Re: Mini-deep fryers???




"OmManiPadmeOmelet" <Omelet@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:Omelet-13A0C8.08553314122005@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> Is there such a thing?
> Looking for something plug-in and electric that takes a minimal amount
> of oil......
>
> I've heard of "Fry-babies", are they any good?

depends on what you are cooking in them. (And the size question pales when
compared to finding "the right" batter-oil-temp-technique.)

The Fry-babies are small, so it's tough to do enough chicken for a family,
or more than a few doughnuts or a turkey, but they are pretty good for doing
the christmas cookies and a serving or two of fries or onion rings. They are
quick to heat and easy to handle, and are good onesy-twosy cookers.

Even though they have a small amount of oil, some have such a big heater in
relation to the amount of oil they hold, that their oil temperature can
catch up faster than the oil catches up in a big unit.
IMHO oil temp vs size is a red herring anyway, because cooks add more food
to the big ones, thus dropping the big one's temperature just as much, e.g.,
one pound dropped in one quart is the same as two pounds dropped in two
quarts, etc., if you get the drift.

It was my experience that the "small ones" come in three basic sizes - the
old fry-whatever size, the smaller fry baby, and the bigger fry daddy. I
have had the old one for years and we got the slightly larger "fry daddy" as
a second one for a couple of jobs that were taking too long with the old
one. Turns out there really isn't that much difference for what we were
cooking.
However, for us, having two small ones ended up being a better move than
getting one larger one, since we can run two units at once and keep the
apple fritters from tasting like onion rings.

-----------

We have four "deepfryers", depending on what and how much is being cooked. I
have a deep frying pan, an old "small"fryer, a fry daddy, and a turkey
cooker. All but the big one are used under the vent-hood.

For doughnuts, and chicken and enough french fries for a family, I use my
deep iron frying pan. It has a lot of surface area to hold a lot of thin
flat foods. Downside is that you have to watch the temp and have a cover
real close, since the oil mist over flame can flare up. I rarely use this
one.

We will use the old small electric the most, for small batches, and add
the fry daddy as a second cooker if the food load-vs-serving time warrants.
Having two has worked well, since in practice deep fried things don't all
get done at the same time anyway.

For heavy duty frying, I have a 70,000 BTU LP party-size "turkey cooker":
turkey cooker/corn-boiler/
party-pasta-maker/smoker/scout-outing-hot-water-heater-and-mitten-dryer/chee
se-curds-and-fries-for-parties-maker/ore smelter, used outside. Apparently
you can get attachments, like a walleye cooker that looks like a shallow
wok, for frying and holding larger batches of fried food.

hope it helps....

>
> TIA!!!
> --
> Om.
>
> "My mother never saw the irony in calling me a son-of-a-bitch." -Jack
Nicholson


.



Relevant Pages

  • Re: Raw or cooked, which is more nutritious
    ... > that cooking destroys nutritional elements and food is best eaten raw, ... > presence of a small amount of oil or butter increases the amount of ... "Cooking carrots in the presence of a small amount of oil or butter ...
    (sci.med.nutrition)
  • Re: Sunday Times Scans reveal brain damage from cannabis.
    ... that the government spend less on everything except business. ... food manufacturers. ... turning part of the Dutch countryside into a runway. ... the oil subsidy ?was mysteriously inserted in the final energy ...
    (uk.politics.drugs)
  • Re: The new survivalism: hoarding food
    ... with thousands of other people needing food and propane and everything ... preparedness experts said: ... said he was moved by economic uncertainties and high energy prices, ... in oil production, and that coming supply shortages might threaten ...
    (sci.military.naval)
  • Re: Spicy Food and Upset Stomach
    ... Yes, you are correct, in that if you classify lard as a "saturated ... is why I specifically said coconut oil. ... tests for the anitoxidant potentials of various herbs and spices. ... Food Chem Toxicol. ...
    (sci.med.nutrition)
  • Re: news flash, another corrupt "scientist"
    ... > replacement of healthy traditional saturated fats with partially ... > hydrogenated soybean oil, and the victim is the unsuspecting public, ... > first national campaign to pressure fast-food restaurants and food ... > worse after hydrogenation." ...
    (sci.med.nutrition)