 Recipe

Make-Ahead Potato Latkes (12)

Make Ahead Potato Latkes

4.44 from 46 votes

Golden brown potato latkes can easily be made from scratch at home before your holiday celebration. Mix together the grated potatoes and onions with a simple egg base and fry them in oil. Once cooled, they can be stored for later and just reheated before serving.

TOTAL TIME 1 hour hour 5 minutes minutes

PREP TIME 25 minutes minutes

COOK TIME 40 minutes minutes

YIELD 18 latkes

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Ingredients

  • 4 eggs
  • 1 tablespoon kosher salt
  • 1 teaspoon fresh cracked black pepper
  • 1 cup flour
  • 2 teaspoons baking powder
  • 2 onions
  • 4 large Russet potatoes washed
  • Olive oil or Canola oil for frying

Instructions

Prepare the Potatoes

  • In order to prevent the potatoes from turning color, it is important to mix together the latke mixture very quickly. Start by preparing the filling ingredients in the largest mixing bowl you have.

  • Crack the eggs and add the salt, pepper, flour, and baking powder to the bowl. You do not need to mix them together, just set them aside while you prepare the vegetables.

  • Peel the onions and cut them into halves. Run them through a food processor fitted with the coarse grate disc.

  • Roughly peel the potatoes, it is ok if a little skin remains. Cut them into quarters and run them through the food processor.

  • Pour all the grated veggies into a strainer in the sink and rinse them with cold water. Shake the strainer to drain as much liquid as you can.

  • Return the food processor bowl to the base of the machine and place the circular blade inside. Add about half of the potato-onion mixture back to the food processor and pulse it for 10 pulses. Mix the extra-grated veggies back into the strainer. This gives the latkes a nice hand-grated texture.

  • Working in batches, spin two - three handfuls of veggies in a salad spinner to remove as much liquid as possible. Drain and spin once more. Pour the veggies into the prepared mixing bowl and repeat until all the potatoes have been spun.

  • Quickly mix together the potato mixture with the eggs and flour using a large spatula. Continue to stir and fold it together until all the potatoes and onions are coated in egg and flour.

Fry the Latkes

  • In a large skillet over medium-high heat pour 1/4 cup of cooking oil. Once the oil is shimmering, use a 1/4 cup metal measuring cup to portion out a latke. Turn it over into the pan and use a spatula to flatten it into shape. Repeat until the pan is filled with latkes that still have 1 inch of space around each side. My 8-inch skillet could only fit two or three without over crowding the pan.

  • Once the first side is golden brown, use a spatula to flip the latkes over and brown the other side. 8 - 10 minutes total.

  • Transfer the cooked latkes to a plate lined with paper towel to drain some of the oil.

Make Ahead Tips

  • Once the latkes are golden brown, they should be served immediately with a sprinkle of salt and on a platter with sour cream and applesauce for topping.

  • If you prefer to make them ahead, line a large baking pan with parchment paper and lay the latkes out in a single layer. Let them cool completely and then cover with plastic wrap and store in the fridge for up to 24 hours.

  • Preheat the oven to 350°F and bake the latkes until heated through and crispy before serving, about 5 minutes.

Freezing Tips

  • Completely cooled latkes can be frozen with layers of parchment or wax paper in between the layers to prevent them from sticking to one another. Store in an air-tight container.

  • Thaw in the fridge overnight or bake directly from frozen until heated through and crispy.

Recipe Notes

The times listed for frying and reheating in the oven are based on 1/4 cup portions of latke mixture flattened about 1/4 inch thick. If your latkes are thicker or larger, times should be adjusted accordingly.

COURSESide Dishes

CUISINEJewish

AUTHORTiffany Dahle

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FAQs

Can latkes be prepared ahead of time? ›

Or, you can grate the potatoes hours ahead and store them submerged in water in the refrigerator. Drain them well and make the batter up to two hours ahead. (It doesn't matter if it discolors– when you fry them the latkes turn a beautiful golden brown). Fry the latkes no more than an hour or two ahead of serving.

How do you keep latkes crispy when reheated? ›

– Always serve latkes hot and fresh if possible.

When ready to reheat, place in a 375 degree oven for about 10 minutes (7 if using a convection oven) until heated through just prior to serving. A convection oven setting will produce a more crispy result.

How do you keep latke batter from turning brown? ›

Onions can help block oxidation by coating some of the potato cells” Don Odiorne VP of Foodservice said. That's why some cooks alternate adding potatoes and onion to the mixture rather than doing all the potatoes first.

How to keep latkes from turning grey? ›

When you grate raw potatoes, you release starch that can cause them to oxidize, or turn dark. The best way to keep that from happening is to cover the potatoes with cold water, then drain them very well and pat them dry before cooking.

Can you refrigerate latke batter? ›

Pre-Mix: Prep latke batter and keep in a sealable container in the fridge for a few hours or overnight. 4. Pre-Fry: Day of: Fry and keep at room temp.

What is the best oil for frying potato 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.

How to store latkes for next day? ›

Make the latkes ahead of time and store them in the refrigerator in a single layer on baking sheets. Or freeze them flat in a single layer (transferring them to a resalable bag once they're frozen flat). To reheat them bake them in a 425 degree F oven until they're warmed through and crisp.

