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Blackstone Smashed Potatoes
Home Salads & Side dishes Blackstone Smashed Potatoes
Salads & Side dishes

Blackstone Smashed Potatoes

Prep Time 30 min
Cook Time 15 min
Servings 6

Blackstone Smashed Potatoes

Blackstone smashed potatoes hit that perfect middle ground between creamy and crisp. The centers stay soft and fluffy, while the flattened edges pick up a hard, golden crust that crackles when you cut into them. Once you add butter, garlic, and a cold spoonful of sour cream on top, they stop feeling like a side dish and start acting like the part of dinner people remember.

The trick is to boil the potatoes just until a fork slips in with little resistance, then let them steam off for a minute so excess moisture doesn’t keep them from browning on the griddle. A hot Blackstone and a generous mix of oil and butter matter here too: oil helps with the high heat, and butter adds flavor once the potatoes start crisping. Smash them once they’re hot enough to flatten cleanly, but not so hot that they stick and shred.

Below you’ll find the exact timing that gives you crisp edges without drying out the centers, plus the best way to top them so they stay loaded instead of soggy.

I boiled the potatoes until just tender and the griddle gave them the crispiest edges I’ve ever gotten at home. The garlic butter around the potatoes was a great touch, and the sour cream with chives made them taste like loaded baked potatoes in a much better texture.

★★★★★— Melissa T.

Save these Blackstone smashed potatoes for the day you want crispy griddle edges, buttery garlic, and a loaded topping finish.

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The Secret to Crispy Blackstone Potatoes Without Turning the Centers Dry

The potatoes need a two-part approach: first, cook them through in water, then finish them fast on a hot griddle. That first boil gives you a creamy middle, but it also creates the biggest risk in this recipe. If the potatoes are waterlogged when they hit the Blackstone, they’ll steam before they crisp, and you’ll lose that edge-to-edge crunch.

Let the potatoes drain well and cool just long enough to handle. When they go onto the griddle, they should sizzle immediately. If they sit there quietly, the surface isn’t hot enough. The potatoes should be smashed once, firmly, and left alone so the crust can build undisturbed.

What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing in These Smashed Potatoes

Blackstone smashed potatoes crispy golden loaded
  • Baby potatoes — These hold their shape better than larger russets and give you a creamy interior with enough structure to smash without falling apart. Yukon golds also work well if you want a slightly richer, more buttery center.
  • Olive oil and butter — Oil handles the higher heat on the Blackstone, while butter brings the flavor and helps the bottoms turn deep gold. If you use all butter, it can brown too fast and burn before the potatoes crisp.
  • Garlic — Adding the garlic around the potatoes instead of directly on top keeps it from scorching. It perfumes the fat and clings to the crispy edges instead of turning bitter.
  • Sour cream, cheddar, chives, and bacon bits — These toppings turn the potatoes into a loaded side dish. Use sharp cheddar for the best contrast, and add the sour cream after the potatoes come off the griddle so it stays cool and creamy instead of melting away.

Getting the Smash, Sear, and Finish in the Right Order

Boiling Until Fork-Tender

Start the potatoes in well-salted water and cook them until a fork slides in easily but the potatoes still hold their shape. If they’re undercooked, they won’t smash cleanly; if they’re overcooked, they’ll break apart before they ever reach the griddle. Drain them well and let them sit for a minute so the surface moisture can evaporate.

Heating the Griddle and Fattening the Surface

Bring the Blackstone to medium-high before the potatoes go down. Add the oil and butter and let the butter melt completely, then spread the fat around so every potato has contact with the pan. If the griddle isn’t hot enough, the potatoes absorb the fat instead of crisping in it.

Smashing and Leaving Them Alone

Set the potatoes on the hot surface and press them flat with a heavy spatula or masher. You want a wide, rough-edged disk, not a puree. Once smashed, don’t move them until the bottoms are deeply golden; that stillness is what gives you the crust.

Finishing the Second Side

Spoon the garlic around the potatoes and let it cook in the fat for a minute or two, just until fragrant. Flip the potatoes carefully and cook until the second side is crisp and the edges are deeply browned. Season after the browning so the salt doesn’t pull extra moisture to the surface before the crust sets.

