Can I make potatoes sweet by cooking them?





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I've heard that cooking "breaks down" carbohydrates such as starch. I also know that starch is a complex carbohydrate, which is essentially made out of simple carbohydrates (sugars).



Potatoes contain a lot of starch, so I was wondering: is there a way of cooking potatoes that will break the starch down and make them sweet?



Of course, I'm not expecting to be able to make them sweet like candy, but I'm wondering if I can get some amount of sweetness out of them.



I'm just asking out of curiosity; I don't have any particular goals or dishes in mind.










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  • 1





    Have you ever had any potato dishes that tasted sweet? (excluding sweet potatoes)

    – bruglesco
    Jan 13 at 3:25











  • I often find older potatoes has a slightly sweet taste to it as the starch had naturally broken down.

    – Jay
    Jan 13 at 4:34











  • Put your potatoes in the coldest part of your fridge for a week or two and they will likely turn sweet.

    – Stephie
    Jan 13 at 11:19











  • @Stephie how so? Care to post a new question and answer about sweetening potatoes in the refrigerator?

    – moscafj
    Jan 13 at 11:59











  • @moscafj at some point, yes, but I am a bit short on time atm.

    – Stephie
    Jan 13 at 15:13


















4















I've heard that cooking "breaks down" carbohydrates such as starch. I also know that starch is a complex carbohydrate, which is essentially made out of simple carbohydrates (sugars).



Potatoes contain a lot of starch, so I was wondering: is there a way of cooking potatoes that will break the starch down and make them sweet?



Of course, I'm not expecting to be able to make them sweet like candy, but I'm wondering if I can get some amount of sweetness out of them.



I'm just asking out of curiosity; I don't have any particular goals or dishes in mind.










share|improve this question


















  • 1





    Have you ever had any potato dishes that tasted sweet? (excluding sweet potatoes)

    – bruglesco
    Jan 13 at 3:25











  • I often find older potatoes has a slightly sweet taste to it as the starch had naturally broken down.

    – Jay
    Jan 13 at 4:34











  • Put your potatoes in the coldest part of your fridge for a week or two and they will likely turn sweet.

    – Stephie
    Jan 13 at 11:19











  • @Stephie how so? Care to post a new question and answer about sweetening potatoes in the refrigerator?

    – moscafj
    Jan 13 at 11:59











  • @moscafj at some point, yes, but I am a bit short on time atm.

    – Stephie
    Jan 13 at 15:13














4












4








4








I've heard that cooking "breaks down" carbohydrates such as starch. I also know that starch is a complex carbohydrate, which is essentially made out of simple carbohydrates (sugars).



Potatoes contain a lot of starch, so I was wondering: is there a way of cooking potatoes that will break the starch down and make them sweet?



Of course, I'm not expecting to be able to make them sweet like candy, but I'm wondering if I can get some amount of sweetness out of them.



I'm just asking out of curiosity; I don't have any particular goals or dishes in mind.










share|improve this question














I've heard that cooking "breaks down" carbohydrates such as starch. I also know that starch is a complex carbohydrate, which is essentially made out of simple carbohydrates (sugars).



Potatoes contain a lot of starch, so I was wondering: is there a way of cooking potatoes that will break the starch down and make them sweet?



Of course, I'm not expecting to be able to make them sweet like candy, but I'm wondering if I can get some amount of sweetness out of them.



I'm just asking out of curiosity; I don't have any particular goals or dishes in mind.







flavor sugar potatoes starch






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asked Jan 13 at 0:36









Tanner SwettTanner Swett

1235




1235








  • 1





    Have you ever had any potato dishes that tasted sweet? (excluding sweet potatoes)

    – bruglesco
    Jan 13 at 3:25











  • I often find older potatoes has a slightly sweet taste to it as the starch had naturally broken down.

    – Jay
    Jan 13 at 4:34











  • Put your potatoes in the coldest part of your fridge for a week or two and they will likely turn sweet.

    – Stephie
    Jan 13 at 11:19











  • @Stephie how so? Care to post a new question and answer about sweetening potatoes in the refrigerator?

    – moscafj
    Jan 13 at 11:59











  • @moscafj at some point, yes, but I am a bit short on time atm.

    – Stephie
    Jan 13 at 15:13














  • 1





    Have you ever had any potato dishes that tasted sweet? (excluding sweet potatoes)

    – bruglesco
    Jan 13 at 3:25











  • I often find older potatoes has a slightly sweet taste to it as the starch had naturally broken down.

