A perfectly cooked Baked Potato is a thing of beauty. Our method for the best way to bake a potato yields a crisp, salty skin with fluffy insides every single time and is absolutely fool proof.
Well, foolproof unless you walk away from the oven and forget your potatoes for two hours. Believe me. I know this.
And I grew up eating potatoes like this. To this day, my dad says that the biggest parenting mistake he ever made was teaching us to eat the potato skins because then he didn’t get to eat as many.
…And there’s just something about a pile of perfectly baked potatoes on a table. Whether you top them simply with butter, salt and pepper, or go great guns and church up those crispy jacketed baked potatoes with butter, sour cream, bacon, chives, and any other thing that dings your chimes.
Baked Potato Bars have long been the go-to party food for family get-togethers. Because you can accommodate any number of food allergies and preferences or aversions.
My son had a few friends over for a bonfire last week and I failed to plan appropriately, so it was a Baked Potato Bar to the rescue! It is a crowd pleaser!
While several pounds of potatoes baked, I packed my counter top with whatever I could find in the refrigerator; crisped pancetta and speck, sour cream, grated Cheddar cheese, smoked salmon, goat cheese, chopped green onions, and various other odds and ends.
Not only was there enough for everyone to eat until they were quite full, there were leftovers. And we were all happy.
How do I make the best baked potato?
It’s so easy to make a perfect baked potato if you follow a couple of basic rules.
Wash and dry the potatoes. You can towel dry the potatoes, but they need a to be completely dry before you go any further. This will probably require a bit of time to air dry.
That’s okay. Sometimes I will wash them in the morning and let them dry on a cooling rack while I go about my day.
Rub the dry potatoes with a little oil and salt. I usually oil my hands and just rub the potatoes, then sprinkle with salt.
Jab the potatoes with a fork. You don’t have to go fully crazy on them like my son did in the video; just stab them about 8 times all around the potatoes. Make sure the fork really penetrates the potato to about 1/8-inch depth. This allows steam out of the potato as it bakes, but it makes the insides perfect, so it’s important.
Make sure the oven is hot and well-preheated. Don’t try to cheat it and put them in before the oven reaches full temperature. Plopping your taters in a hot oven is one of the keys to making a perfect baked potato.
Bake them directly on the rack. Please. Don’t put them on a pan, or you won’t allow the air to circulate the potatoes to the maximum level and that air circulating is one of the keys to getting a perfect, crisp-jacketed baked potato skin.
What oil do I use for baked potatoes?
There’s a little bit of person preference that comes into play here, but you should choose an oil that does well at high temperatures. Some good choices are grapeseed oil, pure olive oil, canola, vegetable, or peanut oil.
While you can use extra virgin olive oil, it’s likely to smoke a bit at the temperature needed to make your perfect baked potato.
What kind of potatoes for baked potatoes?
In a word, Russets. Russet potatoes are starchy and have a thicker skin.
These are both desirable in a baked potato. The high starch level helps the potato bake up evenly fluffy so all of your lovely butter or sour cream can melt into it. Heaven.
I do not advise using waxy potatoes like white potatoes, golden potatoes, or red potatoes for baking. Their close texture just doesn’t make that same magical transformation that Russet potatoes do.
How long to bake a potato?
In short, 425°F yields the very textured potato. It gives you a crisp, roasted, flavourful potato skin, a fluffy interior, and is utterly, absolutely perfect. The high temp prevents the potato from forming a weird thick skin under the skin as the potato bakes.
If you’re concerned about drips, you can put a rimmed pan on the rack below the potatoes, so you don’t deal with anything on the floor of your oven.
Do you have something else you’re already roasting and want to know whether you can change the temperature and still get good results?
You’re in luck! While I prefer my potatoes at the aforementioned 425F, you can adjust your temp to match whatever else you’re already baking or roasting by adjusting your baking time.
Use the same method of preparing the potatoes and this handy guideline for adjusting the time to match your temperatures.
350F for about 75- 85 minutes
375 for about 60-70 minutes
400 for about 50- 60 minutes
What to do with leftover baked potatoes
Want some excellent dishes to serve with your best baked potatoes? Try this Curried Beef Oven Stew, ropa vieja, or Peposo scooped over the top, Instant Pot Garlic Beef Stroganoff, Chimichurri, Slow Cooker Italian Shredded Beef, Slow Cooker Honey Mustard Pork, and Slow Cooker Italian Pork.
If you’re just looking for a way to top your ultimate baked potatoes, try these Buffalo Chicken Baked Potatoes, Midwestern Tacos, or Colcannon Stuffed Twice Baked Potatoes.