Make Them Dairy-Free

Use all olive oil instead of butter and skip the sour cream and cheddar topping, or replace them with dairy-free alternatives. You’ll lose a little of the loaded-potato richness, but the crisp texture stays strong as long as the griddle is hot.

Make Them Gluten-Free

These are naturally gluten-free as written, but the toppings matter if you’re serving a crowd. Check the bacon bits and any seasoned cheese blend so you don’t bring in hidden additives that don’t belong.

Use Yukon Golds for a Creamier Center

Yukon gold baby potatoes smash into a softer, more buttery middle than red potatoes. They still crisp well, but the interior leans richer and less fluffy.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Store leftovers for up to 4 days. The edges will soften, but the flavor holds up well.
  • Freezer: They freeze, but the texture turns a little mealy after thawing. Freeze on a tray first, then move to a bag if you need to keep them longer than a few days.
  • Reheating: Reheat on a hot skillet, griddle, or in a 425°F oven until the edges crisp back up. Microwaving makes them soft and steamy, which is the fastest way to lose the contrast that makes this recipe work.

Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Can I boil the potatoes ahead of time?+

Yes. Boil and drain them up to a day ahead, then refrigerate them uncovered or loosely covered so the surface dries out a bit. That extra dryness helps them crisp faster on the Blackstone.

How do I keep smashed potatoes from sticking to the griddle?+

Use enough oil and butter to coat the surface, and don’t try to flip them too early. The crust releases on its own once it’s set; if you force it, the potato tears and leaves half its crust behind.

Can I use larger potatoes instead of baby potatoes?+

You can, but cut them into even chunks first so they cook at the same rate. Baby potatoes are easier because they give you more surface area for crisping with less risk of turning mushy.

How do I get the garlic flavor without burning it?+

Add the garlic around the potatoes once the fat is hot, not directly on top of them at the start. That gives it enough time to perfume the oil and butter without sitting on dry heat long enough to turn bitter.

Can I make these without bacon?+

Yes. Leave it off and add extra chives or a little smoked paprika for another layer of flavor. The potatoes still taste complete because the real base of the dish is the crisp crust, garlic butter, and sour cream.

Blackstone Smashed Potatoes

Blackstone smashed potatoes with ultra-crispy golden edges and creamy centers—boiled until fork-tender, then smashed and griddled for crisp, browned rounds. Finish with sour cream, shredded cheddar, chives, and bacon bits for loaded griddle potatoes.
Prep Time 30 minutes
Cook Time 15 minutes
Total Time 45 minutes
Servings: 6 servings
Course: Side Dish
Cuisine: American
Calories: 680

Ingredients
  

baby potatoes
  • 2 lb baby potatoes
olive oil and butter
  • 4 tbsp olive oil
  • 4 tbsp butter
garlic
  • 6 cloves garlic minced
seasoning
  • 1 salt to taste
  • 1 pepper to taste
toppings
  • 1 sour cream for topping
  • 1 shredded cheddar cheese for topping
  • 1 chopped chives for topping
  • 1 bacon bits for topping

Equipment

  • 1 cast iron skillet
  • 1 sheet pan

Method
 

Boil and cool
  1. Boil baby potatoes in salted water until fork-tender, about 15-20 minutes, then drain and let cool slightly.
  2. Cut the potatoes if needed for even rounds, and keep them intact enough to smash flat on the griddle.
Smash and griddle
  1. Heat the griddle to medium-high and add olive oil and butter.
  2. Place the boiled potatoes on the griddle and smash flat with a heavy spatula or masher to make even rounds.
  3. Add minced garlic around the potatoes and cook for 6-7 minutes, until the bottoms are crispy and golden.
  4. Flip the potatoes and cook another 5-6 minutes until both sides are crispy and browned.
Season and top
  1. Season the crispy smashed potatoes with salt and pepper to taste.
  2. Top with sour cream, shredded cheddar cheese, chopped chives, and bacon bits right after griddling so the cheese melts slightly.

Notes

For maximum crisp edges, make sure the boiled potatoes have steamed off a little moisture before griddling. Store leftovers in the refrigerator up to 3 days; re-crisp on a hot griddle or skillet instead of microwaving. Freezing is not recommended because the texture softens. For a lighter option, use reduced-fat cheddar and sour cream while keeping the same griddle technique.
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