Game chips

Grouse served with kale and game chips

Category:Use dmy dates from April 2022 Category:Use British English from February 2021Category:All Wikipedia articles written in British English

Game chips are a traditional British accompaniment to roast gamebirds, such as pheasant, grouse, partridge and quail. They are thin slices of potato (sometimes dusted with flour; often crinkle-cut), deep-fried, and may be served hot or cold.[1][2][3][4] They are different from chips (American English: French fries), which are square-cut, deep-fried, and generally eaten hot; from crisps (American English: potato chips), which are thin (often very thin) slices either deep-fried or baked, and eaten cold; and from sauté potatoes, which are medium-thick slices, shallow-fried, and eaten hot. They date back to at least 1903, when a recipe was published by Escoffier.[5][6]

See also

References

Category:Fried potato Category:British cuisine


Category:All Wikipedia articles written in British English Category:All articles with dead external links Category:All stub articles Category:Articles with dead external links from October 2024 Category:Articles with permanently dead external links Category:Articles with short description Category:British cuisine Category:British cuisine stubs Category:CS1 French-language sources (fr) Category:Fried potato Category:Short description matches Wikidata Category:Use British English from February 2021 Category:Use dmy dates from April 2022