How Hard Can It Be To Make a Potato Chip ? (hint: Fly you fools!)

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Alex

Alex

3 ай бұрын

I tried to make potato chips for the first time. Go to dayoneapp.com/alex and use code ALEX to get limited-time offer of 2 month free trial with Day One Journal Premium
A potato chip, also known as a crisp in some countries, is a thin slice of potato that has been deep-fried or baked until crispy. It is a popular snack food enjoyed around the world.
The main difference between regular chips and kettle chips lies in their texture and cooking method:
1. *Regular Chips:* Regular potato chips are typically made using a continuous frying process. Thinly sliced potatoes are fried in a continuous stream of hot oil, resulting in a relatively uniform texture and shape. These chips tend to be thin, light, and crispy.
2. *Kettle Chips:* Kettle-cooked potato chips, on the other hand, are made in batches using a kettle or large vat of hot oil. The potatoes are sliced slightly thicker than regular chips and are cooked in smaller batches. This method produces a thicker, crunchier chip with more variation in texture. Kettle chips often have a rustic appearance and may be slightly darker in color due to the kettle cooking process.
In summary, while both regular and kettle chips are made from potatoes and fried, the main differences lie in the thickness of the slices, the cooking method, and the resulting texture and flavor of the chips.
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Пікірлер: 895
@ryanmcanelly6556
@ryanmcanelly6556 3 ай бұрын
The color and bitterness you're getting is from reducing sugars in the potato (Maillard Reaction). The crisp comes from the glass state transition. What you're ideally looking for is a potato high in starch and low in reducing sugars (Cold stored potatoes will begin to convert starch into sugar and increase the browning.) As for the frying, what is happening is a dehydration reaction which replaces the water for oil. The soft chips haven't fully been dehydrated and made it to a glassy state. You're closer than you think but there is a lot that goes into it. Source: Previous QA Director for snack food company which specialized in potato chips.
@Finwolven
@Finwolven 3 ай бұрын
I was thinking that might be the answer; dehydrate the slices before frying, but obviously you have actual knowledge on how to do it.
@DFine321
@DFine321 3 ай бұрын
Thats awesome insight. I initially thought you would want to go less starch to get less browning. But apparently my thought process was wrong. Is it still a maillard reaction outside of proteins?....i thought starches would be dextrinizarion.
@smurflord2
@smurflord2 3 ай бұрын
Commercial potato chips are made from a special single variety of potato that has been bred to be low sugar, low moisture and high starch. You will never see this variety in a supermarket, but it's the most commonly grown potato in europe. Lays use a custom bred potato called FC5.
@robertschaefer169
@robertschaefer169 3 ай бұрын
Thanks for reminding me. Cold potatoes, not good for chips.
@Taliesin6
@Taliesin6 3 ай бұрын
Did you guys fry them in 2 stages ? i followed a recipe a loooooong time ago and made very nice chips by first "cooking" them on a lower temp and then frying them again to get the crisp. Similar to how fry shops do french fries (at least in the Netherlands)
@LemmaEOF
@LemmaEOF 3 ай бұрын
I miss when your sponsored segments had a progress bar across the top. It was a really nice bit of style that you don't see in other youtubers' videos and it really made yours stand out.
@pbourlart
@pbourlart 3 ай бұрын
Yes, we then knew how many times we'd have to push on the 10 seconds fast forward key 😀
@LemmaEOF
@LemmaEOF 3 ай бұрын
@@pbourlart I mean the sponsored sections are still a consistent length so you can just do that anyway, that wasn't even a factor for me lol
@pbourlart
@pbourlart 3 ай бұрын
@@LemmaEOFI know, it's still not a big deal, it just helped, that's all 🙂
@davidekambli3281
@davidekambli3281 2 ай бұрын
It probably wasnt his decision but his sponsors.
@MichelPASTOR
@MichelPASTOR 2 ай бұрын
Just use the SponsorBlock extension you will get a progress bar or if you want just skip the sponsors automatically
@michelhv
@michelhv 3 ай бұрын
This is the episode in which Alex pretends he hasn’t read the Internet where all the answers are.
@dimoolia
@dimoolia 3 ай бұрын
​@@KikiThaerigen he just conveniently forgot to check Kenji's recipe where everything is laid out for a light non-kettle style chip. Then he took us on a "journey" of bad cooking making easy mistakes and faking not understanding a bit about potatoes. Such a waste.