    – Jay
    Jan 13 at 4:34











  • Put your potatoes in the coldest part of your fridge for a week or two and they will likely turn sweet.

    – Stephie
    Jan 13 at 11:19











  • @Stephie how so? Care to post a new question and answer about sweetening potatoes in the refrigerator?

    – moscafj
    Jan 13 at 11:59











  • @moscafj at some point, yes, but I am a bit short on time atm.

    – Stephie
    Jan 13 at 15:13








1




1





Have you ever had any potato dishes that tasted sweet? (excluding sweet potatoes)

– bruglesco
Jan 13 at 3:25





Have you ever had any potato dishes that tasted sweet? (excluding sweet potatoes)

– bruglesco
Jan 13 at 3:25













I often find older potatoes has a slightly sweet taste to it as the starch had naturally broken down.

– Jay
Jan 13 at 4:34





I often find older potatoes has a slightly sweet taste to it as the starch had naturally broken down.

– Jay
Jan 13 at 4:34













Put your potatoes in the coldest part of your fridge for a week or two and they will likely turn sweet.

– Stephie
Jan 13 at 11:19





Put your potatoes in the coldest part of your fridge for a week or two and they will likely turn sweet.

– Stephie
Jan 13 at 11:19













@Stephie how so? Care to post a new question and answer about sweetening potatoes in the refrigerator?

– moscafj
Jan 13 at 11:59





@Stephie how so? Care to post a new question and answer about sweetening potatoes in the refrigerator?

– moscafj
Jan 13 at 11:59













@moscafj at some point, yes, but I am a bit short on time atm.

– Stephie
Jan 13 at 15:13





@moscafj at some point, yes, but I am a bit short on time atm.

– Stephie
Jan 13 at 15:13










3 Answers
3






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oldest

votes


















4














What you intended won't work. I have also heard generic statements that cooking in principle breaks down complex carbohydrates to simple ones, but this doesn't mean that all complex carbohydrates will break down, nor that any cooking method will do it. And when we come to your specific example, it is a no: starch doesn't break down into sugars at potato-cooking temperatures. Even if you were to heat starch more, it doesn't become especially sweet - you can observe it when making dark roux.



There are other ways to break the starch down, and the other answers point out the main ones, cold temperature and enzymes. But not cooking.






share|improve this answer































    4














    A raw potato is 79% water, 17% carbohydrates (of which 88% is starch) and 2% protein. So your question is essentially: can starch be turned into sugar?



    In theory the answer is clearly 'yes': this is what plants do when they break down the starch created as the final product of photosynthesis, and what happens in the human digestive system. Starch degradation is a complicated process involving several different amylase enzymes.



    In practice, I think the answer is 'no'. In a raw potato, starch is present in many small granules. When cooked, the starch gelatinizes: the granules burst and water is absorbed. This is a irreversible chemical change that obviously has a big effect on taste and texture. But it does not produce significant amounts of sugars.



    A closer match to the starch degradation process in plants occurs in brewing. When beer is brewed from barley by heating a 'mash': the natural amylases present in the grain convert starch to sugars; these are then fermented by yeast. The exceptionally sweet-toothed might try to mimic this process with potatoes, adding something like wheat, barley or sweet potato that has natural amylase. You could then boil the potato 'proto-beer' to extract the sugar.






    share|improve this answer


























    • So in short: no, cooking does not break starch down into sugars?

      – Tanner Swett
      Jan 13 at 12:44



















    4














    The way to make potatoes sweet is actually to not cook them right away -- you need to chill them, to give the time for starches to convert to sugars. (it's called "Cold Induced Sweetening"), which is discussed in Serious Eat's take on Austrian Potato Salad)



    If you know someone who grows potatoes, they can just leave them in the ground to dig up in the early spring. For the rest of us, it means leaving a bag of potatoes in the back of the fridge for a few weeks.






    share|improve this answer
























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      3 Answers
      3






      active

      oldest

      votes








      3 Answers
      3






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes









      4














      What you intended won't work. I have also heard generic statements that cooking in principle breaks down complex carbohydrates to simple ones, but this doesn't mean that all complex carbohydrates will break down, nor that any cooking method will do it. And when we come to your specific example, it is a no: starch doesn't break down into sugars at potato-cooking temperatures. Even if you were to heat starch more, it doesn't become especially sweet - you can observe it when making dark roux.



