Spuds in the Oven: 7 Easy Ways to Make Homemade Potato Chips
1 / 7
-
Photo by: Julie Van Rosendaal
Thick-cut Homemade Chips These awesome thick cut potato chips are such a crowd pleaser. Flavor them up with herbs and salt and serve a thick, creamy dip on the side! Ingredients 3 medium russet or Yukon gold potatoes, unpeeled OR 1 sweet potato, unpeeled 1-2 Tbsp. canola oil 1 garlic clove, crushed, or 1/4 tsp. garlic powder (optional) coarse sea salt Preheat oven to 450˚F.
Scrub potato and slice lengthwise or width-wise into very thin, uniform slices. A mandolin does the best job.
Brush two heavy baking sheets with about 1/2 tbsp. of oil and place in the oven to heat for about 10 minutes.
Remove the baking sheets from the oven and arrange potato slices on sheets in a single layer. Bake until potatoes are golden on the bottom side, about 20 minutes. Turn them over and bake until they are golden brown all over (15-20 minutes more). Transfer to paper towels to cool. Sprinkle with coarse salt and serve.
I am a huge fan of potato chips. In fact, so much so that I don't buy them that often because if they are in the house I will eat the whole bag at once. Instead, I keep a few potatoes around so I can make a batch of my own potato chips now and then for a treat. I feel better about eating them homemade and I think it is more fun to do. Luckily, there are a lot of easy ways to make potato chips at home. You'll be surprised at how easy they are! - By Kelsey Banfield
Gregg Doyel flashed a heart sign at Caitlin Clark at her introductory press conference on Wednesday afternoon to kick off an incredibly strange back-and-forth.
Jake Mintz & Jordan Shusterman give their early season assessment of all thirty MLB teams at the three week mark, as well as discuss the long-awaited debut of Texas Rangers pitcher Jack Leiter.
This week Boston Dynamics retired its well-known Atlas robot that was powered by hydraulics. Then today it unveiled its new Atlas robot, which is powered by electricity. The change might not seem like much, but TechCrunch's Brian Heater told the TechCrunch Minute that the now-deprecated hydraulics system was out of date.