Frugal, homemade, and healthy potato chips and veggie chips
Homemade healthy potato chips are easier than you think. Try it with different veggies and control the amount of oil and GMOs in your diet. Learn how to make this favourite snack food here.
Today I am celebrating. Iโve been married to my best friend for 30 years today. Yep, heโs frustrating sometimes, but so am I. And I wouldnโt trade a minute of our shared heartaches, sorrows, and joys to be with anyone else. Weโre Lifers. Sunday was Fathersโ Day and I made this special treat just for him. And he said they were the best potato chips heโd ever tasted.
So, today, Iโm taking a break from my series Angora 101, to bring you this special recipe โ in honour of 30 years of marriage to my best friend.
Do you find that you can maintain the frugal, healthy, homestead budget for a while and then a long weekend, birthday, or other special occasion comes around and you buy junk-food snacks to help celebrate or to supplement your homemade treats? June is a month that I tend to do that. The lambing is finished (Weโre still tired) and the garden is still a major time and energy drain, as we weed, plant, and transplant โ hoping for warmer weather, that we are certain must be just around the corner. On top of that Fatherโs Day, my middle sonโs birthday, and our anniversary fall back to back, one week out of the month. Who can bake a cake three days in a row? Who needs to eat cake 3 days in a row? Well, maybe my husbandโฆ
Now, most of the junk food contains genetically modified ingredients, that we are trying to avoid. Even from the organic/natural food aisles, there are potato chips deep fried in canola or soy oil. I would just quit buying potato chips, but then one family member or another would sneak a bag into the cart at Overwaitea (grocery store). And a small bag of chips is $5 around here. Time to find a way to do this at home.
By making my own potato or veggie chips, I make sure there are no GM ingredients. I can avoid rancid oils or oils that form carcinogens when heated, like all liquid oils. They arenโt as time-consuming or as difficult as I thought theyโd be โ 30 minutes from start to finish for what a 300-gram bag of chips is. And you can do it without any specialized equipment โ youโll just need a grater or veggie peeler, a colander or strainer, and a frying pan. You can get fancy and use a mandoline. I have one on my wish list at Amazon, right now.
Bron Original Stainless Steel Mandolin Slicer
It will make bigger, rounder potato chips, but you donโt need one.
Recipe for Healthy potato chips
3 medium potatoes make as many potato chips as one of those small bags of chips (250 to 300-gram size).
Scrub but donโt peel 3 potatoes
Using the long side of a grater or a vegetable peeler, slice thin slices off the long side of all 3 potatoes. If you have thicker bits that wonโt easily slice, set them aside and donโt use them.
Soak your potatoes in a 2-quart glass bowl of cold water. This removes the starch from the potatoes. I did this while I was slicing the remaining potatoes. With older potatoes, you may need to soak them for 30 minutes. Drain in a colander and rinse under cold water until the water runs clear.
Rinse your potato slices until no starch remains and then drain well to get rid of excess water.
Drain for 5 minutes to remove excess water. In the meantime in a small 8-inch frying pan, heat 3 cups of coconut oil โ this makes about an inch and a half of oil in the bottom of the pan. I use expeller expressed coconut oil from Tropical Traditions.
Coconut Oil, Organic, Expeller-Pressed โ 1 quart
It doesnโt have the coconut flavour and is nonvolatile at high temperatures. Be careful not to burn the oil. I put it at medium heat until it is heated through and then reduce the stove temperature slightly. Donโt let the oil smoke. The oil is ready when you splash a few droplets of water into the oil and it sizzles. If it boils up like lava, your oil is too hot, reduce the heat. If it doesnโt fizzle, you need to wait longer.
In the meantime, get a plate or basket and line with a cloth and overlay that with paper towels to absorb the excess oil, from the finished chips.
Divide your sliced potatoes into 4 even portions. When the oil is hot, add 1/4 of your sliced potatoes using a slotted steel spoon. I use the one I use for stir-frying and cheese making. Stir slightly to make sure none of the potato pieces are sticking to the bottom of the pan. After 3 minutes, turn the chips over. Continue cooking until the chips are golden brown. Remove from oil, using a slotted spoon and drain on the prepared plate or basket. Shake gently to remove excess oil.
