Thursday, July 19, 2012

Kale Chips


 When I first heard about kale chips I was all, like:

+


Then I finally put on my big girl pants and tried them and I was all, like:

So...here's how you make 'em.

You will need:  

Fresh Kale (as much as you can stand)
Olive oil
Salt
Pepper
any other savory spices you might like:  turmeric, garlic powder, cumin, soy sauce, chili powder et cetera

Wash the kale thoroughly, drain and then pat dry:  the drier, the better.  Cut out the ribs and tear into smallish pieces.   Toss with a small amount of olive oil (~2t/bunch of kale), salt and pepper to taste.  Place on an ungreased nonstick baking sheet in a single layer.  Add any other spices at this time.  Bake until crisp.  This will vary from oven to oven.  I have had the best luck at 275F on the convection bake setting for 16 minutes.  I think ~300F for 18-20 minutes in a conventional bake cycle would work as well.  


Tossing....


Single layer on the baking sheet


Crispy and ready for crunching
Yum!

One bunch of kale took 3 baking sheet batches and made enough for a movie snack for the lord of the manor and I.  Or it would have if Thing 1 hadn't eaten most of the "green potato chips" as I was cooking them. 



3 comments:

  1. As a newly converted kalehead, this recipe has been on my to-do list all summer, and you make it look easy. Kale all the way, baby! I'm firing up the oven as I post.

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  2. I used the only kale I had on hand, the prewashed, precut bagged stuff. The pieces are too small to be ideal, obviously, esp. since they shrink up, but they start out nice and dry.

    I tried 300 and 18 min., which was perfect.

    I made half with just salt and pepper and half with salt, pepper, and lemon pepper. Both are good, but the lemon pepper has a nice zing that complements the mild cabbage-y taste.

    Lovely crunch. Great way to get your veges! Thanks.

    Excuse me while I go hide and eat them all myself.

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  3. OK, postscript:

    Having made these a few times, I can attest that you really don't want to eat a whole batch all by yourself. Trust me.

    And they do keep pretty well, at least in my pyrex covered bowls, but only for a couple of days. Day three, and they get chewy.

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