Mormon Funeral Potatoes Go National
Cook’s Country magazine features Funeral Potatoes in its May issue and credits members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (Mormons) for coming up with the dish’s name, although the dishes goes by other names in other parts of the country.
“Mormons call it ‘Funeral’ or ‘Ward Party’ potatoes. In the South, it’s ‘hash brown casserole, but I’ve heard it called ‘neighborhood potatoes in Massachusetts and ‘cheesy potatoes’ in Washington,” writes the Cook’s Country author, Sarah Gabriel.
When I did a story on Funeral Potatoes a few years ago, I asked food editor friends across the country if they were familiar with the recipe, and what they called it. It seemed that Utah was the only place that called them Funeral Potatoes. In Wisconsin, they’re known as Heart-Stopper Hash Browns, for all their artery-clogging sour cream, butter and cheese. In New Jersey, they’re Party Potatoes. In Detroit, they’re Cheesy Potato Casserole. Folks in Pennsylvania call them Pittsburgh Potatoes. In a Virginia cookbook, they’re a Church Social Potato Casserole, and in Florida, they’re Churchlady Potatoes.
In fact, most Utahns didn’t start calling them Funeral Potatoes until the past 15 years or so. By that time, they were a staple at dinners given for bereaved friends and family after an LDS funeral. Relief Society presidents heading up the after-funeral dinners say these potatoes go well with ham, and are easy for other ward members to make and bring. The unofficial name stuck.
When they got their own 2002 Winter Olympics pin, they were firmly entrenched , as part of Utah food culture, along with fry sauce and green Jell-O.
The recipe has appeared by other names in community cookbooks and on packages of frozen hash browns. The hash browns are swimming in sour cream, grated cheese, and cream-of-something soup (mushroom, chicken, celery or potato, depending on your recipe and what’s in your pantry). Crushed, buttery cornflakes are the usual topping.
The Cook’s Country article revises the recipe by ditching the “gloppy” cream of chicken soup and making a from-scratch cheese sauce instead. Sour-cream-and-onion potato chips are swapped for the buttered cornflake crumbs.
The result? Still potatoes “to die for.” But I wonder if busy cooks would take the time to make the cheese sauce, or whether they are just content to open up a can, gloppy or not.
Also, the Cook’s Country version may be great just out of the oven. But they didn’t hold up that well when I made them and had to transport them to a family dinner an hour away. The sauce seemed to separate, leaking a watery liquid instead of a creamy consistency.
Say what you will about gloppy canned soup, it holds its consistency in temperature changes and doesn’t separate when heated and cooled.
Here’s a comparison of the Cook’s County version with the recipe from “The Essential Mormon Cookbook.”
Which is best? You decide..
FUNERAL POTATOES – COOK’S COUNTRY
3 tablespoons unsalted butter
2 onions, chopped fine
1/4 cup all-purpose flour
1 1/2 cups low-sodium chicken broth
1 cup half-and-half
1 3/4 teaspoons salt
1/2 teaspoons dried thyme
1/4 teaspoon pepper
2 cups shredded sharp cheddar cheese
9 cups (1 30-ounce bag) frozen shredded hash brown potatoes
1/2 cup sour cream
4 cups sour-cream-and-onion potato chips, crushed
Adjust oven rack to middle position and heat oven to 350 degrees. Melt butter in a Dutch oven (or pot) over medium-high heat. Cook onion until softened, about 5 minutes. Add flour and cook, stirring constantly, until golden, about 1 minute. Slowly whisk in broth, half-and-half, salt, thyme, and pepper and bring to a boil.
Reduce heat to medium-low and simmer, stirring occasionally, until slightly thickened, 3-5 minutes. Off heat, whisk in cheddar until smooth.
Stir potatoes into sauce, cover, and cook, stirring occasionally, over low heat until thawed, about 10 minutes. Off heat, stir in sour cream until combined.
Scrape mixture into a 13-by-9-inch baking dish and top with potato chips. Bake until golden brown, 45-50 minutes. Let cool 10 minutes. Serves 8-10.
Make ahead: potato mixture can be refrigerated in baking dish, covered with aluminum foil, for up to 2 days. To finish, bake potatoes 20 minutes, then uncover and top with potato chips. Bake an additional 45-50 minutes.
— Cook’s Country
FUNERAL POTATOES – “The Essential Mormon Cookbook”
1 32-ounce bag frozen shredded or diced hash browns
2 cans cream of chicken soup
2 cups sour cream
1 cup grated cheese
1/2 cup butter, melted
1/3 cup chopped onion
2 cups crushed cornflakes
2 tablespoons butter, melted
Place hash browns in a baking dish. Combine soup, sour cream, cheese, the 1/2 cup melted butter, and onions. Gently blend into the potatoes. Combine crushed cornflakes and the 2 tablespoons melted butter. Sprinkle on top. Bake at 350 degrees for 30 minutes. Makes 12 servings.
— “The Essential Mormon Cookbook,” by Julie Badger Jensen