
Why is fried chicken so important? Because it is everything we love about life. It is extravagant. It is mouth-watering. It is simple yet it brings signficant pleasure. It is a self-love thing though it reminds me of the best parts of any kind of love. It's why all French food has butter, butter and more butter in it. Life is too short to not eat fried chicken and too long to go without it. The little pieces are as good as the big ones and anything that goes this well with jalepeno cheddar grits is perfect in and of itself. Enough said? No? Well if you are too dense for food to be the religious experience it was meant to be then you aren't reading this blog anyway. And if you are looking for the low-fat version then you should never visit France (where they are signficantly skinnier than we are) and you should stop reading now. I use lard in my fried chicken and would use double-lard if I could find such a thing. I will do an ode to rendered pig fat in a future post.
Ok now down to the part I love. Fried chicken is EASY to make and make right every time. You will need:
- 1 cast iron pan
- 1 meat thermometer
- 1 chicken - if you take the skin off I have no pity for you, if you want to kill your spirit that is your problem but I have it on good authority a kitten dies every time you eat skinless chicken...
- 1 quart of buttermilk
- 2 T of poultry seasoning mix (get it at HEB or other stores)
- 2 T of rubbed sage
- 2 T of fresh cracked pepper (I grind mine in a cast iron mortar because pepper is awesome)
- 1 T of kosher salt (please please please use kosher salt instead of that other nasty stuff, your food will be less salty and won't taste like chemicals)
- 1 bag of HEB 'frying flour' (I have no idea if you can get this where you live)
- 3 huge spoons of Crisco - each will be about the size of a small fist
- Half a 'stick' of lard
Turn the heat on. On my gas stove I turn it to 3-4 which is medium-high. Add 2 spoons of Crisco and half the lard and let it go all pretty and clear. Make sure it isnt too hot. I like to let it warm up and then add a 'flick' of water. When the water starts making a beautiful crackling sound it is hot enough. And now all you have to do is use some tongs to grab the chicken out of the buttermilk and dredge it in the flour. I also like to add the extra batter that forms from the buttermilk drippings because it allows me to eat the whole time. Cook until the meat is 180 but make sure you don't burn it (keep the temp low enough). Biggest mistake I've made is frying with the fat too hot. Raw chicken and burnt batter suck big time.
And that is it. You may now take time to thank the universe for the gift it has given you in the form of crispy seasoned fried heaven.