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    Originally posted by covbob View Post
    Glad to hear it! Sausages and mash here tonight - proper thick Lincolnshire sausages from our butcher.
    Nice!

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      Real, proper early night for me

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        Join IPSE

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          Originally posted by NickFitz View Post
          My method is as follows, for what it's worth:
          1. Cut the spuds up into chips. (I peel them first, but some prefer not to.)
          Wee skinny ones, or fat chunky ones, or McCain oven sized ones?

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            Morning!

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              Not liking the cold and dark mornings
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                Morning denizens

                Woke up at half five, for no good reason. Despite my best efforts I haven't been able to get back to sleep, so I've given up. Now waiting for the coffee to brew

                Sort of cloudy out there. Bit chilly too

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                  Originally posted by mudskipper View Post
                  Wee skinny ones, or fat chunky ones, or McCain oven sized ones?
                  A very important question indeed

                  I have two favoured styles, depending on circumstances. For something like a steak I'll go with thin, french-fry-style ones. The other approach is to cut the spuds into disks about 3-5mm thick; if the spud is very large, it may be cut in half first. The aim is to have the biggest ones be about an inch to an inch-and-a-half at their widest diameter. These are the optimum choice for something with a sauce or gravy, such as chops or a casserole, as the larger surface area allows for more gravy to be scooped in a single mouthful

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                    Morning

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                      Originally posted by NickFitz View Post
                      A very important question indeed

                      I have two favoured styles, depending on circumstances. For something like a steak I'll go with thin, french-fry-style ones. The other approach is to cut the spuds into disks about 3-5mm thick; if the spud is very large, it may be cut in half first. The aim is to have the biggest ones be about an inch to an inch-and-a-half at their widest diameter. These are the optimum choice for something with a sauce or gravy, such as chops or a casserole, as the larger surface area allows for more gravy to be scooped in a single mouthful
                      Presumably the par boil time varies depending on size.

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