Vegan Butternut-Potato Cakes With Dairy-Free Lemon and Dill Yogurt Dipping Sauce

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Being Norwegian, I’ll take any opportunity to cook with potatoes, as you cannot call yourself a proper Scandinavian without professing your love for this glorious vegetable in every way possible.

In one of my favorite books, “The Starch Solution,” Dr. John McDougall explains that potatoes actually are a complete food, and you can easily meet your basic nutritional needs (with the exception of B12) by eating potatoes alone. Not to mention that they are incredibly satisfying to eat, so it’s no wonder we group them in with what we call “comfort foods.”

Potatoes grow easily in the cold climate of Norway, and are also popular in other Scandinavian countries as well as Poland and Russia. People in the 19th century lived in good health eating potatoes as their primary source of nutrition, as it supplies all the essential proteins and amino acids we need. I wrote an article about the history of potatoes in Norway for the Norwegian American Weekly which also includes another recipe for potato salad that you can read here.

But back to my recipe today. With the autumn here, I have started cooking with all kinds of winter squash again, and I wanted to come up with something more creative than butternut squash soup. Not that I don’t love that dish, but as a chef and blogger, I’m looking for things that are not as common and might become my, or my reader’s, new favorite. Butternut squash is great to include in your diet as it is a wonderful source of antioxidants like beta-carotene and vitamin C, both powerful healthy food “tools” in the cold and flu season.

I ended up grating butternut squash together with a couple of russet potatoes I had lying around and made some butternut-potato cakes, or as some of you might recognize them as, latkes. Instead of the classic applesauce and sour cream (which is tasty and I love making my own applesauce from local apples right here in the beautiful Hudson Valley of New York), I wanted a slightly different taste and came up with a lemon-dill yogurt sauce. Dill is a very popular herb in Norway and Scandinavia, I’ve written about dill in more detail on the blog post, you can access that post here. There are so many wonderful non-dairy yogurts out there now, from So Delicious, Stonyfield, Forager, Ripple, and Kite Hill.

Try making these butternut-potato cakes if you are planning to invite people over for a cocktail party or a casual hangout with friends. They will also be perfect as an appetizer for Thanksgiving or a festive holiday gathering. I would pair these with a nice Pinot Gris from Alsace or Oregon, or if you prefer a leaner white, a Chablis or Verdejo from Spain. I promise your guests will go back to the platter again and again as you can’t just have one!

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This recipe was republished with permission Sunny Gandara.

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This post was last modified on December 15, 2020 7:34 am

Sunny Gandara

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Sunny Gandara