These oven baked 3-ingredient herb butter potato fans are the sort of simple little side dish that makes a table feel special without asking much from the cook. Around here, dishes like this have always had a place at luncheons, church suppers, and Sunday dinners, where a plain potato gets dressed up just enough to earn compliments. Thinly sliced, brushed with butter, and baked until crisp on the edges and tender in the middle, they bring together thrift, comfort, and a touch of old-fashioned charm.
Serve these potatoes alongside roast chicken, baked ham, pork chops, or a simple meatloaf, and they fit right in with green beans, glazed carrots, or a crisp garden salad. They also make a lovely addition to a luncheon plate with sandwiches or quiche, since they look fancy but eat like pure comfort food.
Oven Baked 3-Ingredients Herb Butter Potato Fans
Servings: 4 to 6
Ingredients
6 medium Yukon Gold or russet potatoes
Directions
1. Heat the oven to 400°F. Lightly butter or grease a shallow baking dish. Scrub the potatoes clean and pat them dry.
2. Slice each potato crosswise into very thin slices, stopping just before you cut all the way through so the base stays intact and the potato can fan open as it bakes. A pair of wooden spoon handles or chopsticks on either side of the potato can help keep you from slicing through.
3. Place the sliced potatoes in the baking dish. Brush the melted butter over the tops and gently into the cracks. Sprinkle the chopped herbs over each potato, tucking a little between the slices where you can.
4. Bake for 50 to 65 minutes, brushing once or twice with any butter in the pan, until the potatoes are tender in the center and crisp, golden, and fanned at the edges.
5. Let the potatoes rest for 5 minutes, then spoon a little of the melted herb butter from the dish over the top and serve warm.
Variations & Tips
Use the right potato: Yukon Gold potatoes give you a creamy center and lovely color, while russets bake up a bit fluffier inside with crisper edges. Try to choose potatoes of similar size so they finish baking at the same time.
Make slicing easier: If a potato rolls around on the cutting board, shave just a whisper-thin strip from the bottom to steady it before slicing. Keeping the slices thin and close together is what gives these their pretty fan shape.
Add a little pantry help: Even though the beauty of this recipe is its simplicity, a pinch of salt and black pepper certainly does no harm. If your butter is unsalted, that small extra seasoning can wake everything up nicely.
Try a garlic-herb version: Stir a little minced garlic or garlic powder into the melted butter before brushing it on the potatoes. It gives the whole dish a deeper, savory flavor that pairs especially well with roast meats.
For extra crisp edges: If the potatoes are tender but not as browned as you like, raise the oven heat for the last 5 to 10 minutes or give them a brief broil, watching carefully so the herbs do not scorch.