Home Made Fries
French Fries Your Way
by Brian Clancey
I do not like buying frozen French Fries because I want to
control the types and amount of vegetable oil used to make them.
Some of the commercial French fries on the market contain
surprisingly large amounts of oils. This is too bad because
potatoes. by themselves, are not fattening and contain plenty of
important nutrients.
A 5 1/2-ounce potato, about the size of a computer mouse, has
100 calories, no fat, 26 grams of carbohydrate and 3 grams of
fiber. North Dakota State University nutritionist Julie
Garden-Robinson says that potato also provides 21% of the daily
recommendation for potassium and 45% of vitamin C, plus other
nutrients.
She stresses that you should cCook potatoes in their skins and
eat the skin or peel as thinly as possible because many of the
nutrients are directly beneath the skin.
French Fries Your Way
One potato per person or one big for two people
Olive oil
Fresh ground pepper
Coarse salt
Dried red chili peppers (optional)
Oregano and thyme (optional)
Wash the potatoes. Do not peel. Cut out any blemishes.
Cut the potatoes in any style. Remember the thicker the piece,
the longer it takes to cook.
For shoe string, cut into quarter inch thick slices along the
length of the potato. Lay them flat and cut them in quarter-inch
thick fries. For wedges, don't cut them so small.
For cubes, cut into quarter to half inch thick slices. Lay them
flat and cut again. Then again along their length.
Wash off the excess starch on the potatoes. Pat dry. Put on a
light coating of olive oil. Sprinkle with the pepper, salt and
optional ingredients such as herbs or dry chili peppers and
quickly combine them with your hands.
Spread on a large cookie tray and bak at 450 degrees F. After 10
or 15 minutes, turn the potatoes with spatula to help them brown
on all sides. Serve when cooked to your liking.
It does not matter which type of potato you use. However, I like
to cube the red ones and cook with them with the herbs. I like
to turn the russets into shoe string and the yellow fleshed
potatoes into wedges, using the dry chili peppers for
flavor.