Skip to main content

Lyonnaise Potatoes

4.7

(6)

Sliced potatoes on a plate with caramelized onions and fresh parsley.
Photo by Elizabeth Coetzee, Food Styling by Mira Evnine

A good Lyonnaise potatoes recipe, or pommes de terre sautées à la Lyonnaise in French, is a thing of beauty. Humble spuds are sliced, cooked in butter until golden brown, tossed with caramelized onions, and showered with chopped parsley for a dish that is far more than the sum of its parts. 

The trick for great Lyonnaise potatoes is to cook the potatoes in two stages—boiling, then pan-frying them—to achieve a silky smooth interior that perfectly contrasts the crisp, golden exterior. Boiling the sliced potatoes in heavily salted water with a splash of vinegar gives them a head start on cooking to ensure that they are as tender as possible. The vinegar not only adds a nice pop of acid to contrast the richness of the potatoes, but it also helps them tenderize while retaining their shape, a technique I learned from Serious Eats’ Kristina Razon’s method of making the classic dish. While the potatoes boil, onions get cooked until golden brown and jammy, a step that takes patience but is worth the wait. The two components are tossed together to create the perfect balance of sweet, salty, savory, and rich.

Serve these potatoes as a side to a hearty main like roast chicken or pork, or eat them as a simple treat whenever a hankering for buttery potatoes kicks in.

Get more of our best potato recipes for casual gatherings or your Thanksgiving menu →

What you’ll need

Read More
A good garlic mashed potato recipe can upstage even the flashiest of mains. Adding just a few cloves of garlic turns what could be a simple side dish into something with undeniable charm.
With salty-sweet miso butter, chives, and savory flakes of nori, this cheesy sweet potato gratin recipe bears little resemblance to traditional versions.
With homemade quick pickles, this will be your new signature side dish.
Steamed fish with potatoes get drenched in a flavorful brown butter infused with anchovies and chives for a bistro-like meal that comes together in no time.
A buttery white wine glaze makes these an ideal holiday side, but leftovers are just as good on a cheeseboard or sandwich.
SEO Dek: Seared and simmered in white wine and chicken broth, these buttery caramelized shallots are an ideal holiday side dish. Stack the leftovers on a sandwich.
All the flavors of chicken piccata, only instead of meat, the dish is built upon plump potato gnocchi (the shelf-stable kind) in this no-boil one-pan recipe.
A flavorful one-pan meal featuring baked pierogies, roasted beets, and a poppy seed dressing. Frozen pierogies and pre-cooked beets make this extra easy.
An elegant, satisfying dinner in under 30 minutes.