Making a chip butty from scratch
Making a chip butty from scratch
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Discussion

Gandahar

Original Poster:

9,600 posts

154 months

Friday 25th August 2017
quotequote all
Ingredients

Some left over spuds lying around
A bag of Tesco's extra strong bread flour ....rather top notch stuff
2 sachets of their yeast.
salt
sugar
water in the ratio of 5:7... warmer than room temp but not too hot.

And then, boiling the potatoes



rising the dough



the raw ingredients



bread cooked



Potatoes in the deep fat fryer




The finished result, home made bap with home made chips



Edited by Gandahar on Friday 25th August 02:58

Sheetmaself

6,089 posts

224 months

Friday 25th August 2017
quotequote all
What a crazy amount of work for something so simple!

Bet it tasted awesome though good work that man.

seyre1972

3,042 posts

169 months

Friday 25th August 2017
quotequote all
Looks fantastic - and probably inspiration for my dinner ...

Got to ask - did you butter the breadcake as well ?

Where I grew up - (80's). Local chippy did the best open chip butty - I say open as there were so many chips you had to eat 2/3 of them before you could half close the breadcake to eat as a butty

Sheets Tabuer

21,137 posts

241 months

Friday 25th August 2017
quotequote all
seyre1972 said:
breadcake
You mean roll

JimmyConwayNW

3,551 posts

151 months

Friday 25th August 2017
quotequote all
Sheets Tabuer said:
You mean roll
You both mean Chip Bap.

Roy Lime

594 posts

158 months

Friday 25th August 2017
quotequote all
JimmyConwayNW said:
Sheets Tabuer said:
You mean roll
You both mean Chip Bap.
All three of you mean chip barm.

21TonyK

13,122 posts

235 months

Friday 25th August 2017
quotequote all
Nice baps.

seyre1972

3,042 posts

169 months

Friday 25th August 2017
quotequote all
Roy Lime said:
JimmyConwayNW said:
Sheets Tabuer said:
You mean roll
You both mean Chip Bap.
All three of you mean chip barm.
I'll translate for the Southerners:

Barm = Barm cake - Manchester side of the Pennines
Bap/Breadcake/Oven Bottom/Scuffler = Gods own County/Yorkshire side of the Pennines
Roll = Southern type of crusty bread - which shatters into razor sharp/gum slicing shards

Order of preference would be:

1. Chip Bap/Breadcake/Oven Bottom/scuffler
2. Chip Barm
3. Chip Roll

Eddie Strohacker

3,879 posts

112 months

Friday 25th August 2017
quotequote all
I'm always amused by the reference to God's own country trotted out by all Yorkshirerers at every opportunity, as it invariably omits any mention of Goole, Wakefield, Huddersfield, Bradford...

Anyhow, lovely bit of dinner, I'll refine the recipe thus:

1) Buy chips - £1
2) Buy rolls £80p
3) Eat.

awlp16

137 posts

118 months

Friday 25th August 2017
quotequote all
Them chips look proper, like my gran used to make!

Oh, and Barm...

Lee_sec

370 posts

224 months

Friday 25th August 2017
quotequote all
Looks great but where is the onion vinegar!

seyre1972

3,042 posts

169 months

Friday 25th August 2017
quotequote all
Eddie Strohacker said:
I'm always amused by the reference to God's own country trotted out by all Yorkshirerers at every opportunity, as it invariably omits any mention of Goole, Wakefield, Huddersfield, Bradford...

Anyhow, lovely bit of dinner, I'll refine the recipe thus:

1) Buy chips - £1
2) Buy rolls £80p
3) Eat.
Eddie - everywhere has it's good/bad parts - as Leeds born, but grew up living outside Wakefield .... again some good/bad parts of it. But do see the funy side of it (and the Gods own County is tongue in cheek) smile

I've now lived in/around London for longer than I ever did up North - but oddly still call it home (even though realistically home is now where my own family are (Greater London))

Dan_1981

18,031 posts

225 months

Friday 25th August 2017
quotequote all
Ooooh yummy chip cob.

wink

Eddie Strohacker

3,879 posts

112 months

Friday 25th August 2017
quotequote all
seyre1972 said:
Eddie - everywhere has it's good/bad parts - as Leeds born, but grew up living outside Wakefield .... again some good/bad parts of it. But do see the funy side of it (and the Gods own County is tongue in cheek) smile

I've now lived in/around London for longer than I ever did up North - but oddly still call it home (even though realistically home is now where my own family are (Greater London))
wink My best mate is from Morley & I like to wind him up about GOC whenever I can!

Roy Lime

594 posts

158 months

Friday 25th August 2017
quotequote all
Eddie Strohacker said:
wink My best mate is from Morley & I like to wind him up about GOC whenever I can!
Craig David?

JakeT

5,987 posts

146 months

Friday 25th August 2017
quotequote all
Dan_1981 said:
Ooooh yummy chip cob.

wink
I am glad I am not the only one calling that.

FiF

48,281 posts

277 months

Friday 25th August 2017
quotequote all
I'll ignore the deprecating comment about Huddersfield, relatives from down south used to visit, look at all the green fields surrounding us, the blue bell woods, the open views over Castle Hill, herds of wildebeest sweeping majestically... ok went a bit Basil Fawlty there, the dairy herd errrr standing in a field (copyright Ewan from Vicar of Dibley), and say something a bit daft like " where are all the slag heaps?" Of course they were used to that picture book idyllic hamlet known as Gosport. rolleyes

Any road up, back on topic, as an amateur bread baker, breadcakes of a variable size there. /Paul Hollywood.
Chips, good effort.

And to put it into accurate Huddersfield lingo, it's plain tea cakes, not bread cakes, that's South Yorkshire speak, in t'West Riding they're plain white tea cakes, from the Scandinavian tekakor. Sithee.


Eddie Strohacker

3,879 posts

112 months

Friday 25th August 2017
quotequote all
FiF said:
I'll ignore the deprecating comment about Huddersfield, relatives from down south used to visit, look at all the green fields surrounding us, the blue bell woods, the open views over Castle Hill, herds of wildebeest sweeping majestically... ok went a bit Basil Fawlty there, the dairy herd errrr standing in a field (copyright Ewan from Vicar of Dibley), and say something a bit daft like " where are all the slag heaps?" Of course they were used to that picture book idyllic hamlet known as Gosport. rolleyes

Any road up, back on topic, as an amateur bread baker, breadcakes of a variable size there. /Paul Hollywood.
Chips, good effort.

And to put it into accurate Huddersfield lingo, it's plain tea cakes, not bread cakes, that's South Yorkshire speak, in t'West Riding they're plain white tea cakes, from the Scandinavian tekakor. Sithee.
Are you ignoring it or not, precious? hehe

matchmaker

8,976 posts

226 months

Friday 25th August 2017
quotequote all
Paper shop roll!

FiF

48,281 posts

277 months

Friday 25th August 2017
quotequote all
Eddie Strohacker said:
Are you ignoring it or not, precious? hehe
Perhaps not, unlike all the other inaccurate twaddle you spout sweetie pie, that's definitely straight into the ignore bin. tongue out