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  • It's not a party if there aren't chips,

  • and this party just got a whole lot

  • better because these are made from cheese.

  • They're light, soft, gooey and perfect.

  • Soft and delicious halloumi with a paprika hit,

  • these chips will be impossible to resist.

  • I start by cutting the cheese into chip-size sticks.

  • So halloumi is the perfect cheese for frying because you can fry it

  • and all it does is it just becomes soft and gooey,

  • but it never disintegrates, never falls apart,

  • it really holds its shape.

  • Dry the halloumi sticks with kitchen towel.

  • That can't be fried because that doesn't look like a chip,

  • so I have to eat it.

  • Just has to be eaten.

  • On a large plate,

  • mix 150g of plain flour,

  • six teaspoons of garlic powder,

  • three teaspoons of paprika

  • and a pinch of salt.

  • So you could make up a load of this, stick it in a jar

  • and then you'd have it ready for whenever you wanted cheesy chips.

  • Next, whisk together two eggs.

  • So grab your cheese, get a few pieces straight into your eggs,

  • and then coat them all over.

  • So the eggs are like the glue for the halloumi.

  • So, I'm going to dip the halloumi into the egg,

  • then into the flour but, as if that's not enough

  • I'm going to dip them back in the egg and then back

  • in the flour, so we get a double coating of crispiness.

  • I'm trying so hard to keep my dry hand in my dry ingredients

  • and my wet hand in my wet ingredients,

  • and I've just gone and stuck my finger in the eggs. Oh!

  • It's a little bit like rubbing your stomach and patting your head.

  • I can't do it. I can't.

  • Oh, no, I'm patting both.

  • Growing up, we didn't have parties as such,

  • but every weekend my dad would cook up a sheep

  • and he would invite all his cousins, all his relatives,

  • and they'd all come round and they'd cook a big pot of rice

  • and we'd get together.

  • So we were having a party every weekend at my mum and dad's house.

  • Now that we've all got our own kids, we tend to get together

  • when it's the kids' birthdays or significant moments,

  • and never have those moments ever been without food.

  • In, and into the flour.

  • Can you see, after their second coating, they are covered

  • in that spice? I mean, look at that.

  • Doesn't that look like a southern fried chip?

  • Now, imagine all the oohs and aahs we are going to get

  • when the guests bite in and then there's lovely salty

  • halloumi cheese inside.

  • Right, now time to fry these.

  • Straight into the oil.

  • You've got to be sure not to overcrowd the pan,

  • otherwise it will lower the temperature of the oil,

  • so just a few at a time, enough for them to move around.

  • And you don't want to be frying them before guests arrive,

  • so what you can do is fry them beforehand and then just pop them

  • into the oven for about ten minutes, let them crisp back up again

  • and they're ready to eat.

  • They're not going to have a clue what's in these!

  • These do not take very long at all.

  • All I want is to warm up the cheese

  • and then crisp up the outside, that's it.

  • When the chips rise to the surface, they're cooked.

  • They look amazing, if I may say so myself.

  • These are delicious just as they are.

  • I could eat this whole lot right now but because it is for a party,

  • I want to make it a little bit fancy.

  • Garnish with sour cream, chopped mint,

  • a sprinkling of Za'atar and a teaspoon of chilli flakes.

  • Just to finish it off, pomegranates.

  • Soft cheese with the lovely crisp outside.

  • These chips are party ready.

It's not a party if there aren't chips,

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