Fritas
Fritas
Fritas
JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide
range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and
facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact support@jstor.org.
Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at
https://about.jstor.org/terms
Columbia University Press is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access
to Molecular Gastronomy
| 191
In their search for ways to remedy these defects, the inra chemists experi-
mented with the idea of packaging raw sliced potatoes under controlled atmo-
spheres—what are now known in Europe as quatrième gamme fries—taking
care to monitor signs of browning during fabrication.
To minimize browning, a number of steps are followed. First, the potatoes
must be carefully peeled, preferably under a stream of water, so that the cel-
lular structure is not damaged. For this reason the blades of the stainless steel
knives used to cut the potatoes into sticks must be kept as sharp as possible.
Next the individual sticks are kept at a temperature of about 4°c (39°f) so
that the metabolism of the intact cells is slowed down as much as possible.
After draining by either centrifugation or ventilation, the potatoes are treated
with an inert gas, in the absence of oxygen, in a perfectly sealed packet. In this
way the sticks can be preserved for 10 days, still at 4°c (39°f), without altera-
tion (in the course of storage, however, the tissues of the potato accumulate
sugars that cause the fries to darken during cooking, by reactions analogous
to those that brown the crust of bread). The flavor and texture of fries that are
cooked later nonetheless resemble the flavor and texture of fresh French fries:
The proportion of oil absorbed is similar, much less than in the case of frozen
potatoes that are deep-fried.
Deep-Frying Considered
How should French fries be cooked? On this point cooks are apt to disagree,
for each chef has his or her own method. One needs to ask what one is looking
for in a plate of French fries and then rationally to examine which procedures
allow this expectation to be satisfied.
Few connoisseurs will quarrel with the opinion that good French fries must
be tender at the center, with minimal greasiness, and that they should be crispy
without being overly brown. To achieve this result we must recognize that deep-
frying involves a diffusion of heat from the outside inward, with two principal
consequences: the formation of the crust and the cooking of the interior.
Potatoes are composed of cells that contain mostly water and starch gran-
ules. When the heat reaches the center of the fries by conduction, some cells
are dissociated as the starch granules release their long molecules into the
192 | investigations a nd mo d e l s