The Fuzzy's Famous Latkes
(based on Phil's Famous Latkes
per Bette's Diner Pancake Handbook)
1.5 to 2lbs russet potatoes, peeled and grated by hand
1/2 large yellow onion, grated by hand, about 1/2 cup
1 egg, beaten
Up to 3/4 cup flour
1 tsp baking powder
1 tsp kosher salt
1/4 cup shredded jack or other mild melty cheese (optional)
Lots of pure olive oil*
Large cast-iron skillet
Grate the onions and potatoes together -- if you have grater with smaller-than-average holes, that's better. Add the salt, mix, and then add the egg. Let sit for 10-15 minutes to become wet. Mix in enough flour to make a gooey pancake-batter-like consistency. Stir in the baking powder and the cheese, if using (the cheese helps make the latkes extra-crispy).
Heat the skillet and add enough pure olive oil to be 1/3" deep. When oil is hot (test with single strands of potato, they should sizzle instantly), drop in scoops of batter, about 1/3 cup in size. Flatten each one slightly on top, and cook until browning at the edges. Flip each latke and fry the top as well.
Blot latkes with paper towels. Serve immediately with applesauce and/or sour cream, or hold in a 200F oven on paper-towel lined cookie sheets.
Note: as you work your way through the latke batter, it may weep moisture and become more liquid. Add a little more flour when this happens to maintain the batter consistency. Also, add olive oil to keep the oil in the pan nice & deep.
* = this works better with "pure" rather than "virgin" olive oil. You want olive oil with a mild, neutral taste and color. I use olive oil because olive oil is intrinsic to the miracle of Hanukkah:
http://www.chabad.org/holidays/chanukah ... cation.htm . This also makes "dairy" latkes which can be eaten with sour cream, which latkes made with schmaltz cannot.