Fry

Duck Fat French Fries with a Trio of Aiolis

by:
May 21, 2011
4
2 Ratings
  • Serves 4 as a starter
Author Notes

When I first saw this challenge I immediately thought of a great restaurant in Baltimore, MD called Salt Tavern. They serve this sinfully delicious appetizer - duck fat french fries with three aiolis for dipping: chipotle, malt vinegar, and black truffle. I immediately knew I would have to try my hand at reproducing this dish at home.

The duck fat fries recipe comes from a conglomeration of sources online and basically uses the two part cooking technique that produces the most crisp french fries, whether or not you are using duck fat. If you can't find duck fat locally, you can purchase it online at D'artagnan.

The aioli recipe uses a modified base provided in Food52's aioli primer and adds the three flavors that Salt Tavern serves. This method works really well because you can create one basic aioli and add a few ingredients to make three separate dipping sauces! - meganvt01 —meganvt01

Test Kitchen Notes

I love the double fry technique and being fried in rich, luscious duck fat certainly doesn't hurt. The sprinkling of parsley and garlic was a nice touch. The recipe gives you three dipping sauces for the price of one. The aioli came together beautifully and each of the three flavors are wonderful in their own way. I'll have to admit I am always partial to the combination of fries and malt vinegar and loved using aioli as the vehicle for the sour-salty combination. You may want to add the truffle oil to suit your tastes (without overwhelming your guests, of course.) - biffbourgeois —Stephanie Bourgeois

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Ingredients
  • Duck Fat French Fries
  • 4 large russet potatoes, peeled
  • 12 ounces duck fat
  • 1 tablespoon parsley, minced
  • 1 clove of garlic, finely minced
  • salt and pepper
  • Aiolis
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 2 cloves of garlic
  • 2 egg yolks
  • 1 tablespoon lemon juice
  • 1 cup canola oil
  • 1/4 cup olive oil
  • 2 tablespoons malt vinegar
  • 1 teaspoon minced chipotles and adobo sauce
  • 1 tablespoon black truffle oil
Directions
  1. Duck Fat French Fries
  2. After your potatoes are cooled, cut them into fries - I like thick steak fries so you have lots of crispy exterior. Place the fries into a bowl of cool water for 5 minutes to remove some of the starch.
  3. Take the fries from the water and blot them dry really well. Let the fries sit on a dry paper towels while you heat the fat.
  4. Heat the duck fat in a large saucepan over medium high heat until the temperature reaches 330 degrees. Place the fries, one by one, into the oil. Maintain the heat and cook for 6 minutes until golden brown.
  5. Remove the fries from the fat and allow them to rest for 10 minutes while you raise the heat of the fat to 360. Place the fries into the duck fat and cook for another 1 to 2 minutes or until the fries are crispy and dark golden brown.
  6. Immediately after removing the fries, season liberally with salt and pepper and sprinkle over the garlic and parsley.
  1. Aiolis
  2. Using a mortar and pestle, grind the salt into the garlic cloves until the garlic is finely mashed and the salt is combined.
  3. Place the garlic and salt into a medium bowl and whisk in egg yolks and lemon juice. Slowly add the canola oil, a few drops at a time until the mixture starts to hold together. Then drizzle in the remaining canola oil whisking constantly.
  4. Add the olive oil using the same slow drizzle and constant whisking method. Just a word of caution - after making a few batches I realized that how big the egg yolks are makes a difference in the volume of oil you can incorporate and reach a particular consistency. Here, just use your best cook judgement and stop when you get to a good thick mayo-like consistency.
  5. After the aioli base is together, separate the base into three separate small bowls. In one bowl, whisk in the chipotle. In the other bowl, whisk in the malt vinegar. In the final bowl, slowly whisk in the black truffle oil. Taste each for seasoning.

See what other Food52ers are saying.

Recipe by: meganvt01

Attorney

19 Reviews

Yale June 17, 2015
I live a block from Salt Tavern and this is ALWAYS the first snack I order. Great with a cold glass of Crispin Cider! And yes, the Black Truffle aioli at the restaurant is my absolute favorite. I always ask for more in a small ramekin!
bellly November 18, 2013
these were so good.
Tamara M. February 24, 2013
What am I missing? The recipe starts with, "After your potatoes are cooled..". My question: when were they cooked?
meganvt01 February 24, 2013
Should be "peeled"
mrslarkin May 24, 2011
oh. my. goodness. lookin good!
Midge May 23, 2011
positively yum!
meganvt01 May 23, 2011
Thanks Midge!
gingerroot May 23, 2011
Yum! These sound dangerously good...
meganvt01 May 23, 2011
Dangerously good is the perfect description!
aargersi May 22, 2011
Nicely done! Your aioli sounds terrific. And the duck fat - well that makes life better doesn't it?
meganvt01 May 22, 2011
It really makes a difference - you could use peanut oil and make good fries, but the duck fat makes them very special.
inpatskitchen May 22, 2011
Yum Yum!!
meganvt01 May 22, 2011
Thanks!
lorigoldsby May 22, 2011
This is a great use of the black truffle oil. It makes my favorite aoili for pommes frites.
meganvt01 May 22, 2011
The black truffle is my favorite. At the restaurant that inspired this, they use actual bits of truffle shavings but that was a little too rich for my budget!
Kayb May 21, 2011
Oh, dear sweet Lord. Just feed me this, and kill me now. I cannot imagine how wonderful it is with a cold draft Yuengling.....
meganvt01 May 22, 2011
I think that would be a perfect addition! It works great as a starter, side, or just an afternoon beer snack.
Sagegreen May 21, 2011
I love french fries with aioli....and add the duck fat...oh my, this is wonderful!
meganvt01 May 21, 2011
Thank you so much!