@dmminion8407
@dmminion8407 3 ай бұрын
@@dimoolia He is showing what it takes to make them at home, while I am sure some people who aren't satisfied with the selection of chips in stores, making and dusting them with flavor they find great, is easier than they thought.
@brendanryan8439
@brendanryan8439 3 ай бұрын
Have a glass of water chief its just a video on crisps​@dimoolia
@TsunamiWombat
@TsunamiWombat 3 ай бұрын
@@dimoolia hate the game not the player. Video's are money. 10min + is money. Content is king. At least the preview icon wasn't him making a :O face
@user-lp3ew1xb5u
@user-lp3ew1xb5u 3 ай бұрын
in a lot of his other videos - the mistakes are more reasonable - here, he just burns them 2 different ways and that's not very compelling to watch. So, yeah - I'm giving it to you.
@BeforeMoviesSucked
@BeforeMoviesSucked 3 ай бұрын
Fry, you fools!
@JanKenk
@JanKenk 3 ай бұрын
the comment i was looking for :D
@AndrewJens
@AndrewJens 3 ай бұрын
Comments like these can lead to bad hobbits.
@BeforeMoviesSucked
@BeforeMoviesSucked 3 ай бұрын
@@AndrewJens Hey, I had nothing to do with Amazon's The Rings of Power... 😄
@Zuluknob
@Zuluknob 3 ай бұрын
Dehydrate them first. Works when i make beet, carrot, and parsnip chips.
@Pomaufour
@Pomaufour 3 ай бұрын
That was my first thought. Also I know nothing about it but air frying ? Maybe that's the answer ?
@onistgaming5177
@onistgaming5177 3 ай бұрын
@@Pomaufour i dont think they had air fryers when they invented chips tho..
@higgy82
@higgy82 3 ай бұрын
@@onistgaming5177 They also didn't have the potato that Lays use...because they invented it.
@JustAnotherMe
@JustAnotherMe 3 ай бұрын
Yeah. My Mum used to make potato chips often when I was a kid. She used to leave the potato slices out in the sun to dry completely and then store big batches of those dry slices away, ready to fry whenever you want a snack. Those may not have been Lays equivalent, but the dehydrating sounds like an important step.
@kaitnip
@kaitnip 3 ай бұрын
@@JustAnotherMeHow did she handle the potatoes darkening in color when in open air? If I just leave a slice of uncooked potato to dry out it starts changing color. I think especially the edges? It's been some time. Or maybe it was that being in the sun means higher temp and they dehydrated without becoming splotchy?
@andregriffin
@andregriffin 3 ай бұрын
Much respect for you videos as always, but this was the first time I could feel you actually knew the answers already during the filming of the trial and error phase.
@acemanhomer1
@acemanhomer1 3 ай бұрын
WASH THEN BLANCH YOUR SLICES! WASH THEN BLANCH YOUR SLICES! Just made some homemade sweet potato chips yesterday, and times before…and blanching is the key to maintaining color…I read somewhere suggest using vinegar in the wash or blanch boil, I used it in the boil.. about 3-4 minutes…..DRY…then fry.
@acemanhomer1
@acemanhomer1 3 ай бұрын
Around 365⁰ oil, has to be quick or it absorbs oil and becomes soggy by oil
@mhkins
@mhkins 3 ай бұрын
Yes this^ I also gently dry my potato chips in the oven at a low temp to draw out any remaining moisture without browning/burning further. Can also use dehydrator.
@zyxwvut4740
@zyxwvut4740 3 ай бұрын
Agreed, although I use the freezer instead of a dehydrator.
@mhkins
@mhkins 3 ай бұрын
@@zyxwvut4740 interesting! What do you do freezer wise to the chips?
@zyxwvut4740
@zyxwvut4740 3 ай бұрын
​@@mhkins First I sprinkle the vinegar, then put a single layer on a plate overnight. I got tired of making my chips and fries soggy by adding vinegar at the last minute. Then realized the vinegar flavor survives the freezing and the freezing removes moisture.
@TheDuckofDoom.
