Triple Cooked Chips

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Triple Cooked Chips
Heston's Triple Cooked Chips.jpg
Origin
Place of origin England
Creator(s) Heston Blumenthal
Details
Course served Appetizer, side dish
Serving temperature Hot
Main ingredient(s) Potato

Triple Cooked Chips are a type of chips or deep-fried potato that were developed by English celebrity chef Heston Blumenthal. Blumenthal began work upon the recipe in 1993, and eventually developed the three-stage cooking process for their preparation. The preparation process involves the chips first being simmered and then cooled and drained of water using a sous-vide technique or by freezing, deep fried at 130 °C (266 °F) and again cooled, and finally deep fried again at 180 °C (356 °F) The result is what Blumenthal calls "chips with a glass-like crust and a soft, fluffy centre".[1]

History

Chef Blumenthal said he was "obsessed with the idea of the perfect chip",[2] and described how, from 1992 onwards, he worked on a method for making "chips with a glass-like crust and a soft, fluffy centre."[1]

He went to great lengths to achieve this, researching the starch content of many different varieties of potato [2] and experimenting with drying chips by microwaving, desiccating or even individually pinpricking them.[1] Eventually Blumenthal developed the three-stage cooking process generally known as Triple Cooked Chips, which he identifies as "the first recipe I could call my own."[1]

Preparation

Blumenthal's technique

Previously, the traditional practice for cooking chips was a two-stage process, in which chipped potatoes were fried in oil first at a relatively low temperature to soften them and then at a higher temperature to crisp up the outside. Heston’s recipe involves simmering the potatoes first in water[3] for 20–30 minutes until they are almost falling apart and have developed lots of little cracks across the surface,[4] at which point they are drained and as much moisture as possible is expelled by placing them in either a freezer[5] or sous-vide machine. This additional stage is designed to achieve three objectives. First, cooking the potatoes gently in water helps ensure they acquire a properly soft texture. Second, the cracks that develop in the chips provide places for oil to collect and harden during frying, making them crunchy.[6] Third, thoroughly drying out the chips drives off moisture that would otherwise keep the crust from becoming crisp. Blumenthal describes moisture as the "enemy" of crisp chips.[6]

The second of the three stages is frying the chips at 130 °C (266 °F)[5] for approximately 5 minutes, after which they are cooled once more in a freezer or sous-vide machine before the third and final stage: frying at 180 °C (356 °F)[5] for approximately 7 minutes until crunchy and golden. The second stage of low-temperature frying is as essential as the first, according to Heston, as it makes "any starch left in the surface cells dissolve and combine to create a rigid outer layer that can withstand the higher temperature of the final frying". [6] This second stage is time-consuming, he acknowledges, but must not be omitted. "A single frying at a high temperature leads to a thin crust that can easily be rendered soggy by whatever moisture remains in the chip’s interior."[6]

Other chefs, such as Joël Robuchon, had previously[verification needed] used such a method of cooking chips in simmering water before subjecting them to a two-stage frying.[7]

Variations

Variations include using a refrigerator to cool the chips in between cooking times and the use of different temperatures, such as 140 °C (284 °F) for the first cooking and 200 °C (392 °F) for the second.[4] Triple Cooked Chips cooked in duck fat is another variation. Various cultivars of potato are used, such as sebago[4] and Maris Piper.[8]

Popularity

First served at The Fat Duck in 1995, Triple Cooked Chips have since become a standard feature in gastropubs and supermarkets.[citation needed]

Reception

The Sunday Times described Blumenthal's dish as "arguably his most influential culinary innovation", and felt that it gave the chip "a whole new lease of life."[8]

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Blumenthal, The Big Fat Duck Cookbook
  2. 2.0 2.1 Blumenthal, In Search of Perfection
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  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 Blumenthal, Heston Blumenthal at Home
  7. Jeffrey Steingarten, The Man Who Ate Everything (New York: Vintage Books, 1998), 409
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Bibliography

Further reading

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External links