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-   -   McDonald's Southern-Style Chicken (https://greekchat.com/gcforums/showthread.php?t=96911)

lillady85 06-10-2008 12:26 AM

Oh jeez...

Mods, can someone pretty please remove Mr. Hell and his buddies' posts?


Somehow I don't think the Man train pics belong in the McDonald's Chicken Sandwich thread.

EE-BO 06-10-2008 11:14 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by honeychile (Post 1665241)
Eggs and buttermilk? I've soaked it in buttermilk, drained it, then fried it, but never tried it with egg. My mother can get a good "scald" on it, but for some reason, I still struggle. Sometimes I think it's because I know she'll make it, since I can't! ;)

PS: Cast iron fryer?

Actually, I fry chicken in a big old Circulon frying pan that was part of the stash of essentials Mom packed me off to college with as a freshman. It is very heavy, but not sure if it is iron or not.

That pan has seen a good 15 years of use and is perfectly cured at this point. Having a well-used cured frying pan makes a big difference. When I got all new pots and pans last year, I kept the old frying pans and only got 1 new one.

What I do is blend 2 eggs into about 2 cups of buttermilk and then soak the chicken (usually I make chicken tenders) for a bit in the fridge. Then I heat vegetable oil in the pan on med-high heat- maybe 1/4 in deep for tenders and 1/2 inch for pieces. When I roll the chicken in the flour mix, I don't even both draining off the milk. So you have to roll each piece by hand to be sure the outer coating of flour is dry. If you shake them in a baggie with flour or do not get lots of flour on there, the crust will stay gooey and soft when you cook the chicken.

The first batch cooking on the first side will always take the longest- even with the oil preheated for a couple of minutes. And I just let them go until they are very dark brown and then flip them. The chicken will cook most of the way on the first side, and the second side will go faster and really be more about getting the crust crispy.

One pan can do about 3 batches at which point there is too much loose flour and batter mixed with the oil that starts to blacken and will make additional batches more soft and doughey while never getting a good browning throughout.

So if you are making more than 3 panfuls- after the 3rd pan just quickly scrape the old oil and other stuff into a cup, put the pan back on the stove and add more oil. It will heat up again pretty fast.

For draining, I put the pieces on paper towels and do not stack them. Once they have drained a bit and cooled down some- then they will be good and crispy.

Final note- if you, like me, enjoy fried chicken cold as well, put leftovers in the fridge uncovered. You can stack the pieces at that point, but don't put a lid on the container. Or if you must seal them, do it in aluminum foil and do not stack the pieces. Then they can go in the fridge for 3-4 days and keep that crispiness.

honeychile 06-10-2008 11:35 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by NutBrnHair (Post 1665653)
OMG!

Not sure if this thread will continue, but...

I was gonna say that -- honeychile, I agree with you 99% of the time, BUT

NO WAY is McDonald's chicken as good as Chick-fil-A -- Come on Chick-fil-A uses peanut oil!

::::::::shaking head:::::::::

But it was Sunday! No Chik-Fil-A on Sunday! I was going for the next best thing! *hangs head*

Quote:

Originally Posted by EE-BO (Post 1665883)
Actually, I fry chicken in a big old Circulon frying pan that was part of the stash of essentials Mom packed me off to college with as a freshman. It is very heavy, but not sure if it is iron or not.

That pan has seen a good 15 years of use and is perfectly cured at this point. Having a well-used cured frying pan makes a big difference. When I got all new pots and pans last year, I kept the old frying pans and only got 1 new one.

What I do is blend 2 eggs into about 2 cups of buttermilk and then soak the chicken (usually I make chicken tenders) for a bit in the fridge. Then I heat vegetable oil in the pan on med-high heat- maybe 1/4 in deep for tenders and 1/2 inch for pieces. When I roll the chicken in the flour mix, I don't even both draining off the milk. So you have to roll each piece by hand to be sure the outer coating of flour is dry. If you shake them in a baggie with flour or do not get lots of flour on there, the crust will stay gooey and soft when you cook the chicken.

The first batch cooking on the first side will always take the longest- even with the oil preheated for a couple of minutes. And I just let them go until they are very dark brown and then flip them. The chicken will cook most of the way on the first side, and the second side will go faster and really be more about getting the crust crispy.

One pan can do about 3 batches at which point there is too much loose flour and batter mixed with the oil that starts to blacken and will make additional batches more soft and doughey while never getting a good browning throughout.

So if you are making more than 3 panfuls- after the 3rd pan just quickly scrape the old oil and other stuff into a cup, put the pan back on the stove and add more oil. It will heat up again pretty fast.

For draining, I put the pieces on paper towels and do not stack them. Once they have drained a bit and cooled down some- then they will be good and crispy.

Final note- if you, like me, enjoy fried chicken cold as well, put leftovers in the fridge uncovered. You can stack the pieces at that point, but don't put a lid on the container. Or if you must seal them, do it in aluminum foil and do not stack the pieces. Then they can go in the fridge for 3-4 days and keep that crispiness.

Thank you! I'll try your method this weekend!

