Skip to main contentSkip to navigation
Close dialogue 1/1 Next image Previous image Toggle caption
Support the Guardian
Fund independent journalism
Support from $3.45 a weekSupport from $3.45 a week
US
The Guardian - Back to home The Guardian
- [x]
Show more Hide expanded menu
-
- News
-
- Opinion
-
- Sport
-
- Culture
-
- Lifestyle
-
Search input google-search Search
-
* [Search jobs](https://jobs.theguardian.com/) -
Search input google-search Search
- [x]
Rachel Roddy’s peppered mussels with salty fries. Photograph: Rachel Roddy/The Guardian
Rachel Roddy’s peppered mussels with salty fries. Photograph: Rachel Roddy/The Guardian
Rachel Roddy’s recipe for peppered mussels with salty chips
Sarawak peppercorns add their woody, citrus aroma to shellfish steamed in wine and served with crisp fries
Thu 2 Jul 2026 01.00 EDT
Share
B lack Sarawak peppercorns have a soft, woody smell, like a forest floor mixed with lemon zest. Those things come through in the taste, too, along with a fruity sweetness. But then peppercorns, the tiny black balls I take for granted (and often forget about), are berries, which is something I didn’t know until I did a pepper tasting at my local spice shop, Emporio delle Spezie.
I also learned that the spice I have always considered one thing, black pepper, is in fact a species, Piper nigrum, a flowering vine in the vast Piperaceae family. Native to south-west India and Sri Lanka, Piper nigrum spread, taking on different characteristics according to wherever it took root: Sarawak pepper, Penja pepper, Lampong pepper, Kampot pepper, Malabar pepper, Madagascar pepper …
The writer and academic Dr Anna Sulan Masing, whose family grew pepper in Borneo, has written extensively about pepper, the way it is grown and by whom, its colonial past and present. It is from her that I learned Sarawak is a state of Malaysia on the island of Borneo, and that Sarawak peppercorns grow in tropical landscapes such as Kapit, a riverside town deep in the interior and where Sulan’s family are from. At the pepper talk, we learned that peppercorns grow in clusters, like grapes, and turn from green to blazing orange-red when ripe. Fresh peppercorns are laid on mats to dry for three or four days, during which time they turn black, but with a bright fruitiness that can be maintained if they are stored carefully and used wisely. It is suggested that, for maximum warmth and flavour, we bash the peppercorns in a mortar. The booklet we came home with suggests pairing the wood-lemon of Sarawak with mussels steamed open over heat and wine, which is a dish that demands well-salted chips.
The following method is pretty much that of food scientist and recipe developer J Kenji López-Alt from Serious Eats. While I am a keen consumer of his work, I rarely attempt to follow in his rigorous footsteps, but, on this occasion, I also wanted a method for thin, crisp chips with the characteristics of both a global hamburger chain and a Belgian food truck. López-Alt’s method does involve precision cutting and three stages, though – a boil, fry one and fry two – but you can pause between steps two and three, and the results are fantastic. (And, of course, there are always oven chips, if need be.)
Peppered mussels and salty chips
Serves 4
**1½****kg mussels
900g russet potatoes**, or similar
2 tbsp white-wine vinegar
**1 tsp****salt
1½ litres peanut oil
2 tsp black peppercorns
3 tbsp olive oil
1 garlic clove**, peeled
200ml white wine
Working under running water, scrub the mussels, pulling away their hairy beards and discarding any that are broken or cracked. Cover the clean mussels with cold water and leave to sit until you are ready to cook.
Peel and cut the potatoes into 5mm x 5mm fries, and drop the raw fries in a bowl of cold water straight after cutting. Drain the potatoes, put them in a large pan and cover with fresh cold water. Add the white-wine vinegar and salt, bring to a boil and cook for 10 minutes, or until tender but not falling apart. Drain, spread out on a clean tea towel and leave to dry for five minutes.
In a wok, heat 1½ litres of peanut oil to 200C, then, working in batches, fry the potatoes for 50 seconds. Lift them out on to a tray lined with kitchen towel and, once they are all fried, leave the chips to cool for 30 minutes.
Meanwhile, crush the peppercorns in a mortar (or put them in a small plastic bag and smash with a rolling pin). In another big wide pan for which you have a lid, heat the olive oil and peeled garlic. Add the mussels, turn up the heat, then add the wine, cover the pan, and cook for five minutes, shaking the pan and listening for the mussels to open. Once they are all open, sprinkle over the black pepper and take to the table as well as some bread.
Working quickly now, return the oil to 200C and, again working in batches, fry the chips for three minutes. Blot briefly to get rid of any excess oil, sprinkle with salt and take to the table batch by batch.