      There are other ways to break the starch down, and the other answers point out the main ones, cold temperature and enzymes. But not cooking.






      share|improve this answer




























        4














        What you intended won't work. I have also heard generic statements that cooking in principle breaks down complex carbohydrates to simple ones, but this doesn't mean that all complex carbohydrates will break down, nor that any cooking method will do it. And when we come to your specific example, it is a no: starch doesn't break down into sugars at potato-cooking temperatures. Even if you were to heat starch more, it doesn't become especially sweet - you can observe it when making dark roux.



        There are other ways to break the starch down, and the other answers point out the main ones, cold temperature and enzymes. But not cooking.






        share|improve this answer


























          4












          4








          4







          What you intended won't work. I have also heard generic statements that cooking in principle breaks down complex carbohydrates to simple ones, but this doesn't mean that all complex carbohydrates will break down, nor that any cooking method will do it. And when we come to your specific example, it is a no: starch doesn't break down into sugars at potato-cooking temperatures. Even if you were to heat starch more, it doesn't become especially sweet - you can observe it when making dark roux.



          There are other ways to break the starch down, and the other answers point out the main ones, cold temperature and enzymes. But not cooking.






          share|improve this answer













          What you intended won't work. I have also heard generic statements that cooking in principle breaks down complex carbohydrates to simple ones, but this doesn't mean that all complex carbohydrates will break down, nor that any cooking method will do it. And when we come to your specific example, it is a no: starch doesn't break down into sugars at potato-cooking temperatures. Even if you were to heat starch more, it doesn't become especially sweet - you can observe it when making dark roux.



          There are other ways to break the starch down, and the other answers point out the main ones, cold temperature and enzymes. But not cooking.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Jan 13 at 15:16









          rumtschorumtscho

          83.1k28191359




          83.1k28191359

























              4














              A raw potato is 79% water, 17% carbohydrates (of which 88% is starch) and 2% protein. So your question is essentially: can starch be turned into sugar?



              In theory the answer is clearly 'yes': this is what plants do when they break down the starch created as the final product of photosynthesis, and what happens in the human digestive system. Starch degradation is a complicated process involving several different amylase enzymes.



              In practice, I think the answer is 'no'. In a raw potato, starch is present in many small granules. When cooked, the starch gelatinizes: the granules burst and water is absorbed. This is a irreversible chemical change that obviously has a big effect on taste and texture. But it does not produce significant amounts of sugars.



              A closer match to the starch degradation process in plants occurs in brewing. When beer is brewed from barley by heating a 'mash': the natural amylases present in the grain convert starch to sugars; these are then fermented by yeast. The exceptionally sweet-toothed might try to mimic this process with potatoes, adding something like wheat, barley or sweet potato that has natural amylase. You could then boil the potato 'proto-beer' to extract the sugar.






              share|improve this answer


























              • So in short: no, cooking does not break starch down into sugars?

                – Tanner Swett
                Jan 13 at 12:44
















              4














              A raw potato is 79% water, 17% carbohydrates (of which 88% is starch) and 2% protein. So your question is essentially: can starch be turned into sugar?



              In theory the answer is clearly 'yes': this is what plants do when they break down the starch created as the final product of photosynthesis, and what happens in the human digestive system. Starch degradation is a complicated process involving several different amylase enzymes.



              In practice, I think the answer is 'no'. In a raw potato, starch is present in many small granules. When cooked, the starch gelatinizes: the granules burst and water is absorbed. This is a irreversible chemical change that obviously has a big effect on taste and texture. But it does not produce significant amounts of sugars.



              A closer match to the starch degradation process in plants occurs in brewing. When beer is brewed from barley by heating a 'mash': the natural amylases present in the grain convert starch to sugars; these are then fermented by yeast. The exceptionally sweet-toothed might try to mimic this process with potatoes, adding something like wheat, barley or sweet potato that has natural amylase. You could then boil the potato 'proto-beer' to extract the sugar.






              share|improve this answer


























              • So in short: no, cooking does not break starch down into sugars?

                – Tanner Swett
                Jan 13 at 12:44














              4












              4








              4







              A raw potato is 79% water, 17% carbohydrates (of which 88% is starch) and 2% protein. So your question is essentially: can starch be turned into sugar?



