sourceninja
Diamond Member
- Mar 8, 2005
- 8,805
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I myself have been looking for a good fryer. I have an electric stove so I've been worried about controlling the temp with a dutch oven. Thoughts?
These type of countertop fryers are used by restaurants all over the country. If there was a significant problem they would not be certified and aside from that, word would quickly spread amongst owners of any problems. I've used them over the years without issue. Now, if there's lighting or other demands on that circuit, you would probably blow the breaker.
That's incorrect. There are a number of commercial units that use 120 volt 15 amp service. Here's one http://www.foodservicewarehouse.com/waring/wdf75rc/p4607.aspx
And, (Magnus can correct me if I'm wrong), the higher the oil temperature, the less oil is absorbed by the food. Frying in a lower temperature leads to soggier, more oil saturated food. Putting in a lot of fries, allowing the temperature to drop to 300, then slowly recover = greasier french fries.
Fries absorb oil two ways. As the potatoes cook, they lose moisture near their surface, which is replaced by oil. Then, as they cool after being removed from the hot grease, oil from their exterior gets pulled in. Because our cold-start method cooks the fries more gently, less moisture is lost (but enough so the fries stay crisp) and less oil is absorbed during frying. Plus, this approach exposes the spuds to just one cool-down, versus the two cooling-off periods of the classic method, so less oil gets absorbed after cooking as well.