@TheDuckofDoom. 3 ай бұрын
The chip makers have many economies of scale. A major factor is they contract directly with farmers and storage houses for particular potato qualities that are not typical in supermarket potatoes. Storage conditions are a huge factor in browning due to the effect of temperature on starch←→sugar conversion(it goes both directions), many academic papers with substantial research have been written on the affect of different conditions of long term storage and pre-use storage (the final 2-3 weeks) on the frying qualities of potatoes, both fluffy fries and crispy. Farmers don't even use the same type of fertilizer for supermarket and processing customers because it effects the starch and moisture ratios. Supermarket potatoes are grown for maximum weight yield and tend to have high water content. Processing buyers pay based on a more complicated quality scale, or for some products like potato flour even by weight of extractable starch regardless of total fresh weight.
@dj-kq4fz
@dj-kq4fz 3 ай бұрын
Thanks! Food science is fascinating and underrated IMHO.
@user-ey8lg6wo7v
@user-ey8lg6wo7v 3 ай бұрын
Hi Alex. I think you miss two Important things. Suger get caramelized on 130 Celsius. Water get evaporated in 100 Celsius. You shuold stay on that range for having enough time to release the liquid but to stay on the right color. I think there’s a video on KZbin- in which they throw the potatoes into a cold oil and yet the results are great. Big love from a big fan. Shaked
@bugsygoo
@bugsygoo 3 ай бұрын
I think you have missed the magic that is time and editing.
@EzekielDeLaCroix
@EzekielDeLaCroix 3 ай бұрын
Every time Alex embarks on a new cooking journey, it's like he forgot everything he learned and all the built up knowledge escapes him. I know it's for storytelling and a journey of discovery kind of plot but Alex floundering over the basics he should have figured out by now is kind of funny to watch.
@pbourlart
@pbourlart 3 ай бұрын
Yes, the most obvious part is the mandolin one. He should have known that from the beginning (and I'm pretty sure he did).
@pbourlart
@pbourlart 3 ай бұрын
Also, it's very weird for a "cooking engineer" to control the temperature of his oil with a wooden spoon... I've known him to be a lot more scientific than that 😀
@ccnomad
@ccnomad 3 ай бұрын
You have a better attitude than I do. For you it's funny, for me it's exasperating. Feels wasteful, disingenuous, and a bit insulting to his viewers. idk, I know there's a reason he does it this way, but it's tiresome. Stopped watching for a long time, tried coming back just now: Nah.
@Mortalpill
@Mortalpill 3 ай бұрын
My guy nerfing himself just so he can vist a potato chip factory 😭we know you could've done it first try .
@thecrowfliescrooked
@thecrowfliescrooked 3 ай бұрын
Yeah it's entertaining to know that he's just dragging it out for content but I love the content so I'm not complaining
@thealrightchef2800
@thealrightchef2800 3 ай бұрын
True lmfaoo
@peerhauser
@peerhauser 3 ай бұрын
The last scene was bad acting, yes. I love everything about Alex except for the constructed plot.
@thenewexeptor
@thenewexeptor 3 ай бұрын
@@peerhauser same, but I guess this the way if you want to make an entertaining content for mass media usage (and KZbin is one). I've tried several makers channels and these which were heavily scripted turn out more entertaining that the improvised ones. I call it fan vs. expert content.
@ExMachinaEngineering
@ExMachinaEngineering 3 ай бұрын
Definitely catch up in the next one. Really cool idea for a video series
@mhkins
@mhkins 3 ай бұрын
Yes! Starting your potato chip video(s) right as I’m obsessing over making crazy fun flavors at home.
@AS-os3lj
@AS-os3lj 3 ай бұрын
Soon: I am growing my specialiced potatoes for making chips
@heretikpapy
@heretikpapy 3 ай бұрын
You nailed it !! LOL
@eloquentsir5084
@eloquentsir5084 3 ай бұрын
I have a strange feeling that a paid partnership with lay's is comming
@damienpeladan481
@damienpeladan481 3 ай бұрын
I think it’s already here
@1992djg
@1992djg 3 ай бұрын
Who cares he’s about to reveal how we can make our own lays at home for mere pennies
@damienpeladan481
@damienpeladan481 3 ай бұрын
@@1992djg it’s not a criticism, just an observation.
@wyattholm5720
@wyattholm5720 3 ай бұрын
You can make your own, but not for pennies.
@HoldenAGrenade
@HoldenAGrenade 3 ай бұрын
or Salut Company chips with flavors based on various ramens and mother sauces and other things that make sense with the channel history
@eliavery7438
@eliavery7438 3 ай бұрын
I used a Japanese fixed blade mandolin designed to shave cabbage to make some awesome potato chips recently. Yeilded something resembling a very delicate kettle chip. I seasoned them with a dusting of a mixture of good chicken bouillon, toasted onion powder, white pepper, and msg to give em a flavor halfway between roast chicken and french onion soup.
