logo
Steak fries are the worst, but these fat fries will make you a believer

Steak fries are the worst, but these fat fries will make you a believer

I will never understand the allure of the fat French fry. Steak fries are contemptible. Wedges of bland starch with no crunch, like a mouthful of molded mashed potatoes. There is no amount of ketchup, ranch or aioli that can save thick fries from the lower depths of tuber hell. Just order a baked potato and be done with it.
Curly fries, when done correctly, are crisp through each coil. I'm never mad at a waffle fry.
The skinny fry has the potential to be a spud revelation. It's texturally superior to a wedge, with a more even ratio of crunch to fluff. Three skinny fries clumped together and dunked into your favorite condiment will always hit. A single fat fry could never.
For a long time, I held the firm belief that Chateau Marmont was home to the greatest French fries in all the land. They're served in a decorative silver cylinder meant to elevate, at least via the presentation, the humblest of hamburger sidekicks. The mountain of fries exudes an air of luxury, threatening to spill from the top, showered in Parmesan cheese and smelling vaguely of truffles. Truffle Parmesan fries ($17) in the sceniest of sceney Los Angeles hotels? I can feel you seething as I type this. I can hear the guffaw of annoyance that just escaped your mouth. I know — people feel strongly about French fries.
After years of pawing through orders of fries at Heavy Handed, République and a handful of other places around town, I no longer believe they are the best fries in Los Angeles, but they continue to hover near the top, made even more enjoyable with an ice-cold martini. They are worth enduring the slight chill from the two hosts posted as gatekeepers to the bar and restaurant. I don't hold a SAG card, and my social media follower count is far lower than what is acceptable, but please permit me to pass, sit and overpay for your very good French fries.
Also vying for the title of best French fries are the tallow fries from the new Happies Hand Made in the Arts District, named for the beef tallow the fries bathe in. They're long, golden sticks that resemble fine fingers — the sort of fries that appear to have a surface sheathed in an extra layer of speckled coating that provides a satisfying crunch with each bite. They're seasoned well with salt and pepper, well enough to skip the ketchup. But as our deputy Food editor Betty Hallock likes to say: It's not a French fry if you can't dip it in ketchup. Once again, people feel strongly about French fries and their condiments.
I recently stumbled on what could be the best French fry I've ever tasted at an Italian restaurant in the Arts District. It was like the world shifted into another universe where the thick fry crawled out of the depths of tuber hell and emerged triumphant.
If you never noticed fries on the Rossoblu menu, you'd be forgiven. Steve and Dina Samson's restaurant is known best for Steve's regional Italian cooking, built on his family's traditional Bolognese dishes, including stellar pasta. But if you read through to the bottom of the menu, you'll find the fries under the 'contorni' or sides section, listed as 'Apennine fries, triple-cooked, herbs, balsamic' ($14).
They're named for the fries Steve remembers eating as a kid in a small mountain village in the Apennines in southern Bologna.
'One time we just went to some outdoor restaurant and I had fries with balsamic vinegar, and it was like, 'Phew, this is mind blowing,'' he says. 'I was probably like 10 years old, but it stuck in my mind and I always wanted to do that.'
Steve's fries are shy of wedge territory, though I label anything wider than a quarter inch (about the width of a McDonald's fry) a fat fry. They're served in a heap in a bowl, the logs of potato annealed, shiny and splotched with balsamic vinegar. The surface of each fry resembles the rugged terrain of good fried chicken, jagged and almost shaggy in parts. Bits of fried rosemary and sage litter the top.
They're hot and crunchier than I expect for a fry with sizable girth, the exterior layer of potato as delicate and crisp as a chip. But it isn't just that outer layer that's crunchy. It's like the potatoes are fried from the inside out, with a crunch that permeates 90% of the fry's nearly hollow body and eventually relents to a fluffy core. There is no need to rummage around for a good one. They are all the good one.
Before you have time to process how mind-bogglingly excellent the fries are, you get a bite tinged with vinegar and your mouth is flooded with the sweet and sharp tang of balsamic.
With two bites, I became a fat fry believer. Or at the very least an Apennine fry believer.
After trying multiple varieties of potatoes, Steve settled on Kennebec potatoes, and only Kennebec potatoes, to make his fries.
'They haven't been consistently on our menu because it's been hard to keep them consistent,' Steve says. 'Sometimes our produce guy says it can be hard to get Kennebecs because In-N-Out uses so many of them. And then the way potatoes are farmed, it depends on the time of year and how long the potatoes have been stored.'
And even if Steve secures the Kennebecs, he won't know a batch is good until he's gone through the three-cook process to make them.
The potatoes are cut, rinsed and soaked overnight. They're laid flat on racks, then steamed in the oven. The fries rest in the walk-in cooler and dry out, then take their first dip in the fryer. Once the fries are cooked through, they go back on a rack and into the freezer. The potatoes are flash-fried at 375 degrees to order.
'I've heard that there are ways to see if they float or see if they are going to be good potatoes,' he says. 'If you can figure out a way to tell before you go through all the work. But we haven't figured out a way to know before the third cook whether they are good or not. There have been times during service where we have a new batch, and it's like, uh-oh, we can't serve these.'
Sometimes the potatoes absorb too much oil. Other times they fall apart in the fryer.
'Whenever we get a good batch of potatoes, it's such a good feeling,' he says. 'You feel like you've won something.'
With the recent relaunch of the restaurant's menu and a steady supply of Kennebecs, the fries are on again at Rossoblu.
'Things like fries are the hardest to do well because there are a lot of variables and everybody knows what a good fry is,' he says. 'You can't fake your way around a good fry.'
Though Steve intends to have the fries available whenever you visit, there are no guarantees. You may want to call ahead for the good fries.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