The video for this Best Baked Potato recipe is almost entirely a video my son made in a fit of boredom after 3 solid weeks of rain. As it happened, I was working on a recipe for the blog.
He gave me permission to share it because I thought it was hilarious. Watch through to the end, though, where I include the simple hack that will allow you to open your perfect baked potato like they do in steakhouses!
Why No Foil?
When you wrap your potatoes with foil, you’re basically steaming them by trapping the liquid they give off as they bake. It’s not going to have crispy skin that I love so much.
Can I Bake a Potato in the Microwave?
The super technical answer to that is no. You CAN steam and cook a potato in a microwave, and it may be tasty, but it will never have the same fluffy texture and salty, crispy skin that an oven-baked potato has.
That does not mean it isn’t tasty. It just isn’t the same.
If you want to cook your potato in the microwave:
– Scrub the potatoes and poke with a fork like you do in our oven method.
– Place the potato in a bowl or on a plate and microwave on HIGH for 5 minutes.
– Flip the potato over and microwave an additional 3-5 minutes on HIGH or until tender when gently squeezed.
Use these tools to make your potatoes:
–oven gloves or silicone oven mitts
Perfect Baked Potatoes
I prefer to jab the potatoes after they’ve been rubbed with oil and salt. I don’t want to seal the little holes I just made with oil.
Don’t rush the process. The potatoes are done when they yield to gentle pressure when squeezed while wearing an oven mitt. Don’t skip the mitt. Trust me on this.
The perfect doneness temp for the interior of the best baked potato is 205°F. If you have an instant read thermometer and don’t trust the squeeze test, you can test your thickest potato.
If you’ve gone to all the trouble of baking the potato in the best way possible, it seems a shame to mangle it open or cut it in half. Here’s a pro tip.
Use a fork to poke an “x” pattern in the potato then squeeze in the way I show at the end of the video on this post. It’s perfect like that, but if you want to fluff it work a fork to make more canyons for your butter to melt in, I won’t judge.
Best Baked Potato
Rate RecipeIngredients
- 8 russet potatoes washed and completely dried
- 2 tablespoons grapeseed oil or pure olive oil, canola oil, vegetable oil, or peanut oil
- 1 teaspoon kosher salt
- 1 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 425°F.
- Rub the potatoes thoroughly with the oil, then with the salt and pepper.
- Use a fork to poke each potato at least 8 times all over it. Be certain the fork penetrates at least 1/8-inch into the potato each time.
- Place the potatoes directly on the preheated oven racks and bake for 40-50 minutes, or until the potatoes yield slightly when gently squeezed or reaches 205°F internal temperature when checked with an instant read thermometer.
- Jab an "x" into the top of the potato with a fork, and press down at the four corners to burst the potato open.
Notes
Nutrition
Nutritional information is an estimate and provided to you as a courtesy. You should calculate the nutritional information with the actual ingredients used in your recipe using your preferred nutrition calculator.
did you make this recipe?
Make sure to tag @foodiewithfam on Instagram and #hashtag it #foodiewithfamily so I can check it out!
This post was originally published November 2018 and was republished in October 2019 with revised Cook’s Notes and information and in January 2021.
Reader's Thoughts...
Mari says
That was hilarious 😆 !
Rebecca says
Thanks so much, Mari! Aidan sure has a quirky sense of humour and I just love it.
Yorkiemom says
Prepared this exactly as instructed and the potatoes were rock hard in the middle. And I only baked two. Baking time needs to be longer.
Rebecca says
Hi Yorkiemom- I have to wonder if maybe you had some oddball potatoes (huge or possibly a little old?) or maybe potatoes that were marked as Russet but weren’t actually russets because 45 minutes-ish should be more than sufficient at 425°F to cook most average Russet potatoes.
Rebecca says
As an additional note, in the body of the post above, I mention “The perfect doneness temp for the interior of the best baked potato is 205°F. If you have an instant read thermometer and don’t trust the squeeze test, you can test your thickest potato.”
Because some potatoes are different (as is true of all produce), the thermometer might be your best bet to ensure perfectly done potatoes next time!
Brenda barrie says
How come you recommend 425!2hen many other spots recommend much lower temperatures?
Rebecca says
Hi Brenda- I recommend that temperature because I have tried all the other recommendations for lower temperatures and find that 425°F works best to create that crisp exterior and fluffy interior. 🙂
Kristin says
These sound yummy and I’m going to try them tonight! I’ve tried so many different cooking methods and while some a good I still haven’t found a great one. Wondering if you flip the potatoes over halfway through baking time?