@TheFredzOr
@TheFredzOr 3 ай бұрын
this sounds brilliant
@lisam9233
@lisam9233 3 ай бұрын
Mandolin is the way to go for consistency. Good move!
@neonpulse49
@neonpulse49 3 ай бұрын
Miam
@peerhauser
@peerhauser 3 ай бұрын
This sounds very Alex like
@ESGymNo2
@ESGymNo2 3 ай бұрын
I'm so excited for another series!!! Which reminded of the ramen series. You'll end up doing all the snacks we know and love!!
@jacobwisner7821
@jacobwisner7821 3 ай бұрын
I've had good luck with Yukon gold potatoes (semi waxy) and slicing them super thin with a mandolin. Still much closer to kettle chips though. Also interesting results blanching them in beef tallow (draining and patting after) before frying.
@stanete
@stanete 3 ай бұрын
I love the series format ❤
@rodesdara
@rodesdara 3 ай бұрын
this video was an art form of a cliff hanger! I like your stuff! also my familie likes all the meals I learn from you! Salute!
@sylvainparis9610
@sylvainparis9610 3 ай бұрын
Nous sommes connectés Alex, tu te poses exactement les mêmes questions que moi que ça soit sur la pizza, Ramen, et maintenant les Chips c'est fou. Merci de te lancer sur cette thématique :)
@Saccade_HS
@Saccade_HS 3 ай бұрын
Can't wait to see more of this journey!
@SamuelKeaton
@SamuelKeaton 2 ай бұрын
my mind immediately went to the thought of frying the potatoes under vacuum, basically the opposite of how pressure fryers are used to increase the temperature and retain more moisture for fried chicken, fry the potatoes under vacuum to lower the boiling point of water and promote dehydration/crispifying while keeping browning low. Doesn't sound like the most uhhh, practical thing to do at home, but you've built a lot of impractical kitchen appliances over the years!
@jayjo675
@jayjo675 3 ай бұрын
Classic Alex! Love it!
@GetHandsDirty
@GetHandsDirty 3 ай бұрын
Ahahah I knew where this video was going! 😂 That will be interesting to see how the factories make the chips but my two cents would be that they start with a high quality potato species and not the crap that is sold in every supermarket. And maybe you gave us a hint with the double frying? Like the biscuits are baked twice (bis) for longer preservation and super crunchiness. I guess we'll have to wait and see!
@dropelaves
@dropelaves 3 ай бұрын
I was about to say you should have tried to double fry the second batch, but writing the comment with the video still playing I managed to notice my mistake. You're the chef here after all, not me. Haven't finished the video but I'm guessing that'll do the trick :p Love your content, Alex!
@andreaferrigno
@andreaferrigno 3 ай бұрын
I didn't expect a potato chips series 😮😅
@PhysioDetective
@PhysioDetective 3 ай бұрын
Hahaha. Such confected drama and you know why - but I still love it hahaha
@harvestmoon_autumnsky
@harvestmoon_autumnsky 3 ай бұрын
You have very expressive eyes. Best of luck on your crisp creations.
@babygorilla4233
@babygorilla4233 3 ай бұрын
I cannot wait to see what seasonings Alex will be coming up with once it's done
@69Buddha
@69Buddha 3 ай бұрын
Looks like it's time for a trip to Pennsylvania. You can get some footage for an upcoming hard pretzel series while you're at it. ;-)
@johnnymossville
@johnnymossville 3 ай бұрын
I'd go to Martins in PA. Very old company and have mastered the process.
@HelenaOfDetroit
@HelenaOfDetroit 3 ай бұрын
Going to Detroit would be better, in my very biased opinion 😅 After all, most of the potatoes that are used to make Lay's chips come from Michigan. And Detroit is home to Better Made potato chips, which is the only sole-surviving chip maker from the early 20th century.
