• Mamertine@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      I’m not familiar with in n out. Most chain burger places cost their fries in chemicals to make them crunchy longer. A natural cut fry becomes unappetizing like 10 minutes after it’s out if the fryer.

      There are trade offs with each way.

      One is “cleaner” or maybe purer One has a better customer experience

      • gamermanh@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        5 months ago

        In-n-Out has famously “bad” fries for 2 reasons:

        • they single fry, not double fry. This is the classic way fries are fried and actually the big innovation that made McDonalds fries so famously good. Double frying results in a crispier and better tasting fry at the cost it being worse for you. Also let’s them transport them easier en masse

        • they go light as fuck on the salt (some locations I’ve been to didn’t salt at ALL though that may have been a mistake during a rush), to the point they provide salt packets to salt your own fries, which many people don’t do.

        I think they might also fry theirs in peanut oil like 5GBAF do, but I’m uncertain on that front.

        Personally I think their fries are some of the better ones but you gotta salt em

        • shalafi@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          double fry

          I worked McDonald’s when I was 16 (37-years ago 😢) and we didn’t do that.

          Worked a famous bar-and-grill in college and they taught us that, but we called it “blanching”. You could damn near serve hour-old fries, still crispy.

          Is blanching the wrong term?

      • ikidd@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        They soak them in sugar water to keep them crunchy when deepfried It’s an old practice.