Educatingblue 06-10-2008 12:39 PM

On the day they had the "free" sandwiches with the purchase of a drink, I tried the breakfast sandwich and it was only OK. It tastes a lot like the Chik-fil-A biscuit, but not quite there. I HATED the lunch/dinner sandwich because it was too soggy. If I am going to have a chicken sandwich, it better be grilled or "fried hard"!

cheerfulgreek 06-10-2008 12:46 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by honeychile (Post 1665095)
But today, we stopped at Micky D's Arby's
Chik-Fil-A

More artery clogging food. McDonalds, Arby's, KFC, BK, ect ect. clogs up the digestive tract too. A clogged digestive tract with Mickie Ds, Arby's, KFC, and BK left over fecal matter causes slow brain activity.:rolleyes:

MysticCat 06-10-2008 12:50 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by cheerfulgreek (Post 1665935)
More artery clogging food. McDonalds, Arby's, KFC, BK, ect ect. clogs up the digestive tract too. A clogged digestive tract with Mickie Ds, Arby's, KFC, and BK left over fecal matter causes slow brain activity.:rolleyes:

http://images.teamsugar.com/files/up...0_2.larger.jpg

cheerfulgreek 06-10-2008 12:51 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by MysticCat (Post 1665939)

lol lol lol Who is she?

cheerfulgreek 06-10-2008 01:02 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DSTCHAOS (Post 1665942)
haha...but she's right. She just said it in a "fast food thread."

I avoid fast food at all costs.

You and me both. I avoid it like biohazardous waste.:p

cheerfulgreek 06-10-2008 01:08 PM

Hmmmm...should I train wreck this thread by describing how the digestive system has a hard time breaking down large molecules of Taco Hell into smaller molecules?

lol lol. nah, I'll be nice.:D

ladylike 06-10-2008 01:13 PM

:rolleyes:

MysticCat 06-10-2008 06:06 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DSTCHAOS (Post 1665942)
haha...but she's right.

Sure -- everybody knows it ain't good for you, but people all the time choose to do things they find enjoyable even though they may not be healthy, so why be a Debbie Downer by stating the obvious? :p

Meden Agan.

cheerfulgreek 06-10-2008 06:27 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by MysticCat (Post 1666152)
Sure -- everybody knows it ain't good for you, but people all the time choose to do things they find enjoyable even though they may not be healthy, so why be a Debbie Downer by stating the obvious? :p

Meden Agan.

I've never heard of Debbie Downer until today maybe because I don't watch Saturday Night live. MytsicCat You're right though, you really wouldn't care that it isn't healthy until you go to the doctor and he/she tells you that you have gastrointestinal cancer, in other words, colon cancer which has been associated with diets high in fat and sugar and low in fiber, such as Taco Hell, Micky Ds, BK, Arby's ect. In societies that traditionally have a low incidence of colon cancer, such as the Japanese, it just seems like when people begin to eat a Westernize diet of refined foods and high fat, such as (lol lol) :p Taco Hell, Micky Ds, BK, Arby's, ect. the risk of colon cancer increases.:)

I couldn't resist.http://l.yimg.com/us.yimg.com/i/mesg/emoticons7/10.gif

EE-BO 06-10-2008 06:43 PM

I have been on a diet for about 4 months now and it has gone great. But it is not really a diet- but more a complete shift in how I eat. I eat lots of small meals a day and cook most of my own food.

But I also eat out a fair amount. Last weekend I even had a cheeseburger at a lake party here in town- but it was "homemade" and not fast food. And it was fine. Plus I still go for wine lunches every 2-3 weeks and that is duck liver pate, cream soups, butter on everything and all. And I can take it.

About 6 weeks ago I was driving to Houston right after a really long swim, and I was starving. I finally gave in and went to McDonald's. The burger tasted like pure salt and oil. I could not even eat the fries. And I had a stomachache for about an hour.

I used to eat fast food 2-3 times a week, sometimes more. I just can't eat it anymore. I can eat cheeseburgers, fries, fried chicken, nachos etc.- but only homemade or at a mid-scale restaurant like Chili's. There is just something in fast food that I physically cannot take.

MysticCat 06-10-2008 07:12 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by cheerfulgreek (Post 1666165)
MytsicCat You're right though, you really wouldn't care that it isn't healthy until you go to the doctor and he/she tells you that you have gastrointestinal cancer, in other words, colon cancer which has been associated with diets high in fat and sugar and low in fiber, such as Taco Hell, Micky Ds, BK, Arby's ect. In societies that traditionally have a low incidence of colon cancer, such as the Japanese, it just seems like when people begin to eat a Westernize diet of refined foods and high fat, such as (lol lol) :p Taco Hell, Micky Ds, BK, Arby's, ect. the risk of colon cancer increases.:)

I couldn't resist.http://l.yimg.com/us.yimg.com/i/mesg/emoticons7/10.gif

Lemme know when you cut out high-fructose corn syrup as well -- much more insidious, I think. We can start a list from there.

And next time, go ahead . . . resist. ;)

Quote:

Originally Posted by DSTCHAOS (Post 1666174)
Unfortunately not everyone really knows it's bad for you. Many people take a neutral approach of it not being that healthy but not being that bad.

Take it all in stride and go back to celebrating the joys of chicken sandwiches. :)

But I'm the one who doesn't think they're that good. :(

Agreed, though -- maybe I should have said everyone who pays attention at all.

LatinaAlumna 06-10-2008 08:36 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by LucyKKG (Post 1665119)
Being from California, I have no idea what Chik-Fil-A is.

Really? They have them all over the place in LA and Orange Counties.

I've tried the "southern-style" breakfast biscuit from McDonald's and thought it was rather dry tasting.


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