coraa: (cooking)
[personal profile] coraa
Because several people have asked!

These are so fast and so easy and so crunchy and tasty, it's amazing. They do still taste like kale -- but like light, airy, toasty-browned kale, slightly oily and salty (but only slightly). Like potato chips in texture and munchability, but not so much in flavor. Right now, when there's a ton of kale at the farmer's market, they're fun to make.

Basically, the principle behind kale chips is that kale is a fairly stiff/firm green -- so it doesn't immediately wilt in a hot oven -- that is both thin enough and low-moisture enough to crisp up quickly in a hot oven. Unlike potatoes, carrots, parsnips, etc, which are thick and moist enough to be difficult to crisp in a home oven, kale chips are dead simple.

Be careful not to oversalt them, though. I did that, and wow, salty chips.

Kale Chips

  • 1 bunch kale (any kind -- I've used purple, green, curly, and flat)
  • 1 tbsp olive oil (you don't need the good stuff for this)
  • a couple of pinches of salt


Preheat the oven to 350F.

Tear the leafy part of the kale off the stem part and into pieces -- I usually tear them 1-2 inches on a side, but it doesn't really matter. They only need to be roughly similar in size, so just tear them up to something that looks vaguely bite-sized. (They shrink a little during cooking, but not terribly much.)

Toss the kale with olive oil, making sure they're all lightly oiled. (Depending on how big your bunch is, you might need 2 tbsp.) Then sprinkle with salt (and don't oversalt -- you can always add more salt to the finished chips, but there's no way to unsalt them!). You can add other seasonings now -- for instance, black pepper or cayenne pepper for spicier chips -- or even a tablespoon of vinegar for salt-n-vinegar kale chips. First time, though, I recommend just using salt, so that you can get a feel for how the chips taste.

Spread the chips out on the baking sheet in a more-or-less single layer. A little overlapping is fine, but if you've got the whole thing stacked two-deep, you'd be better off doing it in two batches.

Put them in the oven for 5 minutes. At the 5 minute point, give them a stir and put them back in. If they seem to be browning already, check them in 2 minutes; if they seem to still be pretty damp, give them 5. Give them a stir and bite one. (Careful, they're hot.) If it's dry, crisp and toasty, they're done. If not, give it a couple more minutes and try again.

Remove from the sheet and eat!

Profile

coraa: (Default)
coraa

April 2013

S M T W T F S
 123456
78910111213
14151617181920
21222324252627
2829 30    

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jul. 10th, 2025 04:12 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios