The Food Lab: Four Secrets to Improving Any Fried Chicken Recipe (2024)

Really great Southern fried chicken needs two things: juicy, flavorful meat and an ultra-crisp and crunchy crust. Here are four quick and easy ways to achieve both. The best part? These tricks will work for any fried chicken recipe you've got, whether it's the old family standard, a fried chicken sandwich, chicken fingers, or even General Tso's. They're 100% guaranteed to make you the King of Crunch.

Fried Chicken Secret #1: A Salty Marinade = Juicier Meat

The Food Lab: Four Secrets to Improving Any Fried Chicken Recipe (1)

How It Works

Most Southern fried chicken recipes start with a bath in a seasoned marinade of some sort, whether it's buttermilk, milk and eggs, or even pickle juice. Adding plenty of salt to this mixture can help your chicken stay moist.

This works in the exact same manner as a brine. A standard brine is a solution of salt dissolved in water (around 6% salt by weight). As chicken sits in a brine, the salt dissolves proteins in the meat's muscle structure, loosening it and allowing it to retain more moisture as it cooks. Brined chickens lose 30 to 40% less moisture than un-brined chickens.

How to Do It

In order to make a brine with a 6% salt concentration, I add half an ounce of salt for every cup of marinade. This translates to about one and a half tablespoons of Diamond Crystal kosher salt per cup, one tablespoon of Morton's kosher salt per cup, or two teaspoons of regular table salt per cup.

I've gone on record saying that I never brine my chickens or turkeys, as a standard brine can water down the flavor of the meat. For recipes that already have a marinade step built in, on the other hand, you can only benefit from adding the correct amount of salt to that marinade.

Fried Chicken Secret #2: Add Vodka to the Marinade

The Food Lab: Four Secrets to Improving Any Fried Chicken Recipe (2)

How It Works

Adding vodka to your marinade mixture helps create a crust that stays light and crunchy instead of heavy, greasy, or leathery. How does this work?

As chicken fries, liquid evaporates and the breading dehydrates. After that, proteins in the marinade and flour will set and start to brown, giving the crust flavor. The more surface area you have, the crunchier the crust and the more flavorful the bird.

Vodka helps in both of these realms. First, it's much more volatile than water (which is the main component of buttermilk, pickle juice, or pretty much any other fried chicken marinade you'll be using). As such, it evaporates much more rapidly and violently. This helps drive moisture off the crust of the chicken faster, while also creating bigger vapor bubbles, adding surface area to the crust. Both of these things mean crisper, lighter fried chicken.

Finally, vodka also inhibits gluten formation. Gluten is the protein network that is created when flour and water are combined. This is important for things like bread and pizza crust, where a stretchy, chewy structure is desirable, but for crisp crusts, you want to minimize gluten development.

How to Do It

For extra-crisp crusts, I add an ounce of vodka (two tablespoons) for every cup of liquid in my marinade. (For the record, any high-proof spirit—try bourbon!—will work.)

Fried Chicken Secret #3: Add Liquid to Your Dredging Mixture

The Food Lab: Four Secrets to Improving Any Fried Chicken Recipe (3)

How It Works

Have you ever noticed that if you're breading a big batch of chicken, the pieces you bread toward the end come out crisper, crunchier, and with more surface area than the ones you bread at the start? This is because as you work, bits of marinade drip off the chicken and into the dry seasoned flour mixture, forming little clumps that then stick to subsequent pieces of chicken. As the chicken fries, these clumps dehydrate, brown, and crisp, adding extra flavor and crunch.

The Food Lab: Four Secrets to Improving Any Fried Chicken Recipe (4)

So why not take advantage of this phenomenon by adding some moisture to your dry seasoned flour mixture to begin with?

How to Do It

For each cup of dredging flour called for in the recipe, I drizzle about two tablespoons of marinade into it. After drizzling the marinade on top, I then work it into the flour with my fingertips or a whisk before adding the chicken pieces to coat them. Try it—your fried chicken will be crunchier than ever!

Fried Chicken Secret #4: Double-Fry It

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How It Works

Frying removes moisture from the crust and leaves it crunchy, but you can't fry it any longer than it takes the meat underneath to cook. Leave the chicken in too long, and you'll end up with an extra-crispy crust, but dry, overcooked meat. By frying once, allowing the chicken to chill completely, then frying again a second time, you end up with extra-crunchy crust and meat that's still plenty juicy.

How to Do It

Fry your chicken as usual, then let it rest at room temperature for at least half an hour before frying it again. You can even chill and refrigerate the chicken overnight and fry it a second time just before eating it. This is a wonderful way to rejuvenate fried chicken leftovers (as if such a thing exists), and your chicken will end up even better on the second day.

