I was given this suggestion for making perfect chips recently but haven't tried it yet as my chip basket has worn out and 'm having trouble getting a new one locally ( I live in Swansea ).
Cut potatoes ( Maris Piper or King Edward preferably ) thickly, about the same size as a normal index finger and microwave them for five minutes. Then dry them on kitchen towel before frying them whichever way you normally do - chip pan or deep fat fryer. This method produces chips cooked perfectly on the inside ( thanks to the microwave ) and are lovely and crisp on the outside. Sounds like the perfect chip to me and am wondering about people's opinions on this method.
I shall give that method a try as the last couple of batches I`ve made in an electric deep fryer have not been quite cooked on the inside. Sounds interesting.
This is very similar to the proper way of cooking chips, which is to fry at a lower temperature (160) for 6 minutes so they are soft but still white, drain and plunge back in to very hot fat for about 3 minutes so they are golden brown and crisp on the outside, fluffy in the middle.
No matter how you cook your chips you should soak them in salty water for a while before cooking to remove the excess starch, and dry them well before putting in to the fat.
You can get the same result by parboiling them for ten minutes, draining them & then cooking them. Or you can cook them for a couple of minutes at low heat, this cooks the inside. Then remove & turn heat up to normal temperature, return to fat until floating/golden. Crispy ships are the ONLY chips, in my opinion, a microwave isn't worth the kitchen space. ;-)