Stampot, a One-Pot Dutch Winter Dish - with 3 Recipes - Multicultural Kid Blogs (2024)

I love the winter season! It’s cold outside and, surprisingly, it is the season that my kids have no trouble finishing their plates. The reason? Because it is also the season that we eat lots of different types of stampot complemented with apple sauce or apple/cranberry sauce. Cranberry sauce is the American integration at our dinner table during winter time.

What is Stampot?

Stampot is mashed food with gravy and either meatballs, smoked sausage, or any type of meat, fish, or vegetarian add-on you can imagine to go with it. There are many different types of stampot possible. I will share the recipes of the three traditional ones that we eat often.

Actually, when you think about stampot, you can only be limited by your own imagination. Think of the mashed potatoes as the base of your dish, add a vegetable and mash those together. Except for sauerkraut – that is one vegetable you can’t mash, but you can stir it through the mashed potatoes.

I remember as a child eating at a friend’s house and they had a stampot from green beans and potatoes. It was delicious with the gravy and the meatballs.

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What is Needed to Make Stampot

You don’t need fancy kitchen equipment to make stampot. Most of the items you probably have already at hand in your kitchen. Take a look at the list and go on a scavenger hunt in your kitchen with your kids.

Look for:

Did you find everything? Let’s see if you have all the ingredients to make one of the three stampots. You do? I guess,you’ll know what’s for dinner tonight!

Three Traditional Stampot Recipes

I am sharing three traditional stampot recipes with you today. They are perfect and easy for a cold winter day and fun to cook together with the kids. My boys love to peel the potatoes and handle the masher.

All you have to add is gravy, apple sauce, and meatballs, a smoked sausage (UNOX Rookworst, Polska Kielbasa Sausage), chicken, a vegetarian add-on or anything else you can envision.

I also like to add two sweet potatoes to the potato mix, just to add those extra vitamins. I replace regular milk with coconut, almond or cashew milk, to make the dish dairy free. And instead of butter, I like to use coconut oil.

Stampot is an excellent dish to make a completely vegetarian and even vegan. It is gluten free from the start. And as I said, there are many variations possible.

Think of one-pot dish combinations such as:

  • spinach and potatoes
  • green beans and potatoes
  • sauerkraut and potatoes
  • red cabbage and potatoes

Boerenkool (Kale) Stampot

Ingredients:

  • 1 kg (2 lbs) kale, washed and finely cut;
  • 1 kg (2 lbs) potatoes, peeled and cut in quarters and washed;
  • 1 smoked sausage (or 2) – You can replace the smoked sausage for a vegetarian option or leave it out for a vegan option.;
  • 40 gr (3 Tbs) butter;
  • 250 ml (1 cup) milk;
  • 3/4 teaspoon salt;
  • Freshly ground pepper.

Preparation:

  1. In a large pot, add the potatoes, the kale and add water with salt. Bring it to a boil and cook for 20 min. Add the smoked sausage for the last 10 minutes. Move the smoked sausage to a plate and cover it. Drain the water.
  2. Add the butter and cover the pot with the lid and let it sit until the butter is melted.
  3. Mash the potatoes and kale together. Add the milk, little bit at the time, while mashing to get the consistency you like.
  4. Season with the salt and pepper.

Serve the Kale Stampot with gravy and a smoked sausage, cut in slices and applesauce on the side.

Hutspot

Ingredients:

  • 1 kg (2 lbs) carrots, peeled and finely cut;
  • 250 gr (2 medium) onions, cleaned and chopped in small pieces;
  • 1 kg (2 lbs) potatoes, peeled and cut in quarters and washed;
  • 40 gr (2.5 Tbs) butter;
  • 3/4 teaspoon nutmeg;
  • 3/4 teaspoon salt;
  • Freshly ground pepper.

Preparation:

  1. In a large pot, add the potatoes, the carrots,and the onions and add water. Bring it to a boil and cook for 20 minutes. Drain the water in an empty pot and save it.
  2. Add the butter and cover the pot with the lid and let it sit until the butter is melted.
  3. Mash the potatoes, carrots,and onions together. Add the drained water, a little bit at the time, while mashing to get the consistency you like.
  4. Season with the salt, pepper,and nutmeg.

