The Simple Jacket Spud

There’s comfort food and then there’s the jacket spud: humble, satisfying and infinitely adaptable. A proper jacket spud has a crisp, salty skin and a light, fluffy interior that soaks up butter, cheese, and whatever bold flavour you sling on top. Below I’ll walk you through the why and how — so you stop getting soggy skins or gummy centres and start getting perfect bake after bake.

Why these steps matter

Two things decide a great jacket spud: moisture management and heat. Dry skin + direct hot air = crisp exterior. Even internal heat and steam inside the cell structure = a fluffy, broken-apart crumb. Oil and salt encourage browning and crunch; pricking vents steam so the potato doesn’t burst. Finishing high and dry gives you texture; wrapping in foil gives you softer skin (but not crisp).

Ingredients and tools

  • 4 large baking potatoes (Russet, Maris Piper, King Edward — starchy varieties give the fluffiest interior)
  • 2–3 tbsp neutral oil (vegetable, rapeseed, or olive oil)
  • Sea salt or flaky salt
  • Fork or skewer (for poking)
  • Oven, air fryer, or microwave + oven sheet

Classic oven method (best texture)

  1. Preheat the oven to 200–220°C (400–425°F). High dry heat crisps the skin.
  2. Scrub the potatoes free of dirt and dry thoroughly. Moisture on the skin prevents crisping.
  3. Prick each potato several times with a fork — this releases steam so they don’t burst.
  4. Rub each potato with a little oil and sprinkle with coarse salt. The oil helps the skin brown and the salt seasons and creates crunch.
  5. Place directly on the oven rack or on a baking tray. Bake 60–75 minutes for large spuds, 45–60 for medium. They’re done when the skin is crisp and a skewer slides in easily.
  6. Make a deep cross in the top, push the ends toward each other to open, and fluff the interior with a fork before dressing.

Quick finish: microwave then crisp

If you’re short on time, microwave first, then finish in the oven for crisp skin.

  1. Prick and microwave on high: about 6–8 minutes for one large potato, turning halfway; 10–12 minutes for two, depending on wattage.
  2. Transfer to a hot oven (220°C/425°F) after rubbing with oil and salt. Roast 10–15 minutes until the skin crisps.

Air fryer method

Air fryers give excellent crispness because of fast circulating dry heat.

  1. Prep as above (scrub, prick, oil, salt).
  2. Cook at 200°C (390–400°F) for 35–45 minutes, turning once halfway. Timing depends on size.

Toppings and flavour ideas

Think of the jacket spud as a blank canvas:

  • Classic: butter, sea salt, cracked black pepper, grated cheddar, chives
  • Comfort: baked beans and melted cheese
  • Protein boost: pulled pork with BBQ sauce, or chili con carne and sour cream
  • Fresh: crème fraîche, smoked salmon, lemon zest, dill
  • Vegetarian: roasted mushrooms, garlic, thyme, parmesan

Storage and reheating

Cooked jacket potatoes keep 3–4 days in the fridge. Reheat in a hot oven or air fryer (200°C / 10–15 minutes) to restore crispness. Microwaving heats quickly but softens the skin — use the microwave if texture isn’t critical.

Troubleshooting

  • Soggy skin: potato was wet when oiled, wrapped in foil, or baked at too low a temperature. Dry thoroughly, use oil and salt, and bake at higher heat.
  • Raw centre: potato too large for time/temperature. Increase bake time or start with microwave and finish in oven.
  • Potato burst: didn’t prick enough—always pierce the skin several times.
  • Hard, dry interior: overbaked or stored too long. Avoid excessive time in a hot oven and eat within a few days.

Final notes

A great jacket spud is more about patience and a couple of small techniques than kitchen wizardry. Keep the skin dry, add oil and salt, and don’t rush the bake — you’ll be rewarded with perfect texture that holds up to toppings.

What’s the one topping you can’t live without on a jacket spud?