Search This Blog

Showing posts with label Grippo's. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Grippo's. Show all posts

Monday, September 6, 2010

Chipping In

Our church had a huge potluck yesterday after services.  We attended the potluck primarily to see a few friends, make an appearance, and drop off the fried sweet potato chips I made that morning for the buffet. I got up super early, thinly sliced 5 pounds of sweet potatoes on the mandoline, and fried them to serve with a spicy scallion ranch dip. We weren't going to eat at the potluck.  What?  Not eat?  It was church food.  Almost all church food is good, but ours was Episcopalian church food.  Episcopalians bring it. The potluck people set up two tables of homemade wonders sectioned off by courses and sides. The side by side tables were supposed to alleviate long lines and congestion, which they did. But, the two tables had very different offerings. We were not fooled. We chose to go straight down the middle in arms reach of both food laden tables.  Problem solved.

Because we had planned to grill out last night, we decided to snack and eat light. 
Yeah, right.  Everything looked too irresistable to not try.  I started with a hot dog, bun to the side. There were several varieties of baked beans, most falling into the baked dry or baked runny categories.  I prefer the dense dry baked type. Didn't matter.  I spooned both types onto my plate. I used the dry candied bacon version as a sponge to absorb the soupy and beefy brown sugar bean stew.  Yep.  Bean Heaven. There was a huge bowl of Quinoa Salad with nuts, raisins, and onions. I love quinoa.  Broccoli casseroles, corn puddings, and cheesy macaroni bowls lined up tightly like an army mess hall cafeteria line.  Each one a bit different from the other, yet all oozing with melted cheese and sporting those wonderful burned crunchy edges.... the casserole G-Spot.  Score.

The most interesting dish, although somewhat lowbrow and skanky, was a baked pineapple, coconut, and cheddar cheese thing.  It looked like potato casserole.  In fact, that's what Michael thought he was eating when he first  bit into it. The look on his face was priceless. I had fair warning.  It was good. Really good. Sweet syrupy canned pineapple with coconut splinters bathed in cheese. Tasty. We analyzed it as if we were judging  the Best Homemade Odd Church Potluck Dish. Would it have been better with fresh pineapple?   Who knows.  I am going to attempt it,  though.

I loaded up on a Salad Caprese layered with really good mozzarella, fresh basil, and deep red sliced tomatoes.  I topped my portion with tiny whole cherry tomatoes tossed in a vinaigrette with julienned basil.  The two  salads combined into a heavenly tomato basil cheese party, tart from the vinaigrette, fresh from the basil, and grounded by the mozzarella. Cracked Pepper?  Next time, maybe.

There was a baked Spinach Manicotti dish that pulled me in with its baked-too-long-but-you-know-you-want-me appearance.  I tossed it over a spoonful of overly buttered wagon wheel pasta.  The dripping butter helped moisten the collapsed spinach ricotta manicotti. It glistened.  Nice combo.

I couldn't pass on the grean beans. They were well represented.  From snappingly crisp and bright green to bacony shiny and long-stewed army green.  I chose both. I adore fresh perfectly cooked pencil thin green beans.  I do.  Really. But, I could bathe in greasy country army green long-cooked ones.  Yup.

As a nod to good health, I slipped a grape onto my plate and didn't eat the hot dog bun.  Well, I didn't eat it with the charred mustard coated hot dog.  I used it to swipe up the plate juices. Oh my, the plate juices.  Think about it.

Needless to say, we didn't grill out last night.

Eventually, we got hungry. We wanted something easy. Something not resembling anything from yesterdays potluck lunch.  Inspired by a gorgeous post on concrete-magnolia.blogspot.com, we decided on BLT's.  Michael makes incredible BLT's.

While he prepared the sandwiches, I made Grippo's Barbecued potato chips to accompany them. It shaped up to be a homemade potato chip kind of day for me.

Not wanting to drag out the mandoline again, I sliced market baby potatoes into very thin slices, fried them in our deep fryer, and doused them with Grippos Gourmet Bar-B-Q Spice.


They were better than Grippo's.  They were fresh, crisp, and light as air. Perfect with BLT's.







Tonight, we are grilling out.



Tuesday, August 10, 2010

Perfect French Fries

The perfect French Fry?  Why yes, even the humble fry can gain lofty status....when prepared correctly with some care. Anyone can slice a potato and throw the pieces in some oil to fry until they're cooked and browned.  Double frying is the key to perfectly golden fires with a crunchy exterior and creamy interior.

We were having cheeseburgers for dinner last night.  Very standard.  Ground chuck, melted American cheese, shredded lettuce, dill pickle relish, tomato, sliced purple onion, mayonnaise, mustard, salt, and pepper.  We both wanted really good french fries to go with our basic cheeseburgers.

Perfect Fries.
Easy.  

There are two trains of thought.  To soak the sliced potatoes or not? I don't soak.  Too messy and time consuming.  Peeling is optional.  I don't peel.

After slicing one large russet potato into uniform slices, I set the deep fryer on a low temperature of 275 to fry-blanche the fries for 7 minutes. the lower temperature cooked the potatoes through without browning them.  I fried  them in several batches, draining them on paper towels until they were all cooked.

After turning the fryer up to a temperature of 350, I re-fried the potatoes until golden and crispy.  I like a snappy crunchy french fry, so I cooked mine a bit longer the second time than traditionally recommended.  After coming out of the hot oil, I salted them generously.  To take them up one more notch, I showered them with Grippo's BAR-B-Q Seasoning.  Uh huh. My favorite barbecued potato chips morphed into  french fries.  Go figure.

The result was  golden crisp french fries with  soft creamy interiors that tasted like Grippo's Barbecued Potato Chips.( seasoning, optional) Perfect.

It's not rocket science.  It's not even hard.  But, the extra effort and care is worth it.  If no deep fryer is available, use a heavy dutch oven and a thermometer to gage the heat of the oil. Double frying with different tempertatures is key.  Low and slow before fast and furious. 

That's the ticket to perfect fries.