Serve the Hutspot with gravy and either smoked sausauge, cut in slices, or meatballs and applesauce on the side.

Andijvie (Andive) Stampot

Ingredients:

  • 750 gr (3 cups) andive, washed and finely cut;
  • 1 kg (2 lbs) potatoes, peeled and cut in quarters and washed;
  • 250 ml (1 cup) milk;
  • 25 gr (2 Tbs) butter;
  • 3/4 teaspoon fine grain sea salt;
  • Freshly ground black pepper;
  • 3/4 teaspoon nutmeg.

Preparation:

  1. In a large pot, add the potatoes and add water. Bring it to a boil and cook the potatoes for 20 minutes. Drain the water.
  2. Add the butter and cover the pot with the lid and let it sit until the butter is melted.
  3. Mash the potatoes. Add the milk slowly, while mashing to get the consistency you like.
  4. Add the finely cut andive on top and gentle stir them through the mashed potatoes. Season with the salt, pepper,and nutmeg.

Serve the Andive Stampot with gravy and meatballs and a side of apple sauce.

Enjoy!

Enjoy your stampot during these cold winter months. Let me know how yours turned out and if your children loved it.

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Savannah writes for Eat.Pure.Love and The Art of Home Education. She is a Third Culture Kid and a former Business Intelligence Consultant and works as a blogger and freelance photographer. She is a former Dutchie who currently lives in Colorado, USA, where she homeschools her four special needs children. Are you already following her on Instagram?

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Stampot, a One-Pot Dutch Winter Dish - with 3 Recipes - Multicultural Kid Blogs (2024)

FAQs

What is a stamppot What is the legend it is associated with? ›

The first of these Dutch gastronomic staples was allegedly the product of a 1574 legend: Spanish soldiers left behind potato bits during the Eighty Years' War, and so the recipe for stamppot was born. To celebrate this occasion, the Dutch eat hutspot every year on October 3, a holiday known as Leidens Ontzet.

What is stamppot made of? ›

Stamppot consists of mashed potatoes mixed with various ingredients like carrots, onions or kale, and it was one of my favourites when I lived in Holland. It is often served as the main meal, with a smoked, spicy sausage such as rookworst.

What is the other name for stamppot? ›

Every winter, steaming hot plates of food magically appear on tables in Dutch homes everywhere—things like big pots full of snert, boerenkool or hutspot. These are collectively called Hollandse pot, or stamppot. These are quite hearty meals that fill the belly and warm up you right down to your toes.

What is the difference between bangers and mash and stamppot? ›

English Culture: Bangers & Mash (sausages served over mashed potatoes). Dutch Culture: Stamppot (potatoes mashed with a large amount of kale, served with a sausage).

What did The Dutch eat before potatoes? ›

Bread, butter and stew (or porridge) were what most Europeans ate before the potato became so popular. Occasionally a biscuit or cake sweetened with honey. Stews were usually made from various meats (when available), grains , beans and other vegetables mixed together and cooked in a large pot over an open fire.

What is The Dutch national dish? ›

Welcome to Grand Prix Gastronomy! This week, I'm cooking the national dish of the Netherlands, stamppot, which features kale, sausages, and mashed potatoes.

What is the history of stamppot? ›

There are many variations on the dish, such as “stamppot boerenkool” (mashed potatoes with kale) and “stamppot hutspot”(mashed potatoes with carrots and onions). Stamppot has been around since the 17th century and has long been considered comfort food in the Netherlands.

What is the origin of the stamppot? ›

Short history of stamppot

The Dutch probably started making stamppot in the beginning of the 19th century. Before that people did make stews with meat and vegetables, but there was one thing missing: the potato!

What is the history of hutspot? ›

For such a simple dish, hutspot has an interesting backstory. According to Dutch lore, it originated in the 16th century, at the end of the Siege of Leiden during the Eighty Years' War. The siege, during which Dutch rebels battled the Spanish occupiers, lasted for months, and many people starved.

What are the different types of stamppot? ›

There are many varieties of stamppot to try, including boerenkool (kale), zuurkool (sauerkraut), hutspot (onions and carrots), and rauweandijvie (endive).

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