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Home » Recipes » Potatoes

Crispy Pan-Fried Potatoes (Just Like Grandma Made)

Updated: Jan 19, 2026 by Marye

Learn how to make fried potatoes with this easy recipe! You'll just need a few simple ingredients, a heavy skillet, & some patience!
Total time for the recipe to be finished.Total Time 40 minutes minutes
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Wooden spatula removing fried potatoes out of iron skillet.
Fried potatoes in a skillet with text overlay for Pinterest
Pinterest pin with title text overlay showing golden fried potatoes in a skillet.

If your fried potatoes keep turning soggy or pale, it's not you-it's the method.

Fried potatoes look humble. They are not. They demand respect, patience, and an open skillet. This is the old-fashioned way: hot pan, plenty of space, no lid for most of the cook time, and just enough time for those edges to go crisp and golden. Crunch first. Tender center. Exactly how fried potatoes are supposed to behave.

Closeup of golden brown fried potatoes in an iron skillet.

🎧 Listen to the audio version of fried potatoes

Listen to the crispy fried potato recipe recipe, tips, and how-to's. Then sit back and get ready for a quick visit to the fictional town of Picklefork, Texas, where my childhood memories come to life. Just click the arrow to get started. (More Picklefork stories here)

Table of Contents
  • 🎧 Listen to the audio version of fried potatoes
  • 🥰 Is this old-fashioned fried potato recipe for you?
  • 📖 Recipe
  • 🧾 Ingredients for crispy fried potatoes
  • How to make homemade fried potatoes
  • 😱 What can go wrong (and how to avoid it)
  • ❓ What's the Secret to Perfect Fried Potatoes?
  • 👩🏻‍🍳 FAQs
  • 📚 More Southern comfort: related recipes you'll love
  • 🏡 Bringing it home
  • 💬 Comments

🥰 Is this old-fashioned fried potato recipe for you?

  • You want crispy fried potatoes, not soft breakfast confetti that gave up halfway through cooking
  • You're cooking on the stove, with a real pan, like a capable adult
  • You believe simple food should still show up and perform
  • You've been personally betrayed by soggy potatoes and haven't forgotten
  • You want that old-school, grandma-made flavor-the kind that didn't come with instructions, just expectations
  • Reader Review
    THANK YOU! I have been digging through recipes looking for someone who makes these potatoes like my momma used to. I can't tell you how happy I am that I landed on yours. THEY'RE PERFECT.
    Edna

More tips and a full potato comparison chart are in this free Kitchen Cheat Sheet printable.

📖 Recipe

Wooden spatula removing fried potatoes out of iron skillet.

Pan Fried Potatoes Recipe

4.64 from 256 votes
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Learn how to make fried potatoes with this easy recipe! You'll just need a few simple ingredients, a heavy skillet, & some patience!
Course Side Dish
Cuisine Southern
Prep Time: 15 minutes minutes
Cook Time: 15 minutes minutes
Soaking Time: 10 minutes minutes
Total Time: 40 minutes minutes
Servings:6
Calories:265
Author:Marye Audet-White

Ingredients

  • 6 - 8 large potatoes, peeled (or not) and sliced about ¼-inch thick
  • 1 sweet onion, optional
  • 1 clove garlic, optional
  • 1 bell pepper, optional - green, red, poblano, jalapeno, all of them - you decide
  • salt to taste, I prefer kosher salt
  • black pepper to taste, I prefer coarse ground pepper
  • ¼ cup peanut oil, light vegetable oil will work if there are allergy issues
  • 2 tablespoons butter

Instructions

  • Peel and slice (or cube) potatoes. You can also leave them unpeeled - just wash well.
  • Let soak for 5-10 minutes in ice water in a large mixing bowl.
  • Drain well and pat dry - make sure they are VERY dry!
  • Heat ¼ cup peanut oil (or other light oil) in a large skillet on medium high heat until it's shimmering and almost smoking.
  • Add potatoes and let fry for about 2 minutes or until they start to get golden  on the bottom. 
  • Cover the pan and reduce heat to medium. Allow to steam for about 2 to 3 minutes.
  • Remove cover and turn the heat back up to medium high. Flip the potatoes. Fry for a minute or two, or until the bottom layer begins to get golden.
  • Dump the pan of potatoes into a colander over the sink to remove excess oil and moisture. Blot with a paper towel and return them to the pan on medium heat.
  • Add the onion and peppers plus any seasonings you'd like on your potatoes.
  • Saute, stirring occasionally, until potatoes are tender and done. Do not cover at this stage of frying because they will get soggy!
  • Add the butter at the very end of cooking.
  • Taste for seasoning and serve hot with plenty of cracked black pepper.

