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  • 2medium waxy potatoes
    about 350g/12oz (try Vivaldi)
  • 2 tbsp olive oil
  • 1large onion
    sliced
  • 175g smoked back bacon
    not too thinly sliced, rind removed, cut into 1cm strips
  • 100g vignotte cheese
    cut into 1.5cm cubes (including the rind)
  • 100ml double cream
  • sprinkling of crushed chilli
    (optional)
  • 25g fresh white breadcrumb

Nutrition: per serving

  • kcal876
  • fat66g
  • saturates22g
  • carbs48g
  • sugars0g
  • fibre4g
  • protein26g
  • salt4.17g
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Method

  • step 1

    Peel and thickly slice the potatoes into about 1.5cm slices. Boil them in salted water for 6-8 minutes until just tender, then drain.

  • step 2

    While the potatoes are boiling, heat the oil in a large frying pan. Fry the onion over a medium heat for 5 minutes until it becomes transparent. Add the bacon to the pan and carry on frying for 5-7 minutes, stirring occasionally, until the onion turns lightly golden. With a slotted spoon, remove the onions and bacon from the pan to a bowl, leaving as much fat in the pan as possible.

  • step 3

    Heat the grill to high. Add the potatoes to the pan and brown briefly in the fat. If your potatoes are on the floury side they may break up or stick a bit, but this isn’t a problem, just keep everything moving and avoid too many burnt bits. Return the onions and bacon to the pan and lightly mix everything together.

  • step 4

    Nestle the chunks of cheese among the potatoes and bacon then drizzle with the cream. Sprinkle with the chilli, if using, then evenly scatter over the breadcrumbs. Protect the pan handle with foil if necessary and grill for 5 minutes, until lightly browned and just on the point of bubbling.

  • step 5

    Transfer to plates with a wide spatula – no hurry, the dish will not spoil – and savour with a glass of wine.

Recipe from Good Food magazine, January 2003

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Comments, questions and tips (13)

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A star rating of 5 out of 5.15 ratings

dorftrottel.tbn

Excellent dish. Added a chopped clove of garlic to the onion/bacon mix and deglazed the pan with dry white wine. Delicious

Nana_Lu avatar

Nana_Lu

Just had this for lunch and it was delicious! I did use Reblochon however having lived in France for ten years and being a bit of a purist, and a lot more than was stated - a half, which was about 250g. Having said that, I would never have put double cream on a tartiflette before, but I will from…

bridget7KKb3G5Y

I was told by the guy in a Sherpa when buying my reblochon cheese and cream to cook the potatoes in milk. I will also put a splash of white wine in with it.

biketreks

cannot have a Tartiflette recipe that does not have the main ingredient in it! It must use Reblochon cheese or it is not really tartiflette! As per the article that links to this recipe

wenvoeguy

For heavens sake when did the good people of Savoy or anywhere else put wretched chilli into this historic dish - please leave it well out. Clarice below suggests using Reblochon - which is, from my experience, what they use in the alps.

mary.i.batemanumL_JlPf

It isn't a historic dish. It was a marketing ploy invented in the 1980s to promote sales of Reblochon cheese.

lamurasic

Lovely! Perhaps too many calories but nice for a weekend evening when cold outside. I used old cheeses, blue & thick cream. Sprinkled with emmental instead of breadcrumbs. Used the oven for 15-20min., not the grill. We didn´t stop until it was all gone...also the wine.

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