I moved to Malaysia in my 30s and struggled to make friends, so I started a club to make the community I needed
I moved to Malaysia in my 30s and struggled to make friends, so I started a club to make the community I needed

Business Insider

time8 hours ago

  • Business Insider

I moved to Malaysia in my 30s and struggled to make friends, so I started a club to make the community I needed

This as-told-to essay is based on a conversation with Joshua Webley, who founded The Expats Club after moving to Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia's capital. It has been edited for length and clarity. Ten years ago, I left the UK to travel. I was born and raised in a small town about 150 miles north of London. It's one of those places where nobody ever really leaves, but I wanted to see more of the world. For the next seven years, I lived the digital nomad life, traveling through various countries such as Indonesia, Spain, and Morocco, while working remotely for a health insurance company based in Thailand. But when I got to Malaysia, I fell in love with the country, the lifestyle, everything. It felt calmer and less chaotic than other parts of Southeast Asia that I'd seen. I ended up living in Malaysia intermittently over the years, spending several months at a time taking it all in. It was also in Kuala Lumpur, the capital city, where I met my now-wife, Rachel, who is Malaysian. In July 2023, I was offered a job with a wealth management firm in Kuala Lumpur. The visa process took around six months, and by January last year, I was fully settled in the city. I realized I didn't really know anybody I'd moved around so much by then, and the longest I'd ever stayed in one place was two or three months. I didn't know who to ask about restaurants, or who to ask out for a drink when I finished work on a Friday. Although I had been to a few networking events, they were all really professional. You'd go there, and then you'd come home with 10 property agent business cards and five health insurance pamphlets. It came to the point where I thought, OK, I need to do something more. I ended up joining an English society, but the problem with that was I'd be surrounded by other English people. I didn't come to this side of the world just to meet English people; I wanted to meet everybody. Twenty-nine people showed up for that, and things just took off from there. Now, we host the Curry Club Here's how it works: Attendees make a small donation to a chosen charity, which serves as their RSVP, and we meet at a local restaurant. Everyone pays their own way. The donation helps ensure people show up — it feels like buying a ticket. If 50 people RSVP without donating, traffic or rain might mean only 10 show up. I don't want a restaurant owner telling me they brought in extra staff only for hardly anyone to show up. This system keeps it fair. Sometimes, we also host a volunteer event with the chosen charity. As we're here in Malaysia as expats, the idea is to try to give back to the community that has welcomed us. Even though it's called the Curry Club, a lot of times we don't only do curry houses. We've also had Spanish tapas and Italian food. The next one will be German. Over time, it has grown into something bigger The Expats Club is a community for people who have moved to Malaysia. These days, it's a team effort — my wife handles the club's social media and digital marketing. People in the community also organize their own smaller meetups now, such as to play golf or pickleball, or to go hiking. All I have to do is kick-start them by creating the first few events. Once they've all met each other, it becomes self-sustaining. There are also dedicated groups for retirees, business owners, and women. Rachel hosts the women's group events. People can join whichever groups interest them and connect with like-minded individuals. In addition to Kuala Lumpur, we've started hosting meetups in other parts of Malaysia, including Penang. Beyond social events, the community has also become a resource for expats navigating their move to Malaysia, whether it's visas, housing, or other local know-how. We made good friends — most are retirees They come around our house, and it's amazing. They clean everything up, and they don't stay too late. My wife and I got married early this month, and most of my guests were friends I've met through the Expats Club. When my best man, who's the same age as me, wasarranging my bachelor's party, I had to tell him, "Look, here are the people who are coming, but just be careful because most of them are over 70 years old. I don't want anything too crazy." When you move abroad, as much as you're gaining new insights about living in a new country, you are also saying goodbye to your network. It's especially tough when there's a big time difference. Now, things are different. I've actually made friends and built a beautiful community of people that I can love and trust.