Notes

Storage:
Cover and refrigerate 4-5 days.
 

Nutrition Facts

Calories: 265kcal | Carbohydrates: 53g | Protein: 6g | Fat: 4g | Saturated Fat: 2g | Cholesterol: 10mg | Sodium: 15mg | Potassium: 1211mg | Fiber: 4g | Sugar: 2g | Vitamin A: 115IU | Vitamin C: 17.7mg | Calcium: 41mg | Iron: 2.5mg

Nutrition information is estimated as a courtesy. If using for medical purposes, please verify information using your own nutritional calculator. Percent Daily Values are based on a 2000 calorie diet.

This recipe has been tested several times. If you choose to use other ingredients, or change the technique in some way, the results may not be the same.

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🧾 Ingredients for crispy fried potatoes

You don't need a long grocery list to make great fried potatoes. These are the essentials-the few ingredients that actually matter. Everything else is optional, and none of it can fix bad technique anyway.

Labeled ingredients for fried potatoes.
  • Potatoes - the main character. Slice them with intention.
  • Oil - enough to sizzle, not enough to start a small insurance claim
  • Salt - be generous; potatoes absorb judgment and seasoning equally
  • Butter - added at the end, like punctuation that makes the sentence sing

I like peanut oil for frying because of its high smoke point but if there's an allergy then use any light oil. Once the potatoes are cooked I like to sprinkle them with a little creole seasoning to spice 'em up.

How to make homemade fried potatoes

Need visuals? Here's how the whole potato-frying process looks in real time.

Step by step images showing how to make fried potatoes.
  1. Slice or dice evenly.
  2. Soak in water.
  3. Heat oil in a heavy skillet.
  4. Place potatoes in a single layer in hot oil.
  5. Flip over.
  6. Cook until beginning to turn golden brown.
  7. Add onions and peppers if using.
  8. Add butter
  9. Cook until done.

😱 What can go wrong (and how to avoid it)

🥔 They turn soggy instead of crispy
This usually means the potatoes weren't soaked or you trapped steam by covering the pan. Moisture is the villain. Let the skillet breathe.

🥔 They brown on the outside but stay raw in the middle
Your pan was too hot and you rushed it. Lower the heat slightly and give the potatoes time to cook through before flipping.

🥔 They stick to the pan and tear apart
The pan wasn't hot enough when the potatoes went in. Wait until the oil shimmers, then commit. Hesitation is how potatoes rebel.

🥔 They cook unevenly-some pale, some scorched
You overcrowded the pan. Fried potatoes need personal space. Cook in batches if you have to. It's worth it.

🥔 They taste flat and boring
You didn't salt early and finish with a final seasoning. Fried potatoes need seasoning like gossip needs witnesses.

❓ What's the Secret to Perfect Fried Potatoes?

Perfect fried potatoes aren't about ingredients-they're about technique.

  • Dry the potatoes very well
  • Use high heat
  • Don't overcrowd the pan
  • Flip sparingly
Closeup of potatoes frying in the pan.

👩🏻‍🍳 FAQs

Do I have to soak the potatoes first?

Yes. A quick soak removes excess starch so they crisp instead of clump.

Why can't I cover the pan?

Covering traps steam. Steam makes potatoes sad and floppy. Cover at the beginning then let them crisp up uncovered.

Why won't mine get crispy?

Either the pan isn't hot enough or you're flipping too soon. Let them sit. Trust the process.

📚 More Southern comfort: related recipes you'll love

If fried potatoes are your love language, you're going to want backups. Cast Iron Country Potatoes bring crispy edges and buttery middles, cooked low and slow in cast iron like every sensible kitchen ancestor would approve of. They're breakfast-for-dinner potatoes, porch-sitting potatoes, mind-your-business potatoes.

Then there's Garlic Butter Chicken and Potatoes, which is what happens when a skillet decides to show off. One pan, tender chicken, golden potatoes, and enough garlicky butter to make everyone suspiciously quiet at the table. Comfort food with authority.