Repeat with remaining portions of potato slices. Be careful not to over brown them and donโt let your oil smoke. If it starts to smoke, turn down your heat source, it should never smoke. Remember that oil can ignite if it gets hot enough. Donโt leave the stove unattended.
Salt with Celtic or Himalayan sea salt and serve while still warm.
Variation โ healthy veggie chips
We also tried this recipe with carrot chips. I peeled large, organic juicing carrots, and then sliced the carrot thinly along its length, using a vegetable peeler. You need some wrist strength to do this. Carrots were rinsed and allowed to drain for a few minutes. Then cooked the same way as the potatoes. They were done when the carrots turned golden brown and the cooking oil turned butter yellow. These were the best! The sugars in the carrots caramelized and gave them a yummy, sweet taste.
Try this with yams, sweet potatoes, winter squash, carrots, beets, and rutabagas, or any dense vegetable, that isnโt mostly water. Watery vegetables like zucchini should be battered and breaded before deep frying. Itโs another way to use your own homestead raised produce. I canโt wait to try this with our Russian Blue potatoes this summer. Yummy! I must find a way to make these salt and vinegar flavoured, Sarahโs favourite.
To clean up:
Allow the oil to cool and strain it into a wide mouth one-quart canning jar to use again. It can be reused indefinitely. It wonโt go rancid, provided it is kept capped to keep out insects.
If you donโt have coconut oil, organic lard or palm oil will also work. Different oils will give your chips a different texture because they fry at different temperatures. Avoid burning the oil.
Thatโs all there is to a healthier and more frugal alternative to store-bought potato chips and other junk food snacks. Give it a try and youโll find lots of ways to make your snacks healthier and fresher, with these easy techniques.
PrintHomemade and Healthy Potato and Veggie Chips
- Prep Time: 20
- Cook Time: 10
- Total Time: 30 minutes
Description
These homemade potato or vegetables chips are a healthy alternative to the store-bought version. Youโll save money too!
Ingredients
- 3 large potatoes, scrubbed and unpeeled
- coconut oil
Instructions
- Using the long side of a vegetable peeler slice thin chip-like pieces off the long side of all 3 potatoes.
- Soak your potatoes in a 2-quart glass bowl of cold water to remove the starch.
- Drain in a colander and rinse under cold water for 5 minutes until the water runs clear.
- Get a plate or basket and line it with a cloth and overlay that with paper towels to absorb oil from the finished chips.
- Divide your sliced potatoes into 4 even portions.
- In a small 8-inch frying pan, heat 3 cups of coconut oil under medium heat โ this makes about an inch and a half of oil in the bottom of the pan. Be careful not to burn the oil or let it smoke.
- When the oil is hot, add 1/4 of your sliced potatoes using a slotted steel spoon.
- Stir slightly to make sure none of the potato pieces are sticking to the bottom of the pan. After 3 minutes, turn chips over.
- Continue cooking till chips are golden brown. Remove from oil, using a slotted spoon and drain on prepared plate or basket. Shake gently to remove excess oil.
- Repeat with remaining portions of potato slices. Be careful not to over brown them and donโt let your oil smoke. If it starts to smoke, turn down your heat source, it should never smoke.
- Salt with Celtic or Himalayan sea salt and serve while still warm.
Notes
The oil is ready when you splash a few droplets of water into the oil and it sizzles. If it boils up like lava, your oil is too hot, reduce the heat. If it doesnโt fizzle, you need to wait longer. Remember that oil can ignite if it gets hot enough. Donโt leave the stove unattended.
Oh, thanks so much, Darlene. Iโll have to try that. โบ
The way to make them taste like salt and vinegar is to let the raw potatoes soak in vinegar for a few minutes. You can also make your regular potatoes have a vinegary taste by adding some vinegar (or use all vinegar) to cook them. hth
Thank you, Beth.
Nice post! Congratulations on your anniversary. Wishing you many more happy years to come. ๐