@69Buddha
@69Buddha 3 ай бұрын
​@@johnnymossville Johnny's got it right. As a Lancaster County boy, we'd even take field trips in middle school to go see Martin's in York or Snyder's of Hannover. That southern part of PA has Martin's, Gibbles, Snyder's, Bickel's, Utz, Herr's, and a bunch more I can't remember off the top of my head, spanning from 1909 (Snyder's) up to 1950 (Gibble's). Not sure how​ @HelenaOfDetroit that makes Better Made "the only sole-surviving chip maker from the early 20th century." ;-) It's potato throw down time!
@hydrojet7x70
@hydrojet7x70 2 ай бұрын
Ooooooo can’t wait to see the next one!!!
@yewbertsfriend
@yewbertsfriend 3 ай бұрын
Dear Alex, excited for this new series. But I am left wondering, will we ever get closure on pasta?
@Amocoru
@Amocoru 3 ай бұрын
As soon as I started the video and saw you didn't at least soak the potatoes to remove the starch I knew the outcome of the first set. Such a good video.
@Raddlesnakes000
@Raddlesnakes000 3 ай бұрын
Alex, I'd love to see some sort of fry oil calibration experiment using those ikea induction hobs. Like you said you can always use the old fashioned way but it'd be fun to know how much more or less power is going into the oil at each power number.
@macfanguy
@macfanguy 3 ай бұрын
The stuff i did not know I needed.😂
@jasondads9509
@jasondads9509 3 ай бұрын
ooooh finally a potato chip series
@valajonsdottir7794
@valajonsdottir7794 3 ай бұрын
Just watched your video and then the Tasting History session on potato’s chip history popped up😮
@duesenantrieb8272
@duesenantrieb8272 3 ай бұрын
I recently experimented a bit and marinating the potatos in corn starch and making them a litttle thiner than you yielded amazing results. The closest i have ever goten to crispy pale chips. I dont have a dehydrater but i am quite sure if you dehydrate them a little ( like 30% of the water ) i think you would get a realy close result to fabric made chips. I dont have a clue about anything tbh but ive been frustraded with makin chips for a long time now, this is my best take on them. Oh yeah and i use Puree potatoes. Others dont get as crispy from my experience.
@abilawaandamari8366
@abilawaandamari8366 3 ай бұрын
I went on my own little rabbit hole about potato chips, I believe it's pretty much impossible to make a 1:1 recreation of the regular commercial chips
@JanusXX
@JanusXX 3 ай бұрын
I think you can achieve it reliably by a 4 step process. You slice them, cook them (boil or steam I guess, maybe you can omit this step, but it think it will improve things), then you dry them in a food dehydrator for a very specific amount of time that I can only guess, then you fry them in hot oil. It is what my intuition/experience tells me right now. The drying step is the most important, and the more you dry the more easily they get crispy, until the water is so little it will burn easily. I am willing to try it if you do it please let me know the results. I will let you know of mine.
@abilawaandamari8366
@abilawaandamari8366 3 ай бұрын
@JanusXX its funny that you mentioned that the thought of dehydrating the potatoes also comes to my mind. That's the same principle behind prawn crackers. Unfortunately, I don't have a dehydrator, so I can't put that to the test myself.
@lMchMyersl
@lMchMyersl 3 ай бұрын
​@@JanusXX Sadly, in this case, he is right. You can't make a 1:1 recreation of commercial potato chips by buying supermarket potatoes. It basically comes down to starch to sugar ratio on the potato which is influenced by growing and storage conditions. For commercial potato chips you want very low sugar content, which means high starch, ideally with low water weight. Supermarket potatoes will have high water weight for better yield, high sugar and low starch due to cold storage. Higher sugar = higher browning which makes it bitter. It's possible to cheat a little bit due to a temperature differential in which the browning reaction happens and the glassy (crispy) transition happens, but it will still be different than commercial chips without the right potatoes.
@R41D
@R41D 3 ай бұрын
alex you are SLEEEPING on kettle cooked chips. they are King
@jaker2542
@jaker2542 3 ай бұрын
congrats on dropping better help. good on you
@3all714
@3all714 3 ай бұрын
i also started this chips frying journey same as you, cut them thin, boil, fry but still they gets thick, stays soft. some of those “chip” are perfect but its not what i was satisfied with and wasn’t acceptable. i fried a lot, ate a lot of those mid soggy, sometimes crispy chips but to this date i couldn’t master it. its been like 2 years. Its been a long time since i made potato chips at home. maybe i will try again if you get a good way to make it.
