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Fried Chicken

Posted on May 4, 2026 by foodiefusion

Since we already touched on the Southern-style method earlier, let’s refine this into the absolute gold standard of Fried Chicken. If you are serving this alongside a Ribeye, Pasta Bake, and Cabbage Soup, you need a crust that stays crunchy even when it hits the plate next to those “wet” sides.

The secret to that “glass-like” crunch? Cornstarch and the “Wait” method.


🍗 The “Shatter-Crunch” Southern Fried Chicken

The Ingredients

The Brine (The Moisture Lock):

  • 1 kg (2.2 lbs) Chicken pieces (bone-in, skin-on)

  • 2 cups Buttermilk

  • 2 tbsp Pickle juice (The “secret” used by famous chicken joints for tang)

  • 1 tbsp Hot sauce

The Dredge (The Crunch Factor):

  • 2 cups All-purpose flour

  • 1/2 cup Cornstarch (Provides that crisp, non-greasy finish)

  • 1 tbsp Smoked paprika

  • 1 tbsp Garlic powder

  • 1 tsp Cayenne pepper (adjust for heat)

  • 2 tsp Salt & 1 tsp Black pepper


The Instructions

  1. Marinate: Submerge the chicken in the buttermilk, pickle juice, and hot sauce. Let it sit for at least 4 hours. This breaks down the proteins so the meat stays juicy even if the oil is hot.

  2. The “Craggy” Secret: When you’re ready to coat, take 3 tablespoons of the buttermilk brine and whisk it into your dry flour/spice mix. This creates little “flakes” in the flour that turn into those giant crunchy crags once fried.

  3. The Coating: Remove chicken from the brine, let the excess drip off, and press it firmly into the flour. Really pack it on.

  4. The 15-Minute Rule: Place the coated chicken on a wire rack for 15 minutes before frying.

    Why? This allows the flour to hydrate and form a “glue” with the chicken. If you fry immediately, the breading often slides right off.

  5. The Fry: Heat oil to 175°C (350°F). Fry in batches.

    • Drumsticks/Thighs: 12–14 minutes.

    • Breasts: 8–10 minutes.

  6. The Drain: Never drain on paper towels! Use a wire rack. Paper towels trap steam, which turns your crispy skin soggy in seconds.


🧥 Comparison: Coating Styles

Since your menu now has a lot of “crispy” items, here is how they stack up:

Dish Coating Texture Best For…
Fried Chicken Flour & Cornstarch Thick, Craggy, Hard-Crunch The Main Star
Pork Chop Bites Panko Breadcrumbs Light, Airy, Spiky Snacking/Appetizers
Fried Bombs Fine Breadcrumbs Thin, Snap-like Shell Holding in Molten Filling

💡 The “Pro” Serving Move

Since you have the Cabbage Soup on the menu, try this: Serve the chicken on a separate platter so the steam doesn’t affect the soup, but provide a small bowl of Hot Honey (honey simmered with chili flakes) for dipping.

This chicken, combined with the Ribeye and Slow Cooker Pasta, officially makes this the “Dinner of a Lifetime.”

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