This weekend we made a true US comfort food (we’re so excited to head to Hong Kong this week and get some good old American food – fingers crossed!). I used the recipe from Baker Bettie’s website. I love her photos, and all the recipes I’ve tried so far have been great!
Buttermilk Fried Chicken from Thomas Keller
Ingredients:
- Two 2 1/2 to 3 pound chickens cut into 10 pieces
- Chicken brine (see below)
- Canola or Peanut Oil
- 1 quart buttermilk
- Salt and Pepper
- 6 cups all-purpose flour
- 1/4 cup garlic powder
- 1/4 cup onion powder
- 1 tablespoon plus 1 teaspoon paprika
- 1 tablespoon plus 1 teaspoon cayenne
- 1 tablespoon plus 1 teaspoon kosher salt
- 1 teaspoon freshly group black pepper
- Cut each chicken into 10 pieces: 2 legs, 2 thighs, 4 breast quarters, and 2 wings. Pour the brine into the container large enough to hold the chicken pieces, add the chicken and refrigerate for no longer than 12 hours. (To be honest, I boil my chicken pieces right before cooking in a similar brine recipe to below to make sure they are thoroughly cooked but it still keeps the chicken tender).
- Remove the chicken from the brine (discard the brine) and rinse under cold water, removing any herbs or spices sticking to the skin. Pat dry with paper towels. Let rest at room temperature for 1 1/2 hours, or until it come to room temperature.
- Fill the pot with at least 2 inches of oil and heat to 320 degrees F. Set a cooling rack over a baking sheet. Line a second baking sheet with parchment paper.
- Meanwhile, combine all the coating ingredients in a large bowl (flour, garlic powder, onion powder, paprika, cayenne, kosher salt, and pepper). Transfer half the coating to a second bowl (or just keep it all in one bowl). Pour the buttermilk into a third bowl and season with salt and pepper. Set up a dipping station: the chicken pieces, one bowl of coating, the bowl of buttermilk (we didn’t have butter milk but beaten eggs with a little plain milk works great too!), the second bowl of coating, and the parchment-lined baking sheet.
- Make sure to set up two flour bowls on the kitchen floor or a low counter for your helper to dip things into as well (or just play with the flour and transfer from bowl to bowl). It’s a mess but Dee LOVES it so I think it’s worth the trouble.
- Just before frying, dip the dark meat pieces into the first bowl of coating, then into the buttermilk, allowing the excess to run back into the bowl; then dip into the second bowl of coating, and rest on the parchment. (The double coating is the key to get a really good breading! – I never knew this before yay knowledge!)
- Carefully (more carefully than me) lower the pieces into the hot oil. Fry for 11 to 12 minutes turning over half-way through, until the chicken is a deep golden brown, cooked through, and very crisp. Allow to drain on a cooling rack, skin side up to let the fat drain off.
- Turn up the heat to 340 degrees F to cook the white meat. Repeat the coating and frying process for the white meat. Note that the white meat will cook faster. Approximately 7 minutes for the breasts and 6 minutes for the wings.
My first piece didn’t cook at all which is why I just went to boiling all the pieces before hand and then frying only a couple minutes after that. Can’t have Deester eating uncooked chicken – gross! Plus, I boiled up some sliced carrots in the water after the chicken was done boiling. This gave the carrots such a good taste and Dee loved them.
- 5 lemons, halved
- 24 bay leaves
- 1 bunch flat-leaf parsley
- 1 bunch thyme
- 1/2 cup clover honey
- 1 head garlic, halved through the equator
- 1/4 cup black peppercorns
- 2 cups (10 ounces) kosher salt
- 2 gallons water
I know that it must look like we’re the most unhealthy people eating all this fried food but I promise the rest of the times it’s rice and vegetables so we like to throw in some good ol’ American fatty food when we can :)
♥ meg
Filed under: Children, Family, Food, Monday Meals | Tagged: american, baker bettie, brine recipe, carrot slices, carrots, comfort food, cooking, dee, dinner, dipping station, family, food, fried chicken, game day food, meals, meg, monday meals, southern, super bowl food, teaspoon cayenne | 5 Comments »


