              In theory the answer is clearly 'yes': this is what plants do when they break down the starch created as the final product of photosynthesis, and what happens in the human digestive system. Starch degradation is a complicated process involving several different amylase enzymes.



              In practice, I think the answer is 'no'. In a raw potato, starch is present in many small granules. When cooked, the starch gelatinizes: the granules burst and water is absorbed. This is a irreversible chemical change that obviously has a big effect on taste and texture. But it does not produce significant amounts of sugars.



              A closer match to the starch degradation process in plants occurs in brewing. When beer is brewed from barley by heating a 'mash': the natural amylases present in the grain convert starch to sugars; these are then fermented by yeast. The exceptionally sweet-toothed might try to mimic this process with potatoes, adding something like wheat, barley or sweet potato that has natural amylase. You could then boil the potato 'proto-beer' to extract the sugar.






              share|improve this answer















              A raw potato is 79% water, 17% carbohydrates (of which 88% is starch) and 2% protein. So your question is essentially: can starch be turned into sugar?



              In theory the answer is clearly 'yes': this is what plants do when they break down the starch created as the final product of photosynthesis, and what happens in the human digestive system. Starch degradation is a complicated process involving several different amylase enzymes.



              In practice, I think the answer is 'no'. In a raw potato, starch is present in many small granules. When cooked, the starch gelatinizes: the granules burst and water is absorbed. This is a irreversible chemical change that obviously has a big effect on taste and texture. But it does not produce significant amounts of sugars.



              A closer match to the starch degradation process in plants occurs in brewing. When beer is brewed from barley by heating a 'mash': the natural amylases present in the grain convert starch to sugars; these are then fermented by yeast. The exceptionally sweet-toothed might try to mimic this process with potatoes, adding something like wheat, barley or sweet potato that has natural amylase. You could then boil the potato 'proto-beer' to extract the sugar.







              share|improve this answer














              share|improve this answer



              share|improve this answer








              edited Jan 13 at 6:11

























              answered Jan 13 at 4:22









              Mark WildonMark Wildon

              4787




              4787













              • So in short: no, cooking does not break starch down into sugars?

                – Tanner Swett
                Jan 13 at 12:44



















              • So in short: no, cooking does not break starch down into sugars?

                – Tanner Swett
                Jan 13 at 12:44

















              So in short: no, cooking does not break starch down into sugars?

              – Tanner Swett
              Jan 13 at 12:44





              So in short: no, cooking does not break starch down into sugars?

              – Tanner Swett
              Jan 13 at 12:44











              4














              The way to make potatoes sweet is actually to not cook them right away -- you need to chill them, to give the time for starches to convert to sugars. (it's called "Cold Induced Sweetening"), which is discussed in Serious Eat's take on Austrian Potato Salad)



              If you know someone who grows potatoes, they can just leave them in the ground to dig up in the early spring. For the rest of us, it means leaving a bag of potatoes in the back of the fridge for a few weeks.






              share|improve this answer




























                4














                The way to make potatoes sweet is actually to not cook them right away -- you need to chill them, to give the time for starches to convert to sugars. (it's called "Cold Induced Sweetening"), which is discussed in Serious Eat's take on Austrian Potato Salad)



                If you know someone who grows potatoes, they can just leave them in the ground to dig up in the early spring. For the rest of us, it means leaving a bag of potatoes in the back of the fridge for a few weeks.






                share|improve this answer


























                  4












                  4








                  4







                  The way to make potatoes sweet is actually to not cook them right away -- you need to chill them, to give the time for starches to convert to sugars. (it's called "Cold Induced Sweetening"), which is discussed in Serious Eat's take on Austrian Potato Salad)



                  If you know someone who grows potatoes, they can just leave them in the ground to dig up in the early spring. For the rest of us, it means leaving a bag of potatoes in the back of the fridge for a few weeks.






                  share|improve this answer













                  The way to make potatoes sweet is actually to not cook them right away -- you need to chill them, to give the time for starches to convert to sugars. (it's called "Cold Induced Sweetening"), which is discussed in Serious Eat's take on Austrian Potato Salad)



                  If you know someone who grows potatoes, they can just leave them in the ground to dig up in the early spring. For the rest of us, it means leaving a bag of potatoes in the back of the fridge for a few weeks.







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered Jan 13 at 14:13









                  JoeJoe

                  61.2k11105313




                  61.2k11105313






























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