And if you grew up anywhere near a church basement or a 1980s potluck, Lipton Onion Soup Mix Roast Potatoes will feel familiar in the best way. Bold, beefy, deeply savory, and absolutely unapologetic. Box mix magic, but make it intentional.

🏡 Bringing it home

Fried potatoes don't need tricks, gadgets, or a lecture. They need heat, space, patience, and someone willing to let them sit long enough to do their thing. When you get that part right, you end up with crisp edges, tender centers, and a pan that smells like you know exactly what you're doing.

Serve them with eggs, pile them next to fried pork chops, or eat them straight from the skillet while pretending you're "just checking for seasoning." No judgment. That's cook's privilege.

If your fried potatoes have ever let you down, this is your redemption arc. Same skillet. Better outcome. And next time? You'll hear that sizzle and know-you've got it handled.

Now go.
Salt them properly.
And don't you dare put a lid on that pan. 🥔✨

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    Pineapple Sweet Potato Casserole

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About Marye

Marye Audet-White is a professional food writer, New York Times bestselling cookbook author, and founder of Restless Chipotle, where she shares Southern comfort food, yeast breads, and from-scratch recipes tested in real kitchens. She’s known for explaining the little technique details that keep recipes from going off the rails, so home cooks can count on what comes out of the oven actually tasting good.

Comments

    4.64 from 256 votes (223 ratings without comment)

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  1. Pam Eurto says

    August 25, 2021 at 2:17 pm

    5 stars
    These look great.and need to be on the menu this week. Unfortunate for you there will always be someone gripping at you. This is usually due to their inability to.follow directions. Or changing the ingedients.. I did love you comment to him, well done.

    Reply
  2. Dianne says

    August 21, 2021 at 8:42 am

    I have a glass topped stove, so I can't use my iron skillet and you say not to use nonstick. What is the best alternative?

    Reply
    • Marye says

      August 21, 2021 at 1:03 pm

      The glass topped stove doesn't allow pans to get hot enough to really get a good caramelization which is the same problem with the non-stick pans... so in that case you can use the nonstick pan because it won't make a difference.

    • Kathryn says

      July 15, 2022 at 6:56 pm

      Actually I have a glass top stove and several cast iron skillets. You can use them and they get plenty hot to fry anything you like.

  3. Squirrel Butler says

    August 03, 2021 at 8:52 am

    5 stars
    Thanks, Marye, I am trying these out today!

    Reply
  4. Squirrel Butler says

    July 27, 2021 at 9:40 am

    5 stars
    Man, I REALLY want to make these!!

    But the instructions are contradictory, at least to me! It says to fry for 2-3 minutes, check bottoms, but it doesn't say to flip them at that point; it says to check them, and then cover the pan and reduce heat. It doesn't say to flip them until after the steaming. Is that correct?

    Also, in the helpful notes above the recipe (and they really are helpful, so thank you!), it says to fry for 10 minutes without touching them, until they're browned at the edges, and then flip and fry the other side for 5 more minutes, which is totally different from what the recipe card says to do.

    I am not trying to be critical, i really am not. These look delicious, and other reviewers have raved about them, but I suspect they have more 'kitchen intuition' than I do, and know how to make sense of the differing instructions.

    Help! Thanks!

    Reply
    • Marye says

      July 27, 2021 at 11:14 pm

      You flip them after steaming. In the notes it did say to fry 10 minutes but it should have said 5-10 minutes because a lot depends on the exact heat of your pan, the oil you use, the type of potatoes you use and so on. Thank you for your questions - I try to think of how the instructions should read but I don't always get it right. 🙂

  5. Deborah says

    November 15, 2020 at 5:21 pm

    5 stars
    The round fried ones are what I grew up calling pan fried potatoes. I learned how to do them from my grandmother. She’d put a lid on the pan for a bit and cook them on a lower temperature, then take the lid off and turn up the heat some to brown and crisp them. Of course she added the onion and black pepper. We ate these with pinto beans or purple hull peas, onion and cornbread. And in season, sliced tomatoes. Makes me so hungry!

    Reply
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Marye Audet-White, founder of Restless Chipotle Media

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NY Times bestselling author. 10 cookbooks. Mom of 8 kids. Homeschooling mom for 22 years. Addicted to Hallmark Christmas Movies. Collector of old cookbooks.

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