Step aboard the cruise ship where food is the main attraction
Step aboard the cruise ship where food is the main attraction

USA Today

timea day ago

  • USA Today

Step aboard the cruise ship where food is the main attraction

Platters of prosciutto sat next to dishes of marinated olives and peppers, across from handmade pastas. At the Caprese bar, I could pick from numerous options of mozzarella, from fior di latte and burrata, to be mixed with tomatoes, like heirloom and cherry. The entire room smelled of garlic and freshly baked bread as fellow passengers found their seats. This Italian market wasn't in the streets of Rome or a Tuscan restaurant – this was aboard Oceania Cruises' latest ship, Oceania Allura. With the ingredients sourced from the day's port of Ravenna, the market is another example of the small-ship luxury cruise line's destination-focused travel experiences. I was on the ship's maiden voyage in mid-July, departing from Trieste, Italy, to Athens, Greece, with stops in Croatia's Rijeka and Dubrovnik, Montenegro, and Ravenna, Italy. "What sets Oceania Allura apart is not just the refined design or the thoughtfully curated spaces, but the warm, personalized service and those intangible, heartfelt touches that our loyal guests have come to cherish," said Dominique Nicolle, Oceania Allura general manager, in a statement to USA TODAY. During the sailing, elevated food from not just Italy was around every corner – white-glove afternoon tea, cooking classes, a wine-pairing lunch and a variety of specialty restaurants. Some of the excursions at the destinations also focused on local cuisine, made by residents – such as a lunch served at locally owned winery Storia di Pietra in Montenegro, where we tasted a bright white wine alongside a strong shot of rakija, the local version of grappa. "Of course, our passion for cuisine continues to lead the industry, and Oceania Allura is home to an array of new dining experiences that elevate our culinary legacy even further, such as the debut of our first-ever Creperie, the beloved signature French restaurant Jacques being reprised onboard with innovative new menus and more," Nicolle continued. I don't consider myself a foodie, but it was hard not to feel like one during the sailing. More travelers are seeking out these types of culinary experiences on their trips, with 77% saying they want to plan trips around a destination's cuisine in Chase Travel and Infatuation's The Spots of Summer 2025 survey. USA TODAY was among those invited on the first sailing for the new Oceania Allura. Here's what sailing Oceania was like. Inside the 'Star Trek' cruise: How fans boldly sail where no convention has gone before What is it like aboard the Oceania Allura? The Oceania Allura spans 804 feet long, called "the most innovative and luxurious Oceania Cruises ship to date," according to the cruise line. Built in Genoa, it is the second in the Oceania Cruises' Allura Class, following her sister ship Oceania Vista, which launched in 2023. "Oceania Allura delivers the pinnacle of small-ship luxury, with an elegant, residential feel that instantly puts guests at ease," Nicolle said. The ship was designed with an upscale, modern style – an almost floor-to-ceiling crystal chandelier in the Atrium and the signature French restaurant Jacques featuring dim lighting and a faux fireplace for an intimate atmosphere. All staterooms and suites are outside-facing, and also generous at over 290 square feet, with the largest cruise ship bathroom I've seen. The entire ship felt spacious, even when everyone was out and about, with tucked-away nooks in the lounges for conversations and quiet escapes. It has a casino, several lounges, a state-of-the-art fitness center, an artist loft, a spa, a pool, a running track, and a library. For entertainment, there were nightly shows and a culinary center with hosted cooking classes – ingredients were pre-cut and portioned out, so all you have to do is show up and follow the chef's directions. (Four Oceania ships currently have a culinary center, and classes require signing up in advance.) The ship has a capacity for 1,200 guests at double occupancy, with two staff members for every three passengers. With the dining experiences as a focal point, there is one chef for every eight guests aboard and over half the crew are dedicated to the food operations. There was never a shortage of food, or long waits to get your meal. Oceania's dining options In total, there were nine food venues aboard the Allura, including four fine dining specialty restaurants (that are included with the fare): I also enjoyed the wellness-inspired food at Aquamar Kitchen, like the fresh juices and smoothies, and the daily afternoon tea in one of the lounges, complete with scones and clotted cream. The Viennese-inspired coffee house Baristas was where I grabbed my daily pain au chocolat, which was always perfectly flaky. What's new on the Oceania Allura? Where will the Oceania Allura sail to? The Oceania Allura will sail 26 voyages in its inaugural season to 92 destinations in regions like the Mediterranean, Caribbean, and Canada and New England. How much are the sailings? Sailings on the Oceania Allura start at $799 per guest for a four-day cruise from New York in the fall, but prices can go up to around $3,000 for longer cruises in the Caribbean and Mediterranean. The reporter on this story received access to this sailing from Oceania Cruises. USA TODAY maintains editorial control.

