I still remember the first time I pulled a tray of golden, crackling potatoes from the oven and my husband wandered into the kitchen like a cartoon character floating on the smell alone. That crispy edge, fluffy center situation is exactly what made me fall hard for baked potato wedges. They are the kind of simple food that stops conversation.
My grandmother never made fancy things. She made potatoes, and she made them matter. I was maybe eight, standing on a step stool, watching her toss wedges with oil that shimmered like liquid gold. She never measured. She just knew. I have spent years trying to capture that same effortless confidence in my own kitchen.
These days, this is the recipe I turn to when I need something reliable and deeply satisfying. It pairs beautifully with hearty mains, and if you are craving something equally comforting, my stuffed cabbage cake has that same stick-to-your-ribs energy.
What You Need to Make This Recipe
The potatoes themselves matter more than people admit. I reach for russets every single time because their starchy flesh transforms into that dreamy, pillowy interior while the outside shatters. Good olive oil is non-negotiable , it carries the heat, creates the crust, and adds a fruity depth that cheap oil simply cannot fake. Smoked paprika changed everything for me; it brings this subtle campfire quality that makes baked potato wedges taste like they came off a grill rather than a sheet pan. If you want another potato dish that leans into bold flavor, my turkey skewers are a favorite weeknight pairing.

How to Make Baked Potato Wedges
I start by scrubbing the potatoes hard, leaving the skins on because that is where the drama lives. Cutting into thick wedges feels satisfying, like splitting logs for a fire. I toss them in a bowl with oil and spices while the oven screams to 425 degrees, and I always listen for that low hum that means real heat is happening.
The sizzle when they hit the pan is the sound I wait for. I arrange them skin-down, flesh up, giving each wedge room to breathe and brown. Halfway through, I flip them and the kitchen fills with this toasty, earthy smell that makes people wander in asking questions. The edges curl and darken. The centers soften and steam. By the time they emerge, speckled with caramelized paprika and crisp at every corner, I am already reaching for my favorite dipping bowl. For another potato recipe that delivers serious comfort, my cheesy ranch potatoes and smoked sausage is a weekend staple at our table.
Pro Tips
Soak your cut wedges in cold water for 30 minutes before baking. This pulls out surface starch that would otherwise glue them to the pan and prevent that gorgeous crust from forming. I learned this after too many stuck, sad potatoes.
Never crowd the pan. When wedges touch, they steam instead of roast. I use two sheet pans if needed, because each wedge deserves its own little heat bubble to become properly crisp.
Season twice for depth. I toss with half the spices before baking, then dust the rest on hot out of the oven. The heat wakes up the first layer, and the second hits with fresh, punchy flavor that pops on your tongue.
My Secret Trick: I place the sheet pan in the oven while it preheats, so the wedges land on screaming hot metal. That immediate sear on the cut side creates a crust so shattering, people will ask if you fried them.

How to Store Baked Potato Wedges
- Refrigerate cooled wedges in an airtight container for up to 4 days. I use glass rather than plastic to prevent sogginess.
- Freeze in a single layer on a baking sheet first, then transfer to a freezer bag for up to 2 months. This prevents them from freezing into a solid potato brick.
- Reheat at 400 degrees on a wire rack set over a sheet pan for 12-15 minutes. The rack allows air circulation underneath, reviving both sides to crispness.
- Avoid the microwave entirely. It steams the interior and ruins the texture you worked hard to create.
Nutritional Benefits
Potatoes carry more potassium than bananas, and leaving the skins on in this baked potato wedges recipe means you keep the fiber and B vitamins that most people throw away. The olive oil here is doing real work too , it helps your body absorb the fat-soluble nutrients in the potatoes while adding heart-healthy monounsaturated fats that make this feel indulgent rather than virtuous.

FAQs
Why are my potato wedges soggy instead of crispy?
You likely overcrowded the pan or started with insufficient heat. Moisture is the enemy of crispness, so give each wedge space and make sure your oven is fully preheated before they go in.
Can I make these with sweet potatoes instead?
You can, but expect a different result. Sweet potatoes contain more moisture and sugar, so they soften faster and caramelize rather than crisp. Reduce the temperature to 400 degrees and watch them closely.
What dipping sauces work best with baked potato wedges?
I am partial to garlicky aioli or a smoky chipotle crema. The fat in creamy sauces plays beautifully against the crisp edges, though a bright vinegar-based ketchup cuts through the richness nicely too.
Do I really need to soak the potatoes first?
For baked potato wedges that shatter when you bite them, yes. Soaking removes surface starch that causes sticking and steaming. Skip it only if you enjoy peeling wedges off the pan with a spatula and a prayer.

Baked Potato Wedges
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Heat oven to 425F. Place your baking sheet in the oven while it preheats - this hot surface is the secret to crispier bottoms.
- Cut each potato in half lengthwise, then cut each half into 3-4 wedges. Aim for even thickness so they cook uniformly. Pat wedges dry with a clean kitchen towel - moisture is the enemy of crispiness.
- Toss wedges in a large bowl with olive oil, garlic powder, paprika, salt, and pepper until evenly coated. Don't overcrowd the bowl or the oil won't distribute well.
- Carefully remove the hot baking sheet. Spread wedges in a single layer with a cut side down. Bake 20 minutes, then flip each wedge to the other cut side and bake 12-15 minutes more until deep golden and crisp at the edges.
- Transfer to a plate lined with paper towels for 2 minutes to absorb excess oil. Sprinkle with parsley if using and serve hot with your favorite dipping sauce.
Notes
Conclusion
I have made these baked potato wedges for quiet weeknights, for friends spilling through the door, for moments when I needed cooking to feel like therapy rather than work. They never disappoint me. If you are as potato-obsessed as I am, my pot roast twice baked potatoes take that love to an entirely different level. Make them soon. Your kitchen will smell like home.