Can I bake potatoes ahead of time and reheat? ›

Cool baked potatoes completely, place them in an airtight container or resealable plastic bag and refrigerate them. The USDA says they can be safely refrigerated for 3 to 4 days. Like all foods that have been cooked and cooled, potatoes should be reheated to at least 165 degrees F.

What's the difference between hash browns and latkes? ›

Latkes also aren't hash browns. Hash browns are all about crispy, burnished crust, with just enough potato-y center to gain a third dimension and a little give. A latke's interior should be plump and slightly cakey, but yielding, with recognizably rustic strands of potato intertwined with onion.

Why are my potato pancakes gummy? ›

Get That Moisture Out.

Using a kitchen towel or paper towel, wring out as much moisture as possible. If you don't drain the moisture, they won't crisp as easily and that may be why your potato pancakes are gummy.

How do you reheat potatoes without getting them soggy? ›

Reheat a Baked Potato on the Stovetop

Add a little olive oil to a skillet over medium-low. Cut the potatoes in half and put the cut sides in the pan. Cover with a lid and cook for three to four minutes. Once heated, remove the lid and flip the potatoes, heating on all sides, so the skin gets crispy.

Why are my latkes not crispy? ›

Opt for a Russet Potato

The key to a crispy, crunchy latke is starch. Different potato varieties have different amounts of starch, and russets are the starchiest spud of them all. For this reason, your best potato option for latkes is a cheap, humble russet.

Can I make pancakes ahead of time? ›

MAKING AHEAD

You can store the made pancakes in the fridge, wrapped in foil, for up to 2 days - just reheat before use.

Why are my latkes greasy? ›

Not only are the health claims untrue, but vegetable oil has a way of being absorbed into the potatoes, giving latkes that heavy greasiness, in a way that animal fat doesn't.

What grater to use for latkes? ›

Grate them by hand using the large holes on a cheese grater. Or, for the greatest ease, use the grater blade on a food processor: place the potato in the large feed tube, lock into place, turn on, and push through. Repeat with the other potatoes.

Should I peel my potatoes for latkes? ›

Prepare the potatoes and onion.

Scrub 1 1/2 pounds russet potatoes well, but do not peel.

How to keep potato pancakes from turning black? ›

Peel the potatoes and then cut them into cubes. As you cube them place the cubes in a bowl and sprinkle with lemon juice to prevent them from darkening. In a food processor, grate the potatoes and the onion.

How to keep latke batter from turning brown? ›

Place your potatoes in water until ready to grate so they don't brown. Prep all your ingredients so that you can work fast! Alternate your potato and onion when you grate them, it keeps the mixture white!

What is the best oil for latkes? ›

The Best Oil For Frying Latkes, According To Jewish Chefs
  • Option 1: Canola Oil.
  • Option 2: Peanut Oil.
  • Option 3: Schmaltz.
  • Option 4: Olive Oil (Your Last Resort)
Nov 29, 2023

Can you make pancake batter and leave it in the fridge overnight? ›

How can I make the pancake batter ahead of time? To make ahead the pancake batter, prepare it in the evening. Then, cover the bowl, and refrigerate overnight. In the morning, give the batter a quick whisk just before you want to use it.

What kind of potatoes are best for latkes? ›

Russet potatoes make for perfect latkes

That's why the outlet also recommends the russet. The high starch content in this potato will help the pancakes bind together and fry well. The russet is best known as the ideal spud for mashed potatoes for many of the same reasons.

What's the difference between hash browns and potato latkes? ›

When comparing hash browns to latkes and potato pancakes, hash browns require the fewest ingredients. Latke recipes include a binder like egg. They may sometimes have seasoning like onion plus matzo meal, baking powder, and sometimes milk.

Can you make latkes ahead of time and freeze? ›

New York Times food writer Kim Severson pan-fries her latkes and then freezes them, in a single layer, on a plastic wrapped baking sheet. When the hungry crowd arrives, she bakes them in a 425° F oven for 15 to 20 minutes, until hot and crispy.

Can you prepare potatoes the day before Christmas? ›

Prep your veg the night before

Peel potatoes, carrots, parsnips and any other veg you're having and leave them in pans of cold water overnight. This will save you a lot of faff and additional mess on Christmas morning.

Can you prepare new potatoes in advance? ›

Corey Williams is a food writer for MyRecipes and Allrecipes. She has a decade of journalism experience. If you're here, you'll probably be glad to know that yes, you can peel and cut potatoes the day before you plan to serve them — and that it's super easy!

Can I Grate potatoes the night before? ›

You should avoid peeling and cutting potatoes ahead of time for any recipe that calls for finely diced or grated potatoes. "Because all potatoes are rinsed of surface starch when soaked in water, grated potatoes would lose even more starch," says Welsh.

Can you prep potatoes ahead of time for camping? ›

Preparing potatoes ahead of time can save you valuable time and effort at the campsite. Wash and dice potatoes at home and store them in airtight containers or resealable bags to keep them fresh during transit.

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