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Cooks Illustrated Perfect Oven Fries

Cooks Illustrated Perfect Oven Fries


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Description:

Found this in Cooks Illustrated. Other than frying potatoes in duck fat, this is the closest thing to excellent, Belgian-style fries that is simple to make at home. Perfect with aioli or homemade mayonnaise with tarragon and pepper. Ultimate Oven Fries Written: Jan 2004 The savings in calories and fat are no reason to eat an oven fry--it has to taste good. With its leathery crust and mealy interior, the typical oven fry needs work. The Problem: Low fat is never a good excuse for lousy food, and oven fries should be no exception. Abysmal flavor and texture just aren't worth the savings in calories, especially when these "lite" fries taste like overroasted potatoes with thick, leathery crusts and hollow interiors. In other cases, they are limp, whitish, mealy, and bland--a complete failure in all respects. The Goal: Easy and clean oven cooking--as opposed to deep-frying in a pot of hot, splattering oil--is such an engaging proposition that we decided to try to make an oven fry worth eating on its own terms. If it didn't have a golden, crisp crust and a richly creamy interior, we were going back to the deep fryer. The Solution: Start with peeled russet potatoes, cut into wedges and soaked in hot water for 10 minutes. Pour oil, salt, and pepper on the baking sheet instead of on the potatoes, which helps keep the potatoes from sticking. Cover the potatoes with foil to steam them for the first five minutes of cooking, then uncover and continue baking until golden and crisp.

Reference:

www.cooksillustrated.com

Prep:

45 minutes

Servings:

Submitted by:

Eric
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Ingredients

Take care to cut the potatoes into evenly sized wedges so that all of the pieces will cook at about the same rate. Although it isn't required, a nonstick baking sheet works particularly well for this recipe. It not only keeps the fries from sticking to the pan but, because of its dark color, encourages deep and even browning. Whether you choose a nonstick baking sheet or a regular baking sheet, make sure that it is heavy duty. The intense heat of the oven may cause lighter pans to warp.
Serves 3 to 4
3 russet potatoes (about 8 ounces each), peeled, each potato cut lengthwise into 10 to 12 evenly sized wedges
5 tbsp vegetable oil or peanut oil
Table salt and ground black pepper

Directions

1.
1. Adjust oven rack to lowest position; heat oven to 475 degrees. Place potatoes in large bowl and cover with hot tap water; soak 10 minutes. Meanwhile, coat 18 by 12-inch heavy-duty rimmed baking sheet (see note) with 4 tablespoons oil and sprinkle evenly with 3/4 teaspoon salt and 1/4 teaspoon pepper; set aside.
2.
2. Drain potatoes. Spread potatoes out on triple layer of paper towels and thoroughly pat dry with additional paper towels. Rinse and wipe out now-empty bowl; return potatoes to bowl and toss with remaining 1 tablespoon oil. Arrange potatoes in single layer on prepared baking sheet; cover tightly with foil and bake 5 minutes. Remove foil and continue to bake until bottoms of potatoes are spotty golden brown, 15 to 20 minutes, rotating baking sheet after 10 minutes. Using metal spatula and tongs, scrape to loosen potatoes from pan, then flip each wedge, keeping potatoes in single layer. Continue baking until fries are golden and crisp, 5 to 15 minutes longer, rotating pan as needed if fries are browning unevenly.
3.
3. Transfer fries to second baking sheet lined with paper towels to drain. Season with additional salt and pepper to taste and serve.
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