Who says you can't? Since fries are cooked in oil putting butter on them would kind of be over kill. There is nothing that says you can't put ketchup on a baked potato.
the starch because french fries are made out of potatoes.
Here are some of the things that are cooked with potato: baked potato mashed potato vichyssoise potato salad potato fries potato chips New potatoes roast potatoes sweet potatoes
No, french fries are in the vegetable group. They are made from potatoes and either baked or fried in oil.
Sure they do – potato chips, french fries, mashed potatoes, roasted potatoes, baked potato with toppings.
Some healthier options are roasted chopped up potatoes and baked potatoes!
French fries, baked potatoes, mashed potatoes, latkes, hashbrowns, potato stew, potato soup, clam chowder, scalloped potaoes, sliced fried potatoes, and home fries, to name a few.
It could vary. Everybody would say french fries though. If you had ten french fries, baked and no salted, it would be better for you then say a baked potatoe in fatty butter and some cream cheese and garlic in the middle. Portion size. If you have more french fries, they are probaly not the best choice for a snack. Always go for low fat, low salt, and lo cal food, which ever that may be, depending on the situation.
Whole roasted (IN the husk) corn on the cob, baked potatoes, steak fries (thickly-sliced potatoes, grilled on same BBQ), smashed potatoes, baked beans, green beans, black beans, lima beans, (okay, ANY kind of beans), cornbread, French bread, Italian bread (okay, ANY kind of bread), and don't forget the s'mores! (Please?)
That may be true. The butter or cheese that you add will make it a different answer though.
There are 120 calories in baked french fries.
They are the same thing. Anyone who says otherwise is fat.
If the fries are yams or sweet potatoes and baked in the oven, then yes they are allot healthier.