
Apparently these are very a popular part of school dinners here in Devon, although I’d never heard of them until a friend from work passed on the recipe. Mashed potato and cheese, baked in a puff pastry case, these are a quick and easy tea. Just don’t be tempted to eat them straight out of the oven – not only will you risk burning your tongue, but the taste really develops if given just ten to twenty minutes to cool.
The original recipe calls for mustard powder, but I can’t resist adding cayenne to cheese and pastry dishes. I’ve added plenty of fresh ground black pepper as well, but you can leave this out if you wish. I’ve not tried adding onion, but I think a little would probably be delicious, as would chives.

Just a couple of tips, these can be a be a bit unwieldy, so don’t add too much liquid to your mashed potato (I just used a bit of butter, and forwent the usual milk) and allow it to cool a bit before you use it. Pre-rolled puff pasty comes on a sheet of paper – leave it on this when you roll it out flat, that way you can lift the paper to begin rolling the pastry which will give you a bit more control.
Cheesy Wheels
Makes 12
Ingredients:
230g ready rolled puff pastry
200g mashed potato
175g grated cheese
1/4 tsp cayenne pepper
Salt and pepper to taste
50ml semi skimmed milk
Method:
This recipe is great for using up mashed potato, but if you make it specially for this dish then be careful not to make it too loose. Perhaps omit most of the usual amount of milk you would use. The cheese will stop the end pastry from being too dry.
In a large bowl, mix the potato with the cheese, cayenne pepper and seasoning. Roll out you puff pastry with the long side towards you, leaving it on the greaseproof paper it was rolled in. Spread the potato mix evenly on top, leaving a small gap along the edge furthest from you. Brush a little milk along this edge, which will become your seam.
Begin to roll the pastry away from you. It might be easiest if you lift the pastry by the paper that it sits on. Roll it gently like so that it resembles a Swiss roll and then cut into 1 inch/2.5 cm slices.
Place the sliced on two lightly greased baking trays and bake at 200°C for 25-30 minutes until golden brown. Allow to cool for 10-20 minutes before serving.






















