Archive for June, 2009

Perfect French Fries

Cook the Book: Perfect French Fries

Posted by Caroline Russock, June 29, 2009 at 1:15 PM

fries

I think that french fries are underappreciated. Sure, everyone eats them and enjoys them but do we ever really stop to think about the process of the french fry? I hadn’t until I started working in a restaurant kitchen that prided itself on its fresh-cut fries. I quickly became acquainted with the long and painstaking evolution of the prefect fry. Hours of cutting, soaking, rinsing, re-rinsing, frying, cooling, and re-frying go into this classic burger accompaniment. French fries are not just fried potatoes.

Making the perfect fries is a learning process; it took Bobby Flay years to perfect his technique. Here are a few of his tips for mastering the art of the perfect fry from Bobby Flay’s Burgers, Fries & Shakes.

Russets or baking potatoes are the best, whereas waxy potatoes (such as Red Bliss or new potatoes) simply won’t do. Soaking is key—this removes the starch, keeps the potatoes from sticking together, and eliminates the sugars that prevent the potatoes from achieving maximum crispness. As far as oils go, peanut oil is the best for deep frying. It has a high smoking point and a taste that is mild enough not to overpower the potatoey goodness of your fries. While countertop deep fryers are great you don’t need one to make fantastic fries at home. A heavy-bottomed pot, a wire mesh strainer, a deep-fry thermometer, and a roll of paper towels are the only pieces of equipment you need for piles of golden brown, crisp and delicious fries at home.

As always with our Cook the Book feature, we have five (5) copies of Bobby Flay’s Burgers, Fries & Shakes to give away this week. Enter to win here »

Perfect French Fries

- serves 4 -

Adapted from Bobby Flay’s Burgers, Fries & Shakes by Bobby Flay.

Ingredients

5 large Russet potatoes, peeled or well scrubbed, if leaving leaving the skin on
1 quart peanut oil
Kosher salt

Procedure

1. Cut the potatoes lengthwise into 1/4-inch-thick slices, then cut each slice lengthwise into 1/4-inch-thick fries. Put the fries in a large bowl of cold water and refrigerate for at least 1 hour or up to 8 hours.

2. Heat the oil in a heavy-bottomed medium stockpot over medium heat, or in a tabletop deep fryer, to 325° F. Line a baking sheet with paper towels and set aside.

3. Drain the fries well and pat dry in batches with paper towels. Fry each batch, turning frequently, for 3 to 4 minutes or until the fries are a pale blond color and limp. Remove with a mesh skimmer to the baking sheet lined with paper towels.

4. Increase the heat of the oil to 375° F.

5. Fry the potatoes again, in batches, turning frequently, until golden brown, 3 to 4 minutes. Remove with the skimmer and drain on clean paper towels. Season immediately with salt and serve hot.

NASCAR

A few of us went to Loudon, New Hampshire for the Lennox 301 NASCAR race.  Since most of us weren’t really ‘fans’ we wanted to go and experience the  redneck culture firsthand, or the lack thereof.   It was pretty cool watching the cars zip around in circles for about the first 5 laps or so, but then you realize there are only 296 more laps to go!  There were a couple small fender benders and 1 descent crash.  BUT Overall it was a fun experience and would totally do it again –  BUT I still dont get why it is so popular.

These pics were taken with my iPhone . . .

Cousins

Breakfast

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Luxury yachts offer pirate hunting cruises

Luxury ocean liners in Russia are offering pirate hunting cruises aboard armed private yachts off the Somali coast.

pirate

Wealthy punters pay £3,500 per day to patrol the most dangerous waters in the world hoping to be attacked by raiders.

When attacked, they retaliate with grenade launchers, machine guns and rocket launchers, reports Austrian business paper Wirtschaftsblatt.

Passengers, who can pay an extra £5 a day for an AK-47 machine gun and £7 for 100 rounds of ammo, are also protected by a squad of ex special forces troops.

The yachts travel from Djibouti in Somalia to Mombasa in Kenya.

The ships deliberately cruise close to the coast at a speed of just five nautical miles in an attempt to attract the interest of pirates.

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Popsycle

T- bones!!

As some of you know, we had a major scare with Terra this week where several vets were sure she had stomach cancer. To our delight and the vets surprise, it is not cancer! We still have some pretty serious issues to work out but at least it doesn’t look as fatal as it did last week.