FOOD |
||||
|
scream-of-consciousness; "If you're trying to change minds and influence people it's probably not a good idea to say that virtually all elected Democrats are liars, but what the hell."
Saturday, August 20, 2016
"If the number of Islamic terror attacks continues at the current rate, candlelight vigils will soon be the number-one cause of global warming. " |
5 comments:
- Unknown said...
-
First off, KFC Original Recipe chicken isn't pan-fried or deep-fried, it's pressure-fried. So, without a pressure cooker, you're never going to replicate it.
And in the late '30s, when the Colonel started making his famous chicken, I don't think anybody'd ever heard of canola oil; that's a relatively new addition to supermarket shelves.
So the spice ingredients may be accurate (and anyone with a sufficiently sensitive and experienced palate can probably get it close) but the rest of the "recipe" strikes me as bogus.
- 8/20/16, 8:30 AM
- leelu said...
-
Stu: Agreed.
I worked for the Colonel (not Pepsico or whomever) when I was in high school. IIRC, it was a bag of seasoning mixed into a standard amount of flour. Chix was dredged thru the mix, and the dropped into the pressure cooker.
Used oil was strained, and the 'debris' dried in a pint salad container the lived on the vent hood. When deemed 'ready', it was mixed w/ water and a bag or 'gravy' mix. Which was as close as the gravy ever got to a chicken. - 8/20/16, 12:04 PM
-
-
I worked at a KFC while in high school in the late 80's. We fried the chicken in lard. It came in a cardboard box, as if they took a box with a blue plastic bag and filled it with liquid lard and left if solidify. After we cleaned a pressurized deep fryer, we'd cut the block into chunks, toss em in the fryer and melt them. IIRC, extra crispy was marinated before-hand, original was not. Original was dipped in buttermilk and breaded in flour that had a spice mix bag added to it. Extra crispy was just dipped in buttermilk, breaded (in flour only), dipped again, and breaded again. French fries and nugget-like stuff was fried in some kind of oil, don't remember how we did the gizzards. Clean up involved a lot of hot water, and your shoes were half breaded by the time you left.
- 8/21/16, 9:30 PM
- Bookdoc said...
-
I worked for KFC back in the 70's as a manager and trainer. The chicken was never cooked in lard-that was hydrogenated vegetable shortening. The flour came in 25 lb. bags and was mixed with a large quantity of flour salt (very finely ground salt) and the bag of seasonings. Then it was dipped in a milk and egg mixture and breaded. We cooked it in a 103-C automated pressure fryer that handled the pressure, temperature, and time. The cracklings should NEVER have been left out to sit. They were drained in the cooler and made a fantastic gravy when properly handled. The Colonel used to say "pitch the chicken and eat the gravy"!.
- 8/22/16, 11:28 AM
-
-
I say Rajah. You've taken on this subject of pressure cooking chicken before. Do you have a link to that effort. My recollection is that broasting chicken requires peanut oil.
Casca - 8/22/16, 4:39 PM