No ifs, only butties: This Melbourne chip butty is a carb-on-carb crowd-pleaser
Not one to underestimate the power of simple, nostalgic food, Glory Us chef-owner Tori Bicknell is serving a “crispy-chewy” chip butty supercharged by house-made HP sauce.
Simple pleasures don’t come much simpler than the chip butty: hot chips sandwiched between soft white bread. Stupidly easy to throw together, the British delicacy is a carb-on-carb crowd-pleaser. So why, then, is it so hard to find on menus around Melbourne?
“There are a lot of sandwiches out at the moment that have a lot going on, and everyone’s making them massive,” says Tori Bicknell, chef-owner of Glory Us’ Strathmore andFitzroy North cafes.
“I think people underestimate the simplicity of nostalgic food.”
Bicknell grew up on her British mother’s chip butties, dunked into a bowl of HP sauce. The “super popular” sandwich has been off the Glory Us menu for a little while, but it’s back just in time for Good Food’s Chip Month – and for this edition of Sandwich Watch.
The bread
Restaurant reviews, news and the hottest openings served to your inbox.
Sign upIt starts with slices so fresh that they take your fingerprints when you pick them up. Bicknell uses white tin loaf from Noisette bakery, which “has to be fresh every day”. It’s sealed with unsalted, cultured butter as soon as it hits the board, so it doesn’t dry out.
The chips
“When I’m having them on the side, I like my chips to be thick, greasy and as crisp as possible,” says Bicknell. “But when I’m eating them in a chip sandwich, I like them to retain some moisture [from the sauce] so you’ve got this crispy-chewy amalgamation.”
She uses Edgell Supa Crunch frozen chips, which are air-fried to give the butty a less oil-logged feel. They’re tossed in a house-made, secret-recipe chicken salt that’s completely plant-based (you can easily swap the butter for Nuttelex to make it vegan friendly).
Somewhere between shoestring and thick-cut, the chips are painstakingly stacked on the buttered bread, creating four or so layers, and the perfect cross-section.
The sauce
What binds the butty together is house-made HP sauce, squirted onto both pieces of bread in a smiley face (to subconsciously spread joy). The sauce is a labour of love, taking three days to make. It’s deeply savoury but a little sweet too, with the vinegary hit you need for a sanga full of spuds.
The butty isn’t crunch-on-crunch, with the chips softening as they cosy up to each other and the sauce soaks through, giving it that “crispy-chewy” vibe.
Extra sauce comes in a dipping bowl, alongside another filled with tangy pickle rounds.
How do I get one?
The chip butty ($19) is available on Glory Us’ regular menu at 73 Reid Street, Fitzroy North, and sporadically on the specials board at 62-64 Woodland Street, Strathmore.
Five other fried-potato-filled sangas to try
For a classic chip butty, there’s Northern Soul Chip Shop in St Kilda, doing it with curry sauce; Cerberus Beach House, from its kiosk overlooking Half Moon Bay; and Northcote Fish & Chips. Roving food truck Dimmie Den serves hand-cut potato cakes in sesame-seed-crusted rolls. And Gopi Ka Chatka, with multiple locations, is a go-to for Indian vada pav: a spiced potato patty stuffed in a white roll, with powerhouse dipping sauces.
Related Article
- Opinion
Adam Liaw calls for fish and chip shops to sell buttered bread for DIY butties
- Adam Liaw
Recipe writer and presenter
This is the latest instalment of Sandwich Watch, a column dedicated to the Melbourne sandwiches you need to know about.
Continue this series
Here’s your April dining hit list, Melbourne (featuring this ‘genius’ beef cheek rendang)Up next
- Review
With a flexible menu built for maximum flavour, Etta’s sister Daphne is easy to love
The friendly Lygon Street venue is the perfect neighbourhood restaurant, but she has some growing to do, reviews Besha Rodell.
Coming soon to Melbourne: 15 pubs, cafes and more to get excited about
Mark your diary. We’ve got big restaurant projects by big names like Andrew McConnell, bakeries from the CBD to the ’burbs, and a spot called Spaghetti Club.
Previously
- Review
When the Everleigh closed, a very different cocktail bar moved in. How does it rate?
Leaning into owner Steve Chan’s Chinese heritage, Moondrop confidently goes its own way with 1920s Shanghai style and the kind of cocktails you won’t find anywhere else in town.