My French-born husband taught me the real way to experience France — slow, immersive, and away from big cities
My French-born husband taught me the real way to experience France — slow, immersive, and away from big cities

Business Insider

time2 days ago

  • Business Insider

My French-born husband taught me the real way to experience France — slow, immersive, and away from big cities

I used to travel to France as a tourist, but now I go there because I married into a French family. It has been rewarding to go beyond Paris and visit different regions in France in recent years. I've discovered hidden culinary gems and authentic experiences far from the usual tourist trail. My vacations in France were very different before I met my French-born husband. I was a typical tourist: I stayed in the heart of Paris, ate croissants, and visited must-see attractions during the busy summer months. I always followed a guidebook, and had a packed schedule because I thought it was the only way to ensure I wasn't missing out on anything. But now that I'm married into a French family, my vacations in France have changed. I've realized taking a different approach to travel, and slowing down, can actually lead to richer, more fulfilling experiences. It's been rewarding to go beyond Paris When my husband and I visit France, we never stay in Paris. The Eiffel Tower is now just another landmark I see through the car window on our way out of Paris from the airport. Instead, trips to France are spent visiting our family and friends, attending weddings, or taking vacations in different parts of the country. These days, I prefer visiting smaller French towns and villages, which are usually nestled in beautiful landscapes, because they're quieter and more relaxing. Toulouse has become my favorite city because of its beautiful city center with terracotta brick buildings, pretty parks and gardens, and walking tracks along the Garonne River. It's not even a place that was on my radar before I met my husband. I've found joy in authentic experiences and regional food With my French family, I have experienced France's regions by foot, from wandering through towns and local forests, to exploring hiking trails. The Pic Saint-Loup hiking trail, which is a short drive from Montpellier, is my favorite walk because of its very rewarding 360-degree view at the summit. I've visited castles with less crowds compared to the more famous French castles like Château de Chambord and Château de Chenonceau. For example, I recently enjoyed visiting the very elegant Château de Rambouillet, which is less than an hour from Paris. Since traveling around France six times, I have a greater appreciation of the country's diverse regional cuisines, and I've very happily tried many of them. I've discovered that dining in local restaurants, away from tourist areas, provides a more authentic experience. And I've learned that shopping at farmer's markets, bakeries, and delis is the best way to try lots of different types of delicious regional food. I now enjoy a slower, more immersive pace My vacations in France nowadays aren't about ticking off a list of sights, but they're about having more immersive experiences over a longer period of time. Most of our trips last for 14 days or more. It's by slowing down that I have an enriched understanding of daily French life. France now feels like a home away from home and I feel a greater sense of belonging compared to when I was a tourist. These days, I bring home gourmet food items or specialty French baking trays, instead of Eiffel Tower key chains. And I'll happily go there any time of the year rather than just during the busy summer months. But there is one thing which hasn't changed when I vacation in France. I still eat lots of croissants, because they're much better than the ones back home.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store