@hirotakasugi4891
@hirotakasugi4891 3 ай бұрын
Alex for seasoning things like these, I like to use shrimp and/or lobster shells dehydrated and then powdered mixed with salt and rosemary. It's so good. Great video by the way. It might be the potato variety? Too much start. The starch is what makes it brown easily. Factory potato chips extract the starch I believe.
@channel-gf9ze
@channel-gf9ze 3 ай бұрын
day one journal has Alex on gun point!
@djtecthreat
@djtecthreat 3 ай бұрын
I know you're after chips and I'm excited to see how you make out. I will say my Mom used to cut them a little thicker and fry them up as an occasional treat. Some were thick, some were thin so you'd have crispy but also potato'ey ones too. They were dark like your first batch, sprinkled with a little salt. I really enjoyed them. They were a cross between a homefry and potato chip.
@redmoondesignbeth9119
@redmoondesignbeth9119 3 ай бұрын
This is crazy...I was eating chips an hour ago thinking "Ive got to look up a recipe I can make for chips"...and HERE You are!
@DtWolfwood
@DtWolfwood 3 ай бұрын
Gonna be like the dry pasta rabbit hole, when you find out it takes a lot to make something so simple 😅 looking forward to this.
@JossWaddy
@JossWaddy 3 ай бұрын
It's like Spaghetti all over again! Time to builda drier/frier/ washer/ other bit of kit!!!
@dexterm2003
@dexterm2003 3 ай бұрын
Good quality kettle chips are excellent. There is a brand on the west coast of the US called Tim's Cascade and they are wonderful!
@switzerland
@switzerland 3 ай бұрын
You should have come to Switzerland and try Zweifel Chips, literally the best
@VINsational331
@VINsational331 2 ай бұрын
I smell a Lay's Potato Chip factory tour coming up... giddy up, folks, Alex goin' to Lethbridge!
@moxiedawn4370
@moxiedawn4370 3 ай бұрын
Oh, Alex! Kettle chips are sooooo good! But honestly, all chips are awesome. Easily the best salty snack.
@maxaguilar
@maxaguilar 3 ай бұрын
you should use 2 temperatures. first temp about 150 C then 180 C. Let them rest between cooks. The resting time is tricky because main objective is to dehydrate and therefore lower the next cooking time. Times and Temperatures are suggestions but they worked for me. It should be different for you since we dont use the same raw materials, etc..
@WompWompWoooomp
@WompWompWoooomp 3 ай бұрын
That's how we did it when I worked at a fast food place that made French fries from actual fresh potatoes. A longer cook in oil at a lower temperature, then we'd store the fries until needed, and cook them quickly at a high temp.
@davidm9090
@davidm9090 3 ай бұрын
Most use a Heat and Control production line, such as PC50 in case of Lays. They have videos on their web site that might help, or perhaps they can give some info!
@azyfloof
@azyfloof 3 ай бұрын
So timely that I'm eating a bag of Kettle chips as I watch this :D I wonder what brand you tried for you to say that taste bitter, cause I love Kettle brand chips made here in the UK, and they're beautiful :D They have a little more substance and a little more snap than regular crisps, and are so flavourful. I'd try those as your baseline!
@gaomon2887
@gaomon2887 3 ай бұрын
It's been like 6 month's since i last watched a video of yours and i feel like your french accent has become thicker like a nice glaze
@Butterhoernchen77
@Butterhoernchen77 3 ай бұрын
I think I would buy the apron if it crossed from the neck to the hip instead of from one side of the hip to the other. (so that you have a cross on the back, stopping it from pulling on your neck) Your locking mechanism looks incredible for this. I don't know if others would like it.
@TheTubecrap
@TheTubecrap 3 ай бұрын
Wow, surprised you don't like kettle chips. There is a company here in the Eastern part of the US called Utz. They make a kettle chip called "Utz Kettle Classics Potato Chips Dark Russets". OMG, they are so good. I swear they salt them with crack. If I'm not careful, I can eat an entire bag in one sitting.
@FlesHBoX
@FlesHBoX 3 ай бұрын
When I lived in PA my favorite were Martins, or Goods (the blue Goods, not the red). I always preferred those over Utz
@TheTubecrap
@TheTubecrap 3 ай бұрын
I'm down in MD. I don't think I've seen either of those brands in my local stores..
@ZanHecht
@ZanHecht 3 ай бұрын
Dark potato chips are the exact opposite of what he's looking for.