July 2015

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The Food Lab: Four Secrets to Improving Any Fried Chicken Recipe (2024)

FAQs

What is best flour or starch for fried chicken? ›

I got the best results when using a 50-50 blend of potato starch and wheat flour by weight. The wheat flour facilitates browning, while the potato starch provides structure, cohesion, and that all important crunch factor.

How to make fried chicken 5 steps? ›

You're looking at an hour and a half to two hours.
  1. Step 1: Prep. Start by putting 1/2" of oil on medium heat. ...
  2. Step 2: Coat the Chicken. Put a couple pieces in the plastic container cover and shake. ...
  3. Step 3: Fry the Chicken. ...
  4. Step 4: Season. ...
  5. Step 5: Prepare the Rest of the Meal. ...
  6. 8 Comments.

How to make fried chicken stay crispy? ›

4. Use egg whites, alcohol, and cornstarch for a crispy coating.
  1. Egg white adds structure in the form of protein. It also helps the flour coating stick to the chicken like culinary glue. ...
  2. Alcohol evaporates quickly in the frying oil. ...
  3. Cornstarch in the flour makes the crust crispier.

What is the trick to getting crispy chicken? ›

Potato starch: The key to a crispy chicken is adding a bit of starch into your flour mix. It can be either potato starch or corn starch but the chicken turns out a LOT crispier and stays crispier if you use potato starch. All-purpose flour: We will also need all-purpose flour in the dry mix.

What makes fried chicken not crispy? ›

If your oil temp is too high, your fried chicken will be scorched on the outside with meat that is undercooked. If the oil is too cool, your chicken will be greasy and will lack the golden-brown crispy exterior you want.

Is cornstarch or baking powder better for crispy chicken? ›

The baking powder raises the pH of the surface, allowing it to crisp better*), and tossing in plain cornstarch to absorb some surface moisture and create a rougher texture for the batter to adhere to. *See more on the science of baking powder and chicken wings in this article on oven-fried buffalo wings.

What is the crispiest flour for frying? ›

Rice flour and cornstarch work particularly well because they fry up crispier than wheat flour. They also absorb less moisture and fat during the frying process, making the products less greasy. This is why rice flour is often used when making tempura because it produces a very thin and crispy, dry crust.

What happens when you add cornstarch to flour for fried chicken? ›

When paired with all-purpose flour, cornstarch helps prevent gluten development, which makes the flour coating crispier, and absorb moisture (from the frying and the chicken), which also means a crispier coating. If you already have a favorite fried chicken recipe, try replacing a quarter of the flour with cornstarch.

When frying chicken do you dip in egg or flour first? ›

Batter the chicken:

The trick to getting the batter to stick to the chicken pieces properly is to dip the chicken into the seasoned flour, before dipping into the egg mixture. The flour helps the egg mixture adhere to the chicken. Then dip the chicken back into the flour mixture.

Does baking powder make chicken crispy? ›

That trick is a sprinkling of baking powder, and it'll get you the crispiest, crackliest bites of fatty, salty skin imaginable, whether you're cooking just one thigh, a plate of wings, or an entire bird. Baking powder, it turns out, is good for quite a lot more than baking.

What is the best oil to fry chicken in? ›

Canola Oil

Benefits: With a high smoke point and neutral flavor, canola oil is excellent for frying chicken. As an added bonus, it has high levels of omega-3 and omega-6 fatty acids, which makes it healthier than other options.

Is buttermilk necessary for fried chicken? ›

Traditionally, buttermilk has been used as a marinade for fried chicken, as it helps to tenderize the meat and keep it moist during cooking. However, with our recipe, you'll discover that buttermilk is not necessary to achieve a juicy and crispy fried chicken.

How many minutes to fry chicken in oil? ›

This usually equates to around 10 minutes for wings and 12 minutes for breasts, thighs and legs. For the best tasting fried chicken with a beautifully even golden crumb, turn your chicken pieces with tongs (being careful not to splash yourself with hot oil) every 1 – 2 minutes.

How to keep the breading from falling off chicken fried chicken? ›

Always dip your chicken in beaten egg before coating

Dipping your chicken in egg helps the breadcrumbs, or whatever coating you use, adhere evenly to the outside of the cutlet. You should start with a thin layer of flour, which gives the egg a better surface to cling to, then the egg, then the coating.

What is the key to frying chicken? ›

Fry It Hot

If the fryer oil is too cold, the breading will get oil-logged and soggy—how sad! Get your chicken crispy by frying at temperatures around 375°. Keep in mind that the temperature will go down when you drop in the chicken, so make sure to turn the heat up a bit to compensate.

Why do you soak chicken in salt water before frying? ›

It helps flavor the meat. When brining a chicken, you allow the taste of the solution to penetrate through the surface and penetrate the deeper recesses of the chicken with flavor. It means the flesh is already flavorful without breading. It helps keep the meat moist.

Why do people soak chicken in milk before frying? ›

Marinating chicken with milk helps to tenderize the meat, making it juicier and more flavorful.

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