Handy little chip fryer that holds 1.5 litres of oil and 350g chips
Easy to use, with a viewing window in the lid
Great for onion rings too
Cool-touch handle and stainless steel casing
Top comments
dazbang
2 Sep 164#1
Good price OP :smiley:
On This Morning yesterday they did a pretty basic review of deep fat fryers (Argos own brand, Russell Hobbs, Sage, Delonghi and this one from memory) and this Lakeland one was their preferred option due to the compact size, ease of cleaning, etc...
It is 2.99 postage. Does anyone have the code please for the £3 saving or do I have to order a catalogue first to get it. Thanks.
sam_of_london
2 Sep 16#17
Fry yourself to death. I would not buy it, even it was free. Looks like people here have no qualms about their health. Fried food is the worst food you can eat. Unless you operate a fried food shop like KFC, why would you buy this stuff. Also there so many air fryers these days which use very little oil, why would you want to eat food full of oil and kill yourself?
theman1990 to sam_of_london
2 Sep 161#21
Because it tastes damn good :P , everything in moderation with exercise and there is no problem Homemade chips you can't beat
Everything is bad for you to a certain extent did you not here about the American who died from too many carrots ??
manbearpig to sam_of_london
3 Sep 16#23
What do you care?
manbearpig
3 Sep 16#22
Nothing wrong with the occasional fried food, get over yourself.
Do you ever get fries when you go for a pub lunch? Ever get KFC?
These are all friend foods which are fine once a week. If you don't want to pay for it in a restaurant whats wrong with home cooked chips etc?
sam_of_london
2 Sep 16#20
Sorry I did not know the plastic fryers were so bad. I don't own either. Plastic can also contain Bpa like carcinogenic substances which leach out at higher temperature so not healthy either.
jans
2 Sep 161#19
Yes, why not poison yourself with noxious fumes from hot plastic instead. Bought one of those plastic air fryers and it stunk the kitchen out for over day with an awful chemical smell which tainted the food from the heated up plastic it was cooked in. Nasty stuff (no it wasn't faulty and yes it was washed and rinsed thoroughly prior to use - just the nature of it, apparently) Forget that. It went straight back. Principle idea behind them is good but the construction is all wrong.
dazbang
2 Sep 16#18
Wow :confused:
robertoegg
2 Sep 16#16
Hardly comparable given a) the figures I posted are for domestic situations only, b) even Brits, top of the tables for obesity in Europe, would use stairs more often than a deep fat fryer
Spies
2 Sep 16#15
No such thing as an easy clean deep fat fryer, unless you want to waste hours of your time scrubbing the fat off, it's easier to throw it away and buy a new one once they get really bad.
speric07
2 Sep 16#14
It adds some perspective to your chip pan scaremongering! :wink:
Hope you live in a bungalow!
robertoegg
2 Sep 16#13
or rather you're partially Wrong, I'm partially 'Right'? http://www.firesafe.org.uk/fires-in-the-kitchen/
Anyway, I'm not here to argue - it was a simple statement of what I had found on a reputable website. There's safer ways to get yer munchies in after the pub!
robertoegg
2 Sep 16#12
Genuine question - what relevance does this fact have? There are many things that are "bigger killers".
Godspeed
2 Sep 16#11
Great spot, now just need an offer on mars bars.
BenderRodriguez
2 Sep 16#10
Because Britain isn't obese enough already.
robertoegg
2 Sep 161#4
Fact time....'course, 52% of you might choose to ignore ;o)
1/5th of all domestic fires are caused by deep fat fryers.
Over 4000 people a year are injured by deep fat fryers (reported injuries).
Deaths from domestic fires accounted for around 260 deaths in 2015; we can extrapolate and suggest that deep fat fryers cause around 50+ deaths a year.
On This Morning yesterday they did a pretty basic review of deep fat fryers (Argos own brand, Russell Hobbs, Sage, Delonghi and this one from memory) and this Lakeland one was their preferred option due to the compact size, ease of cleaning, etc...
Opening post
Easy to use, with a viewing window in the lid
Great for onion rings too
Cool-touch handle and stainless steel casing
Top comments
On This Morning yesterday they did a pretty basic review of deep fat fryers (Argos own brand, Russell Hobbs, Sage, Delonghi and this one from memory) and this Lakeland one was their preferred option due to the compact size, ease of cleaning, etc...
Latest comments (26)
Everything is bad for you to a certain extent did you not here about the American who died from too many carrots ??
Do you ever get fries when you go for a pub lunch? Ever get KFC?
These are all friend foods which are fine once a week. If you don't want to pay for it in a restaurant whats wrong with home cooked chips etc?
Hope you live in a bungalow!
http://www.firesafe.org.uk/fires-in-the-kitchen/
Anyway, I'm not here to argue - it was a simple statement of what I had found on a reputable website. There's safer ways to get yer munchies in after the pub!
1/5th of all domestic fires are caused by deep fat fryers.
Over 4000 people a year are injured by deep fat fryers (reported injuries).
Deaths from domestic fires accounted for around 260 deaths in 2015; we can extrapolate and suggest that deep fat fryers cause around 50+ deaths a year.
http://www.fireservice.co.uk/safety/chip-pans
Thanks OP and dazbang. Purchased
On This Morning yesterday they did a pretty basic review of deep fat fryers (Argos own brand, Russell Hobbs, Sage, Delonghi and this one from memory) and this Lakeland one was their preferred option due to the compact size, ease of cleaning, etc...