The Sydney Morning Herald logo
Advertisement

How to make perfect hot chips at home

Danielle Alvarez

Loading

This isn't so much a recipe as a technique. Making chips at home might seem like a lot of effort but I promise this method yields excellent chips with a deep crisp exterior and creamy interior. And who can resist a wholesome, crisp and golden home-made chip?

The type of potato you choose is crucial to success. It must be starchy but also golden. A very white potato like a russet will dry out before it's golden.

Note that the potatoes need to cook for about an hour, so you'll want to start well before you're ready to serve.

Danielle Alvarez's home-made fries.William Meppem
Advertisement

INGREDIENTS

  • 1 kg large chipping potatoes (such as sebago, coliban or pontiac)
  • about 1 litre oil for frying
  • salt

The best recipes from Australia's leading chefs straight to your inbox.

Sign up

METHOD

  1. Cut the potatoes into medium-large chips and place them into a large bowl of water. When you're ready to start cooking, drain and dry the chips with a clean tea towel or paper towel.
  2. Put the chips in a large cast iron or other heavy-bottomed pot. They should only half-fill the pot. If they go any higher you must find a larger pot for safety reasons.
  3. Pour in enough cold fry oil over the chips to cover them by 5-6cm. Place the pot on the stovetop and turn the heat to the higher end of medium high. For the first about 20 minutes stir the every few minutes. But once they start to soften you'll need to mix them more gently to avoid breaking them. Allow the oil to bubble more rapidly and once the chips have softened considerably, turn the heat to high. This will crisp up the chips and turn them golden.
  4. When their exterior has hardened and they begin to float, you can mix them more frequently and if any have stuck to the bottom, carefully scrape the bottom of the pot with a metal spoon to release them. When the chips are deeply golden (total cook time is about an hour) lift them from the oil using a spider (a long-handled wire-mesh skimmer) and toss them in a bowl with lots of fine salt.
  5. Serve with my Cuban fish sandwiches, steamed mussels or alongside a delicious steak or hamburger.

Serves 4-6

Continue this series

The definitive guide to Melbourne’s golden and crunchy chips
Up next
Karen Martini’s pollo agrodolce.
  • Recipe collection

30 chicken and chips recipes that are really worth their salt

Move over takeaway and bring on the fakeaway. From crispy fried classics to zesty grilled wings, these chicken and chips recipes are the ultimate crowd-pleasers.

Steak frites at Ouest France Bistro

Eight of Melbourne’s best steak frites for Bastille Day and beyond

It’s Bastille Day on Sunday, so celebrate with the most simple yet succulent of French bistro dishes – perfectly cooked steak, crisp fries and your sauce of choice.

Previously
Which frozen chips came out on top in the great air fryer fries test of 2023?

From sweaty flop to the crunchy top: 10 air-fried supermarket chips, tasted and rated

Chips and air fryers are a match made in heaven. Except when they aren’t. Here are 10 supermarket chips tried and air-fried.

See all stories

More:

Danielle AlvarezDanielle Alvarez is a chef, recipe writer and host of Good Food Kitchen.

From our partners

Advertisement
Advertisement