Instant mashed potato
Instant mashed potatoes are
potatoes that have been through an industrial process of cooking, mashing, and drying to yield a packaged
convenience food that can be reconstituted in the home in seconds by adding hot
water or
milk, producing a close approximation of
mashed potatoes with very little expenditure of time and effort. They come in many different flavours, including (non-exhaustively) chive, garlic, and butter. Instant mashed potatoes are occasionally packaged with instant gravy.
Mashed potatoes can be reconstituted from potato
flour, but the process is made more difficult by lumping; a key characteristic of instant mashed potatoes is that it is in the form of flakes or granules, eliminating the lumping. Analogous to instant mashed potatoes are instant
poi made from
taro and instant
fufu made from
yams or yam substitutes including
cereals.
Poha, an instant
rice mush, is also much in the same spirit, as more broadly are other instant
porridges, formed from flakes or granules to avoid lumping.
Brands include
Smash and
Idahoan mashed potatoes.
The practice of drying and grinding
starchy
root vegetables for
preservation and portability is widely attested around the world, and likely dates back to before the advent of
agriculture. Potatoes in particular have been
freeze-dried since at least the time of the
Inca empire, in the form of
chuño.
, titled "Dehydrate Potatoes and Process of Preparing the Same", and describing a product that was to be reconstituted in hot water, was applied for in
1905 and granted in
1912.
Flake-form instant mashed potatoes date back at least to
1954, when two
United States Department of Agriculture researchers were issued a patent for "Drum drying of cooked mashed potatoes" (), which describes the end product specifically being "as a thin sheet or flake".
In 1962, Canadian scientist Edward A. Asselbergs was issued , entitled "Preparation of dehydrated cooked mashed potato", for a particular industrial method of producing the product.
Instant mashed potatoes are substantially similar to mashed fresh potatoes in their nutritional qualities, about two-thirds
starch by dry weight, with smaller amounts of
protein,
dietary fiber, and
vitamins. The largest difference is the loss of
vitamin C, although some products may be enriched to compensate. One hundred grams of unenriched instant mashed potatoes provides 11% [
1] of the
Dietary Reference Intake of vitamin C, compared to 18% [
2] provided by the fresh potato version.