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Does anyone still use a deep fat fryer?

(74 Posts)
soontobe Mon 24-Nov-14 17:41:15

I stopped using ours as I was fed up of it being messy.
But I miss homemade chips.

Is there a make that is worth buying?

jinglbellsfrocks Mon 24-Nov-14 18:40:07

Don't do it! Lakeland should be ashamed of themselves.

jinglbellsfrocks Mon 24-Nov-14 18:41:11

DH gives ours a periodic clean. In the shed.

tanith Mon 24-Nov-14 18:45:45

It does have a lid but it tells you not to use it while frying.. I don't empty the oil every time either just let it go cold put the lid on and store in the cupboard.. change the oil after half a dozen uses.. don't those McCain chips work out really expensive using 2 packets each?

janeainsworth Mon 24-Nov-14 18:57:53

It makes less mess than frying bacon in an open pan, Soontobe.
But you'd better hurry up and get one before the Health and Safety experts get them bannedwink

janeainsworth Mon 24-Nov-14 19:04:53

Don't worry Jingl
Quote: "Chip/fat pan fires have fallen by over three quarters in ten years to 2,600."

from the Government Statistics, p 28 https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/36467/FSGB_2011_to_12.pdf

Ariadne Mon 24-Nov-14 19:21:38

How do you afford the calories to be able to eat chips cooked at home?? I had a clip pan back in the 60s when I was first married, and can remember the all pervasive smell ( which is another factor!)

I fry nothing, apart from am omelette occasionally - I honestly don't think it is a healthy cooking process.

And I leave chips for an occasional treat when we are out.

But I do bake.....(give most of it away...) you can't win, really. "it's immoral, it's illegal or it makes you fat".

Liz46 Mon 24-Nov-14 19:28:15

We use an actifry. They are quite expensive to buy but we have used ours a lot. We just use a small amount of olive oil or rapeseed oil so the chips are not too unhealthy. King Edwards or Maris Piper make lovely chips.

suzied Mon 24-Nov-14 19:32:54

Are they the ones that only use a teaspoon if oil? Not sure how they work. I threw my deep fat frier out when I had 4 teenagers and I used to come home from work with the kitchen almost ablaze on a couple of occasions.

jinglbellsfrocks Mon 24-Nov-14 19:33:13

Yeah Janea. That will be because most people have the thermostatically controlled ones these days. (I'm not wading through all that)

Ariadne our old expellaire fan does a good job. And then there's the kitchen door. grin

jinglbellsfrocks Mon 24-Nov-14 19:34:25

Don't the Actifry take about 45 minutes to cook the chips?

shysal Mon 24-Nov-14 19:35:43

www.bbc.co.uk/food/recipes/tuscan_fries_61356
I don't have a fryer, just use a saucepan on the very rare occasion, as I also hate the smell in the house.
Last week I had a go at this Nigella recipe, supposed to be better than Heston's thrice cooked chips. The fries start in cold oil and are cooked on the hob. They were nice and crisp, but hardly worth the time spent watching the pan!

Liz46 Mon 24-Nov-14 20:14:20

Yes Suzied. It is a bit more than a teaspoon of oil but still very much healthier than using a chip pan. The chips are very good. I would never eat frozen chips again.

We used it this evening and had some prize winning sausages from a local butcher. Lovely!

soontobe Mon 24-Nov-14 20:48:15

Do the chips still taste like chips in an actifry?
My knowledge of domestic science is weak, but I would have thought that part of what turns the potatoes in the chips is quite a lot of oil.

soontobe Mon 24-Nov-14 20:49:30

into chips not in the chips

soontobe Mon 24-Nov-14 20:51:43

Thanks for all the posts.
I plan now to get a new fryer. I will take a bit of time looking into all the different sorts recommended on here.

numberplease Tue 25-Nov-14 00:27:38

I`ve never had a deep fat fryer, just a humble chip pan. One of the reasons is that we don`t like the taste of food cooked in oil, we prefer our chips and other stuff fried in beef dripping, but hate the mess at cleaning out and changing time.

Liz46 Tue 25-Nov-14 07:52:32

soontobe, yes. they are very good. We use slightly more oil than the amount in the measure but the results are excellent. It wouldn't make enough chips for a large family but there are enough for us and our two small GC.

Liz46 Tue 25-Nov-14 07:55:59

We looked after two children for a couple of days and when their mother collected them the first thing they said to her was that I had made chips 'out of potatoes'. I hadn't realised that they were so amazed that chips could be made that way. They must be used to them coming out of a plastic bag from the freezer.

hildajenniJ Tue 25-Nov-14 08:00:26

I never use a deep fat fryer. I like homemade chips, but I do them in the oven. I had one when the children were small, but hated cleaning the thing.

Grannyknot Tue 25-Nov-14 08:28:36

I mostly do wedges in the oven, cut from our home grown potatoes.

Microwave chips are sacrilegious! Yuk. If I feel lazy, I go down or send someone to the fabulous chippy near my house to buy a large pack of hand cut chips.

vegasmags Tue 25-Nov-14 09:45:24

I still have my trusty old chip pan - how can you be a proper Northern mum without one? I only use it when the DC come home, but what a treat those chips are. My foodie DD claims that my chips are better than Heston's, but you always think your mum's cooking is best, don't you grin

janeainsworth Tue 25-Nov-14 10:01:14

Spot on Vegasmags grin

I do wedges in the oven sometimes too, but they're nothing like proper chips done in my chip pan.
I don't think proper chips absorb a lot of fat anyway, because they're cooked quickly.

KatyK Tue 25-Nov-14 12:36:54

I haven't used a deep fat fryer/chip pan since I accidentally left it on the head and burned the kitchen down blush It's oven chips for us since then, not so tasty but safer! My DD uses an air fryer, she likes it.

KatyK Tue 25-Nov-14 12:37:21

obviously not on the head on the heat !!!! grin

soontobe Tue 25-Nov-14 12:46:16

KatyK shock
I am lost for words.