Triple cooked chips
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Re: Triple cooked chips
I'm pretty sure I've used citric acid in the past when there's been no lemon juice to hand
- Gillthepainter
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- Joined: Wed Apr 25, 2012 11:53 am
- Location: near some lakes
Re: Triple cooked chips
he he he.
I remember you made your own vinegars, Joan.
I sometimes buy jerry cans of white (5ltrs) at our local market for Tony's jobs round the house. Mostly he pours it in the washing machine.
I remember you made your own vinegars, Joan.
I sometimes buy jerry cans of white (5ltrs) at our local market for Tony's jobs round the house. Mostly he pours it in the washing machine.
- Badger's Mate
- Posts: 1489
- Joined: Thu Jan 14, 2016 6:07 pm
Re: Triple cooked chips
I was brought up with the idea that vinegar meant malt vinegar. When I was a kid anything else was exotic (wine or cider) or cheap and synthetic (non-brewed or distilled) and I still haven't grasped the notion of putting lemons on everything.
I do use other vinegars these days, particularly cider (I've also never quite understood why people call it apple cider vinegar), but it's definitely malt vinegar on chips.
I remember seeing Heston on the telly and he was quite precise about the first cooking of the chips. He cooked them at a very gentle simmer, possibly using a thermometer to manage the temperature, (I can't quite remember that bit), but then drying them in the fridge iirc.
When sous vide first came out there was a lot of old toffee on the BBC boards about how it had all been done before, crockpots, hayboxes etc. One or two of the 'establishment' were quite dismissive, which simply revealed that they didn't understand the process.
Yes the chips at Quo Vadis were lovely, and I didn't even order them!
I do use other vinegars these days, particularly cider (I've also never quite understood why people call it apple cider vinegar), but it's definitely malt vinegar on chips.
I remember seeing Heston on the telly and he was quite precise about the first cooking of the chips. He cooked them at a very gentle simmer, possibly using a thermometer to manage the temperature, (I can't quite remember that bit), but then drying them in the fridge iirc.
When sous vide first came out there was a lot of old toffee on the BBC boards about how it had all been done before, crockpots, hayboxes etc. One or two of the 'establishment' were quite dismissive, which simply revealed that they didn't understand the process.
Yes the chips at Quo Vadis were lovely, and I didn't even order them!
- Badger's Mate
- Posts: 1489
- Joined: Thu Jan 14, 2016 6:07 pm
Re: Triple cooked chips
I sometimes buy jerry cans of white (5ltrs) at our local market for Tony's jobs round the house. Mostly he pours it in the washing machine.
Cheap vinegar is used in our house for descaling the kettle. I used to use citric acid from work or a 'Continental' (i.e. Sub-Continental) grocers
- Stokey Sue
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- Joined: Fri Apr 27, 2012 2:02 pm
- Location: Stoke Newington, London
Re: Triple cooked chips
I don’t use vinegar for cleaning, after using full strength acetic acid for years in labs I can’t stand the smell, even handling it.
Re: Triple cooked chips
Whenever we do homemade chips, we do triple cooked these days, and they are, in my opinion, much better in texture (crisp on the outside, soft and fluffy inside) than once or twice cooked.
https://www.kaveyeats.com/2016/07/hesto ... chips.html
https://www.kaveyeats.com/2016/07/hesto ... chips.html
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