@Nerdificationing
@Nerdificationing 2 ай бұрын
This should be a series - making deceptively hard supermarket stuff
@heni63
@heni63 3 ай бұрын
Ahhh it would be so cool to see you in a factory! iam looking forward to next episode, even if it's without the factory 😘
@Dreamrider79
@Dreamrider79 3 ай бұрын
Love the fact that, well I don't know where I'm wrong, let go copy an industrial factory. Love your videos men
@mhordijk0871
@mhordijk0871 3 ай бұрын
Bought a mandolin today, just for this purpose. And here you are, with a video about it. About the same result as my first attempt, with the slice cutter on my box grater. Double cooking them is my next idea.
@halilbagosi
@halilbagosi 3 ай бұрын
Hey Alex! I love the way your footage looks! Of course lighting and set and skill is a huge part of why it looks so good, but im very interested in what camera you are using. If anyone else knows please tell me! Thank you!
@Loufilmmaker
@Loufilmmaker 3 ай бұрын
We use a Sony Fx3 & a Sony A7siii.
@halilbagosi
@halilbagosi 3 ай бұрын
@@Loufilmmaker Thank you so much! It just looks so crisp!
@vdan3821
@vdan3821 3 ай бұрын
Knowing you put the camera in that greasy bag was painful
3 ай бұрын
Maybe he cut the bag on both ends and just put a couple of chips next to the camera
@brepi312
@brepi312 3 ай бұрын
Filmmakers must make sacrifices
@cburns458
@cburns458 3 ай бұрын
@or camera could have be in a plastic bag/wrap. or he could just wipe it down
@ematise
@ematise 3 ай бұрын
Put it in the sink and washed it😊
@TheRealHululu
@TheRealHululu 3 ай бұрын
​@@ematise right? These people make it a way bigger deal than it is!
@ralexttm4368
@ralexttm4368 3 ай бұрын
I literally JUST vowed to cut chips from my diet for weight loss reason... and you make a video about it??
@rofsjan
@rofsjan 3 ай бұрын
Merci. Intriguing part 1. I'm eating beetroot chips right now. Tasty and healthy.
@eliabrunner8060
@eliabrunner8060 3 ай бұрын
Formula for chips: Slice them at exactly 2mm (to thin = brittle, to thick = to much potato flavor. The oil needs to be 160 degrees Celsius(sunflower oil) The potatos need to have alot of starch( 15% or more) and as you did you need to wash and dry the slices
@grabble7605
@grabble7605 3 ай бұрын
"Too much potato flavor" They're POTATO chips. They're supposed to have that flavor.
@lMchMyersl
@lMchMyersl 3 ай бұрын
@@grabble7605 not really, no They are crispy because the water has been replaced by oil, so really you are mostly getting fat and salt flavors.
@enricobregni7025
@enricobregni7025 3 ай бұрын
San Carlo ricetta classica 1936, some of the best chips you can buy. They are still supermarket chips but they are a fancier version of the normal “san Carlo classiche”. They have been around just for few years in supermarket but they are definitely worth trying if you are are a fan, like me 😊
@Kitora_Su
@Kitora_Su 3 ай бұрын
When will we get the new studio tour? It’s been months!!! 😭
@tamahawk422
@tamahawk422 3 ай бұрын
Satisfying is an understatement
@jdellis6511
@jdellis6511 3 ай бұрын
Fly you fools! Love it.
@macdiu1
@macdiu1 3 ай бұрын
Il faut peut-être faire une première cuisson à l'eau ? Superbe vidéo Alex ;)
@rbejva
@rbejva 3 ай бұрын
The best crisps I've had in a long time I picked up in a supermarket in Béziers - I think the company that made them was called the Occitan Chips company or some such. They were delicious.
@TheRealMozes
@TheRealMozes 3 ай бұрын
Here in belgium we doeble fry our frys first on 150 boil them to make them done and then short on 180 to get them crispy. Maybe you need do double fry them. Or even 3 times. Letting it cool in between so it doesnt burn. Starch also makes the brown caramel colour its suggar
@Pyrozen69
@Pyrozen69 3 ай бұрын
I make them all the time, the key for me is to use the potato peeler so they are extra thin, that way they get crunchy quicker so you dont jave to fry them untill they brow up.
