Tips on Deep Frying
- Choose the quality and the shape of cut carefully
- Cut vegetables into shapes and sizes that will suit your final presentation; using the natural shape of the vegetable as much as possible is best, and or using exaggerated oblique cuts (long and 45° angled) gives the best results
- Deep frying battered vegetables is traditionally a Japanese techniques (tempura), the vegetables are cooked from raw so that they retain a natural crispness, as such the way they are cut and their thickness needs to be carefully considered
- Marinating vegetables prior to deep frying will ensure an added depth to its final flavour (not recommended if a flavoured / spiced batter is used)
- The blanching and refreshing of tubers like potatoes / kumara (in well salted water) prior to deep frying will encourage a definitive crispness to the final product
- Ensure all foods are as dry as possible prior to cooking to avoid 'spitting' of oil and to prevent the oil from degrading too quickly
- Prior to battering all foods must be floured first to ensure the batter clings to the food (cornflour is an excellent flour for this and adds a crispness)
- Always ensure the fat is as clean and fresh as possible to avoid taste contamination
- Battered foods are never cooked in a basket, as the foods will sink to the bottom of the basket and the liquid batter will wrap itself around the holes in the basket, cook and therefore 'stick' to the basket
- Battered foods should be placed directly into the friture and removed with a spider
- Panéed foods may successfully be cooked in a basket
- Never over fill a basket, better to cook small amounts more often, overloading the basket will encourage the foods to stick together
- When placing foods into the friture:
ALWAYS place foods into the friture in a safe manner
ALWAYS place foods into the friture in an away motion from the body to avoid any splashes
NEVER drop it from a height - Remove foods to a drainage tray (tray with paper towels) and place in a warmed oven (at 75°C for a maximum of 5 minutes)
- All foods must be piping hot when served (if you can handle them without tongs, they are not hot enough!) and the coating still crisp
No comments:
Post a Comment