Rebecca says
Hi Kristin- There’s no need to flip the potatoes over if they’re directly on the rack in the oven and have room for the hot oven air to circulate around them! I hope you enjoy these!!
Kristin Pinkerton says
Thanks so much for this recipe! I didn’t flip and they were perfect! As a matter of fact I have some in the oven again right now! LOL Never would have done the oil and salt if it wasn’t for you!! Thanks again!
Rebecca says
I’m so glad you love it, Kristin!! Thanks for taking the time to let me know!
Cindy says
Do you not wrap them in foil
Rebecca says
Hi Cindy- I do NOT wrap them in foil. When they’re wrapped in foil, they are steaming instead of getting that nice, crisped exterior and fluffy interior. I greatly prefer them unwrapped.
Georgia A Walton says
Best recipe!
Rebecca says
Thanks so much, Georgia! I’m glad you loved it. Thanks for taking the time to rate the recipe!
Lisa says
The taste is amazing! I and my family found this recipe about a year ago and have made it probably once a month since then.
TeRoot says
Thanks for your great tips! I think the potato thing is a family trait, right? Because I could live on them. Thank’s for your sharing.
Ronda says
I love this potato my family was amazed a potato could taste that good.Now they all eat them. Thanks!
Granny says
Try microwaving the potato’s then throw them on the grill next to the steak to char brown the skin.
Rebecca says
Hi Granny- Thanks so much, but I truly prefer the texture of the inside of the potato when it’s baked rather than microwaved.
Kim Forester says
Can you boil a potato first and then put it in the oven?
Rebecca says
Yes… but it will be more of a roasted potato at that point… Just curious, what is the motivation to boil then bake?
Danyelle says
These potatoes were wonderful! I used to place in aluminum foil and they never turned out quite right.
Thanks so much for sharing!
Rebecca says
You’re very welcome, Danyelle! Thanks so much for taking the time to let me know you loved it!
Jordan says
Hi Rebecca,
Thanks for the great tips! I was wondering if rubbing them in coconut oil would work? I’ve been experimenting a lot with it recently as i love the aroma.
Thanks,
Jordan
Rebecca says
Hi Jordan- I have not yet tried coconut oil on them. Are you talking about extra virgin coconut oil or refined coconut oil?
Jordan says
I use virgin coconut oil as i love the flavor. I’m going to give it a try this week and I’ll let you know how it goes 🙂
A. says
What’s the best way to pack these potatoes for traveling to a dinner?
Rebecca says
Hi A- I think you’re likely to find the skins will soften a bit as you travel, but I’ve packed them before in paper bags that were wrapped in a blanket. Looks a bit odd, but gets them there warm if you’re not driving too far!
Robert says
The absolute best way to pack for travel is in a cooler. Standard igloo will do. I’ve catered for many events, and is the best way possible for potatoes to keep they’re moisture and fluffiness.
Sherry Eschenwick says
How long to cook like 40 potatoes?
Rebecca says
Hi Sherry- It should take between 40 minutes to an hour so long as they’re not crowded. 🙂
Patrick Allen says
Do you wrap them in foil?
Rebecca says
Hi Patrick- Definitely not for this method. You want the air to circulate around the potato to get that crispy skin and fluffy inside… Foil steams the potato, yielding a softer skin.
Jared says
Does your son have a YouTube channel ? That was hilarious. And educational (snow tires are helpful in storms).
Rebecca says
HA! Thanks, Jared! My son does indeed have a youtube channel. Here’s the link. Hilariously, his bio says “My mom says I’m doing a good job.” Well, I do. 🙂
And yes, snow tires are handy.
Rie says
Can’t get the audio
Rebecca says
It may be your browser is muted? Possibly?
Rebecca says
You may actually need to click the little speaker icon in the toolbar of the video. I don’t think the audio rolls automatically. 🙂
Marilyn Lund says
Why don’t I see where to view the video???
Molly Franks says
We need more of these instructional videos from your son! This one made my day! I also have to mention that potatoes are my favorite vegetable. I’m always in the mood for a potato of some sort.
Marilyn Lund says
Why don’t I see where to click on the video??
Rebecca says
Hi Marilyn! It should play automatically for you when you open the post. You may have adblockers installed if you can’t see it. The video does have an ad run on it. All proceeds from that ad go to my son’s college fund. 🙂
Rebecca says
Thanks so much! I think the potato thing is a family trait, right? Because I could live on them. <3