Every recipe, ready for your kitchen
The Feast app has thousands of recipes from US and world-class cooks and exclusive features that make everyday cooking easier:
•Browse through recipes with enhanced search and filters
•Curate your own recipe collections in My Feast
•Metric or cups? Your choice
•Create your own shopping list
•Use cook mode for step-by-step instructions
•Print your favourite recipes
Start your 14-day free trial today
Explore more on these topics
Share
Most viewed
- #### ‘Hugging is forbidden’: women jailed for life – in pictures
- #### Ohio authorities rescue 16 children confined to one room for four years
- #### Young Indonesian couple publicly caned after kissing on TikTok
- #### Valuable Spanish painting left on street salvaged by man who liked its frame
- #### Trump hijacked US’s 250 anniversary to serve ‘political ideology and pet projects’, congressional report says
A kitchen in Rome
A kitchen in Rome
- ### Rachel Roddy’s recipe for orecchiette with courgettes, parmesan cream and almonds 25 Jun 2026132 132 comments
- ### Rachel Roddy’s recipe for focaccia sandwiches with mortadella and parmesan cream 18 Jun 2026224 224 comments
- ### Rachel Roddy’s recipe for spaghetti with mussels, parsley and lemon 11 Jun 2026149 149 comments
- ### Rachel Roddy’s recipe for baked fish and potatoes with oregano and lemon mayonnaise 4 Jun 202696 96 comments
- ### Rachel Roddy’s recipe for tozzetti, AKA dipping biscuits with chocolate chips and orange 28 May 202672 72 comments
- ### Rachel Roddy’s recipe for ricotta and breadcrumb balls in tomato, chilli and basil sauce 21 May 2026100 100 comments
- ### Rachel Roddy’s recipe for orzo with peas, broad beans, asparagus, parmesan and lemon 14 May 2026151 151 comments
- ### Rachel Roddy’s recipe for spring chicken thighs with spring onions, mint and peas 7 May 2026131 131 comments
More from Lifestyle
More from Lifestyle
- ### Works of ‘civic generosity’: NSW architecture awards winners 2026 – in pictures 2h ago
- ### Who am I rooting for most at the World Cup? A wise and gentle Italian referee 4h ago38 38 comments
- ### My mother was an excellent care worker. Why did she end up marching with the EDL? 5h ago
- ### You be the judge: should my girlfriend stop leaving piles of her hair and nails around the flat? 7h ago495 495 comments
- ### Thursday news quiz: stolen saplings, legal happenings and a missing giraffe 9h ago388 388 comments
- ### I visited seven themed bars in one week. Can ball pits and bingo save British nightlife? 10h ago210 210 comments
- ### My mother has died and I can mourn her. That makes me one of the fortunate 10h ago
- ### What’s really in a hotdog? Nutrition experts explain 22h ago
- ### Jess Cartner-Morley on fashion: still wearing stripes? It’s time to join the dots 1d ago95 95 comments
Comments (89)
Sign in or create your Guardian account to join the discussion
Comments (89)
Sign in or create your Guardian account to join the discussion
Guardian Pick
I think it was reading another of Rachel's little gems, here in the Grain, that alerted me to cacio e pepe. Which is now a staple of mine due to it being sooooo simple and quick. The point being that it's another show-case for freshly toasted/crushed pepper corns. And correct me if I'm wrong dear reader, but farmed mussels are the one fish farming industrial technique that seems to have mainly benefits, without any notable drawbacks.
re m…
4
Guardian Pick
Lovely morning read as a ways, thank you.
You say "900g russet potatoes, or similar". What is similar to a russet for fine salty chips (I live in Ticino, so another challenge to finding "similar")?
Could I challenge you and your Guardian food colleagues? How about a table of key potato dishes and best and similar varieties? I would be forever indebted...
3
Guardian Pick
I think it was reading another of Rachel's little gems, here in the Grain, that alerted me to cacio e pepe. Which is now a staple of mine due to it being sooooo simple and quick. The point being that it's another show-case for freshly toasted/crushed pepper corns. And correct me if I'm wrong dear reader, but farmed mussels are the one fish farming industrial technique that seems to have mainly benefits, without any notable drawbacks.
re m…
4
Guardian Pick
Lovely morning read as a ways, thank you.
You say "900g russet potatoes, or similar". What is similar to a russet for fine salty chips (I live in Ticino, so another challenge to finding "similar")?
Could I challenge you and your Guardian food colleagues? How about a table of key potato dishes and best and similar varieties? I would be forever indebted...
3
View more comments
Most viewed
Most viewed
Most viewed Across the Guardian
-
‘Hugging is forbidden’: women jailed for life – in pictures
-
Ohio authorities rescue 16 children confined to one room for four years
-
Young Indonesian couple publicly caned after kissing on TikTok
-
Valuable Spanish painting left on street salvaged by man who liked its frame
-
Trump hijacked US’s 250 anniversary to serve ‘political ideology and pet projects’, congressional report says
-
Live Anger as report says Trump hijacked US anniversary to serve own agenda – US politics live
-
A storm, overpriced food and a sad ferris wheel: inside Trump’s dreadful state fair
-
Vatican excommunicates all members of ultra-conservative rebel group SSPX
-
Live Kyiv attacks death toll rises to 20 as Russia warns it will ‘continue to increase pressure’ on Ukrainian capital – Europe live
-
A goal, a red and a LeBron James shout: Folarin Balogun gets the spotlight in US’s wild World Cup win
Most viewed in Food
-
Chicken broth, orzo and arctic char: whose fridge is this?
-
Spicy fish sandos, feta scones and pork chops: Alexina Anatole’s summer berry recipes
-
Rachel Roddy’s recipe for peppered mussels with salty chips
-
Is vinho verde the perfect summer wine?
-
How to turn excess cream into mascarpone – recipe
-
Musical fruit or unsung hero? A beginner’s guide to cooking with beans
-
The heat is on: everything you need to start barbecuing today
-
From jerk prawns to juicy chops: Melissa Thompson’s summer barbecue recipes
-
Blackberries and brussels sprouts top Australia’s best-value fruit and veg for July
-
The secret ingredient in America’s culinary capitals? Its people
Original reporting and incisive analysis, direct from the Guardian every morning
-
California resident – Do Not Sell or Share
Support the Guardian
Available for everyone, funded by readers
© 2026 Guardian News & Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved.(dcr)