@dj-kq4fz
@dj-kq4fz 3 ай бұрын
Has Alex done fries (chips)? I love his dedication! Fly on, Alex! (just to add, the fact that our favorite foods are sometimes made on, consistently, an industrial scale, gives me great hope for humanity)
@ChrisBrindley-yakker
@ChrisBrindley-yakker 3 ай бұрын
I need you to knokw that I love you and your content slightly more than my misophonia hates you for this video
@wiiza4ever
@wiiza4ever 3 ай бұрын
Try soaking the sliced potato in vinegary water overnight to reduce the browning.
@donniedarko8507
@donniedarko8507 3 ай бұрын
Come to Greece man. You can't imagine how much fantastic is.. you have to come in Greece!
@nickzeggert491
@nickzeggert491 3 ай бұрын
Anecdotally, washing the potatoes helps tremendously - and a touch of white vinegar in the wash helps to remove surface starches (the ones that convert to sugar and brown via maillard). this will help them keep their golden color while being cooked/crisped through.
@firenter
@firenter 3 ай бұрын
Time for a potato chip series!
@ben10pa
@ben10pa 2 ай бұрын
Alex!! would you be interested in making a series about how to make breakfast cereal? nowadays it seems eating cereal is a net bad thing to do to your body, maybe you can teach us how to do a healthy version?
@dimsunn
@dimsunn 3 ай бұрын
I have a feeling this is gonna be a year long series and Alex will graduate will a doctorate at the end
@zevelgamer.
@zevelgamer. 3 ай бұрын
Maybe try to use russet potato or yukon gold potatoes. Maybe this will help you.
@jackikurtz
@jackikurtz 3 ай бұрын
microwave them in a moist environment first then fry work’s amazing figured this out 20 yrs ago as a kid
@bulletkin1899
@bulletkin1899 3 ай бұрын
My Name is Andong has a great turorial on how to make bith kettle and factory style chips. He also has tutorials on things like doctors sausage and coke with a lot of the history behind it aswell.
@vageliskatsoupis5858
@vageliskatsoupis5858 3 ай бұрын
Hi there, I totally recommend Jumbo Country chips with cheese flavor (my personal favorite). You're going to remember it.
@bergermeister477
@bergermeister477 3 ай бұрын
In the US, there is the Utz potato chip factory in Hanover, PA that does factory tours that walks through their steps of manufacturing potato chips. Could be a good starting point to see their process.
@ShiroKage009
@ShiroKage009 3 ай бұрын
"It can't be rocket science." "Says the guy as he tackles some food science."
@ethankegley14
@ethankegley14 3 ай бұрын
i love how youre not even trying to cut the potato thin the first time. you know that's going to be more like lyonaise
@1964_AMU
@1964_AMU 2 ай бұрын
Dry the chips into a towel before frying. Adding some dextrose will make the color more uniform. Use a fruit-dryer when fried for at least 2 hours at 60 degrees Celcius. (I was living close to a factory in Belgium..)
@codyp3824
@codyp3824 3 ай бұрын
@Alex What model fidlock product do you use for this apron? I work in a michelin restaurant and I'm interested in updating our aprons, that clip looks incredible!
@Getpojke
@Getpojke 3 ай бұрын
I remember a friend suggesting using plain/lightly salted crisps as a vehicle for caviar many years ago. I thought he was a bit mad, but wow it was good. Took the caviar snob right out of me. Then a couple of years later I saw Alton Brown doing the same & felt vindicated that it was acceptable. Nice with the game chips/crisps I explained in my previous post on this video.
@HiMyNameIsColdguy
@HiMyNameIsColdguy 3 ай бұрын
Waiting for Alex to take the potato chip tours at Herr's factory in PA...
@urimaxima
@urimaxima 3 ай бұрын
this is the Alex I mess! Dog with a bone Alex!!
@SardiPax
@SardiPax 3 ай бұрын
I believe there are specific varieties of potatoes used in industry that are not readily available on the retail market.
@andyyang4872
@andyyang4872 3 ай бұрын
At last something interesting like the spaghetti series 😂❤😂
@ariellima5929
@ariellima5929 2 ай бұрын
"Salut guys, what's up. i consider myself a french snob." is one of the best opening lines I've seen in a video
@kaleabkiros1297
@kaleabkiros1297 3 ай бұрын
medium high heat, wide pan(so you can fit more every time), small batches at a time(one layer, no overlap of slices or they'll stick, one potato will need 3-4 batches depending on size ) will work just fine i've been making them the past 3 days, works every time
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