One of my favourite food to eat is fried chicken, but unfortunately I have never been very good at making it. Every time I make fried chicken, the outside is extremely crispy and flakey but the inside was always tasteless. I could not understand why this kept happening until I discovered a technique called brining. Brining is the method of submerging an ingredient in a salt-water mixture for a few hours prior to cooking.
Today, I want to share with you a fried chicken recipe that I stumbled upon in one of my favourite cookbooks – Momofuku Cookbook. I do not take any credit for this recipe, but I have enjoyed it over the months and I have made a few tweaks to it here and there accounting for my personal taste.
Ingredients
4 cups lukewarm water
¼ cup honey
8 garlic cloves
1 tablespoon black peppercorn (ground pepper works fine as a substitute)
½ cup kosher salt
3-4 pound chicken, cut into pieces
4 cups grapeseed or other natural cooking oil (vegetable oil works fine)
In order to brine the chicken, combine the water, honey, cloves, peppercorn and kosher salt together. Mix the ingredients and add the pieces of chicken – sometimes I am extremely picky when it comes to my fried chicken and instead of purchasing an entire bird; I just pick up drumsticks and wings. I have never enjoyed fried chicken breast but everyone is has their opinions.
Have I mentioned that most of the recipes in Momofuku’s cookbook are not something that you can prepare and cook on the whim? Most of his recipes take hours of preparation, but thankfully this recipe only requires a lot of downtime preparation. Let the pieces of chicken sit in the brine for at least an hour but for no more than six.
This part gets extremely weird. Normally a regular fried chicken recipe would require you to dip it into some sort of batter, whether it be a beer batter or a butter milk batter but instead we are going to steam the chicken. This process allows the chicken to fully cook and once you fry the chicken, you get an extremely crispy piece of chicken!
Place the pieces of chicken into a steamer and steam for 40 minutes, or until cooked. One of the easiest ways to tell if your chicken is cooked without a meat thermometer is to stick the chicken and see if the juices that flow out are running clear.
After steaming the chicken, chill the cooked chicken in the fridge for at least two hours, or overnight if you are not in a hurry to prepare it.
When ready to cook the chicken, take the chicken out half an hour before you intend to fry it. I know, there is a lot of waiting, but I promise you, patience is a virtue.
Heat up the oil to 350 degrees Fahrenheit (175 degrees Celsius) in a deep skillet. It is essential to get the oil temperature to this exact temperature to fry the chicken properly. If you do not have an frying thermometer, you can easily pick one up from your local supermarket. I personally use this one – Frying Thermometer
Fry the chicken in batches to prevent overcrowding and sudden drops in the frying oil’s temperature. Cook the chicken for 6 to 8 minutes, flipping once to ensure that both sides turn a deep brown. Remove the chicken and place on a rack to let excess oil seep out. I do not like using paper towels to catch excess oil as the chicken is touching the paper towel and the skin gets extremely soggy after a while.
Serve with your favourite sauce. Bon Appétit!
Oh, I almost forgot. David Chang, author of Momofuku, suggests that you use Chef Kevin Pemoulie’s octo vinaigrette sauce for his chicken. I absolutely love his octo vinaigrette and I use it on just about anything and everything. I always have a batch at home on handy in case I need to dip anything in. They go great with steamed seafood and fried dumplings!
Ingredients
2 tablespoons finely chopped garlic
2 tablespoons finely chopped peeled fresh ginger
1 fresh bird’s eye or Serrano chile
¼ cup rice wine vinegar
¼ cup light soy sauce
2 tablespoons grapeseed or other neutral oil (vegetable is fine)
¼ teaspoon Asian sesame oil
1 ½ tablespoon sugar
Freshly ground pepper, to taste
This recipe couldn’t be any simpler. Combine all ingredients in a lidded container and shake. Use within four to five days (if it even lasts that long!). I find that the octo vinaigrette tastes better after you leave it alone for a few hours so if you plan on using the octo vinaigrette with the fried chicken recipe, make it while you are brining the chicken.
[I will add pictures as soon as I figure out how to take professional quality food pictures. That is the one thing that I have to admit that I am not quite good at.]