DUCK FAT POTATO CHIPS
A kicky homemade treat . . . duck fat potato chips~the Fisher's potato chips of my youth~Poll: Just what is "Sex On The Beach?"
CHIP HISTORY
All deep dives into the origins of potato chips seem to start at Moonโs Lake House, in Saratoga Springs, N.Y. As the story goes, one day in 1853, the railroad and shipping magnate Cornelius Vanderbilt was eating at Moonโs Lake House when he ordered his fried potatoes be returned to the kitchen because they werenโt thin enough. Furious with a fussy eater, the chef sliced some potatoes as slenderly as possible, fried them to a crisp, and sent them out to Vanderbilt. Rather than take the gesture as an insult, Vanderbilt was overjoyed. Weโre grateful to Vanderbilt for the potato chipโand also for Vanderbilt University; for the Biltmore, Americaโs largest private home, in North Carolina; and Anderson Cooper. Thus, โSaratoga Chipsโ were born, which earned the chef the moniker โThe Edison of Greaseโ from American Heritage magazine.ย
Fast forward to 1961, when Layโs became the first national brand of potato chip, and when the company enlisted Bert Lahr, famous for playing the Cowardly Lion in The Wizard of Oz, as its first celebrity spokesman, who purred the devilish challenge, โBetcha canโt eat just one.โ Well, theyโre certainly not all Layโs, but Americans eat almost seven pounds of chips per year.
Look southward to Peru, where there are more than 4,000 varieties of potatoes. You would have to eat a different potato a day for more than a decade to try them all. In the 1600s, potatoes were cultivated throughout Peruโs Sacred Valley. If the potato had stayed in Peru and never left when Spain colonized Peru, the potato would never have made it onto everyoneโs plate everywhereโand become one of the worldโs most important crops. At first, no one wanted to eat it. That changed when French pharmacist and agronomist Antoine-Augustin Parmentier championed the potato in 18th-century Europe when France thought the tuber caused leprosy and was unfit for humans.
In the event youโre feeling adventurous and want to head to your kitchen right this minute after warming up to this brief history of the potato, you might go hunting, for example, potato chip recipes on your own. The online recipe juggernaut Yummly has between 3,500 and 1,300,000โand after a lengthy interrogation by asking you to identify buses and boats to check whether or not youโre a fraud!
Before moving on, here are a few words of perspective about potatoes by one of the most famous of the worldโs greats . . . .
Francis Mallmann Talks
This is an excerpt of an interview in Broken Palate, an online Substack newsletter, published May 10 with Mallmann, one of the most memorable among those profiled on the Netflix original series, Chefโs Table. He is famous despite his residence of choice being as remote as one can get on an island in a Patagonian lake. The interview was by Broken Palate writer Melissa McCart, the author of "Bread and How to Eat It," with Rick Easton of Bread and Salt, coming out next spring.
Broken Palate What products are you excited to cook with when you're home?
Francis Mallmann I think that what I most love are potatoes. They're the most elegant, versatileโฆ
BP They're elegant?
FM They adapt to whatever you want. They can become a cream; they can become a French fry. You bake them in the oven cut them like dominoes for two hours and they're crispy outside and wet inside. So they react to different techniques of cooking and they always surprise you, and they have this sort of balanced taste . . . I want to make a book about potatoes.
THE POTATOES
The potatoes we make chips from in the U.S. are mostly Yukon Golds, sweet potatoes, Yellow Finn, Russian Red Banana fingerlings, purple Peruvian, purple majesty, all blue, Adirondack blue, purple fiesta, French vitelottes, red cranberry,ย Congo, or plain Jane russets. Sometimes, chips are made from beets, kale, pita, tortilla, or noriโdried seaweedโwhich can be eaten straight as a snack or mixed with potato chips.
DEEP-FAT FRIED. . .
Almost every homemade potato chip recipe calls for deep-fat frying after peeling the potatoes. Then weโre instructed to slice them thinly with a mandolin or food processor with a slicing attachment or a knife if we possess the skills to consistently make slices of 1/16โ to 1/8โ thick. Next, usually, but not always, soak them in ice water to rid the slices of starch. Then separate the slices. They can be refrigerated for up to two hours. Dry on a towel or paper towel. Season before frying. Fry until just the shade of brown is right for you. Drain on a sheet pan grate. And serve.
Olive oil is used by Alton Brown in his recipe. This Food Network recipe uses peanut oil. Other traditional fats that have nourished humans for thousands of years include lard from pastured pigs, tallow from grass-fed cattle, coconut, grapeseed, canola, and palm kernel oils. I havenโt tried any of these so-called โtraditional fats.โ Some recipes call for using vinegar in the cooking process to enhance flavor.
. . . OR BAKED, BROILED, M-WAVED OR AIR FRIED
While deep frying reigns supreme, there are several other cooking methods: baked, broiled, microwaved, air fried one way, and air fried another way.
SALT
More choices to make. While I especially like flaky Maldon salt, other options abound: Kosher, fine sea salt, flake sea salt, artisanal sea salt, black lava sea salt, pink Himalayan sea salt, and Fleur de sel.
SEASONINGS
And more choices. As for seasonings, I donโt use any. In researching homemade potato chip seasonings, I discovered: pepper, cayenne pepper, chili powder, paprika, smoked paprika, Old Bay, fresh or dried dill, rosemary, garlic, parsley, Parmesan, lemon zest, Za'atar, cheese powder, and BBQ rub. Have at โem to your heartโs content!
BUTTER BAKED
Homemade potato chips donโt need any oil in comparison to their deep-fried counterparts. Whatโs more, I began using butter on a whim years ago, never having been spurred to do so by a recipe or food article. Was it just inspiration or the resurrection of an old memory of crunchies? Anyway, hereโs my recipe. After cutting my russets, soaking them, and drying them, I brush both sides with butter, and then salt. I put the potato slices on a baking rack on a sheet pan to allow the heat to circulate below the potatoes I set the oven to 250 to 300 degrees F. I bake slowly and have to watch the potatoes closely so they are crispy but donโt burn, perhaps up to 1/2 hour. This method takes patience and many, many, many trips to the oven to check on the doneness of the chips.
In this butter method from Simply Recipes, the process calls for placing the potato slices on a sheet pan directly that has been greased with non-stick cooking spray. Preheat oven to 500 degrees F. Place potatoes on pans and brush with butter. Lower heat to 450 degrees F and bake for 12 to 15 minutes. Remove and sprinkle with salt.
DUCK-FAT BAKED
Now we come to duck fat. But why? All across the pages of cookbooks and internet recipe finders are duck fat recipes for other potato recipes. So, why not try it with potato chips? In my search of recipes for duck fat baked potato chips, I only found one from 2014. Well, duck fat baked potato chips simply needed some attention.
Pure duck fat from Moulard ducks, according to D'Artagnan, a New York City supplier of premium meats, poultry and seafood, is described this way on its website: โWith a silky mouthfeel, subtle flavor, and a high smoke point, duck fat is perfect for high-heat cooking . . . Chefs consider it the best animal fat for cooking, and it enhances the flavor of anything it touches, from poultry to potatoes, and meat to fresh vegetables.โ
Should you be motivated to try rendering your duck fat, here is guidance from The Spruce Eats.
That was certainly enough of an endorsement for me. I used duck fat from Grimaud Farms in Stockton, Calif.โsince it was available at my fave groceryโto coat the potatoes. (Grimaud Farms is also a source for free-range geese, muscovy duck, and guinea fowl.) My approach calls for the use of a baking rack and finishing salt, Maldon sea salt flakes with their irregular, pyramid shapes and clean, crunchy texture. Click on โMaldon sea saltโ for more than you ever imagined or ever knew you wanted to know about it!
SERVINGS
2
TOTAL TIME
1 hour to 2+ hours (if you soak the potato slices for 2 hours)
INGREDIENTS
Mise en place. (Luv that French phrase . . . meaning yโall get your stuff together in one spot before you start cooking!) 1 large russet potato, scrubbed, unpeeled, and sliced into 1/32- up to 1/16-inch-thick pieces on a mandolin, preferably, and lengthwise which will result in larger chips and less work. Sheet pan and baking rack. (The recipe can be increased simply by adding the above amounts of potatoes, duck fat, and salt. But this increases the number of sheet pans and baking racks youโll need. Ovens generally only have three shelves. Plus, each batch can add up to two hours, i.e. soaking sliced chips if you choose that approach, which I do recommend.)
4 tablespoons of fresh room-temperature duck fat
2 teaspoons Maldon salt
STEPS
gather a large sheet pan, baking rack, mandolin, a large bowl of ice water, and ingredients
preheat oven to 450 degrees F
slice potato lengthwise on mandolin for fewer chips and less work
put slices in ice water immediately so they donโt turn brown, for up to 2 hours to rid them of as much starch as possible to keep them from burning
dry slices on a towel or paper towels on both sides
spread duck fat on one side of each slice
move the slices, duck fat side down, to the baking rack on top of the sheet pan
spread duck fat on top side and sprinkle with salt
place in the upper and middle third of the oven for 9 to 13 minutes or until chips are browned to your desire, watching closely after 9 minutes to make sure they donโt burn
season the chips (if using additional seasonings) immediately after they come out of the oven so the moist ones can absorb maximum flavor
when cool, place chips in a paper bag or an airtight container in a cool, dark place . . . refrigeration isnโt necessary to keep them for several days
THE CHIPS OF MY 1950โs YOUTH
Following that perspective . . . some history. I used to eat โcrunchiesโ rocking out to "Lucille," "Earth Angel," "Jailhouse Rock," or the Everly Brothersโ "Bye Bye Love." Andy Warhol was popular but it would be years before heโd painted the Marilyn Monroe which just sold for a record $195 million. Way back then, Jell-O molds, meatloaf, and tuna casserole were all the rage. And in my small corner of the world in Rockford, Illinois, so were crunchies. I was in junior high when the companyโs logo featured a โpotato manโ wearing a top hat and dancing in a circle with two children. That company, Mrs. Fisherโs Potato Chips, is still there today. Their crunchies were broken chips that fell under the conveyor belt while loading bags with normal chips. The paper bags were hopelessly grease-soaked, the bags loaded with salty, salty, salty bits of chips. A friend and I would buy a bag after school almost every day right across the street from school at a small shop. Crunchies were sold for 5 cents a bag.
Following junior high my easy access to crunchies was cut off, but Iโd buy other chips wherever I could. Growing up, I remember telling someone that my purpose on earth was to eat salt! That notion was no doubt born of my crunchies days. And Iโm nowhere close to being the only Rockfordite to ever become addicted to potato-man-with-two-children potato chips . . . .
SOME FUN
Letโs test your worldly knowledge, OK? Just pick the right answer to the following poll and compare your response to all the other souls on Planet Earth who also voted to validate your lofty IQ.
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Potato chips rule the world! ๐
That was such an enjoyable read that I am late walking the dogs! Thanks for a deliciously mouth-watering post... and, yes, I am a chips addict but my next bite will be so much more considered from now on.