Grandma's Southern Fried Chicken

"Just plain ol' good!!! This is actually my very own concoction, because my Grandma never usually measured when she cooked. :) But it definately tastes like my Grandma's and my Great Aunt's!"
 
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photo by Wildflour photo by Wildflour
photo by Wildflour
photo by Chef shapeweaver photo by Chef shapeweaver
photo by Wildflour photo by Wildflour
photo by Misty P. photo by Misty P.
photo by puppitypup photo by puppitypup
Ready In:
1hr 10mins
Ingredients:
17
Serves:
4-6
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ingredients

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directions

  • Wash chicken pieces and place in a deep bowl. Cover with buttermilk and hot sauce, and refrigerate at least 2 hours.
  • Melt shortening in a cast iron skillet to a depth of about 1 inch.
  • Heat to about 370º. (No thermometer needed, really. It'll get hot enough while chicken rests AFTER coating if you have your flame on about medium.) If it starts to smoke, turn it down immediately a bit.
  • In a doubled brown paper lunch sack, mix together all of the dry ingredients.
  • Remove chicken from bowl.
  • Using additional seasoned salt and pepper, lightly coat to season chicken.
  • Place chicken in bag, one piece at a time. Shake well until thoroughly coated.
  • Dip each piece in the buttermilk and coat with flour once again.
  • Shake off excess; place on waxed paper for 15 minutes or until dry.
  • Place chicken, skin side down, in hot shortening.
  • Do not crowd skillet.
  • Brown until golden on bottom (good)(skin) side. When chicken pieces are golden on one side, turn pieces over, cover with tight fitting lid, and reduce heat to a simmer, turning chicken pieces ocaisionally, for 35 to 40 minutes or until juices run clear and chicken is tender. *When lid is placed on, and heat is reduced to a good simmer, the good side of pieces are the top sides. After about 10 minutes, turn back to skin-side down. After another 10 minutes or so, turn back to skin-side up for the last 10-15 minutes.).
  • Uncover and cook 5 minutes longer for "crispy on the outside" crust. Remove at once, skipping this step, if a softer outside is preferred. My grandma and great aunts always drained their fried chicken on brown paper grocery bags. This seems to work best for me, too. Paper towels work "ok", too. *If doubling or making alot of chicken, or just wanting to keep it warm til the rest of your side dishes are done and ready to serve, place chicken on brown paper bag-lined cookie sheet in very low oven. GREAT cold, too!
  • 4-6 servings.
  • To make chicken fingers:

  • Use 4 boneless skinless chicken breasts, cut into strips about a 1/2-3/4 " thick. I skipped the buttermilk and hot sauce part, and dipped them into the flour mixture first, then into 1 egg beaten with about a half of a cup of half and half cream and a little hot sauce. Then back into the flour mixture. Worked out PERFECTLY. I lightly browned them in hot oil on one side, turned them, then put a lid on them. I then only cooked them for 8 minutes. I removed the lid, turned them and cooked them another minute. Drained them on paper towel.YUM!
  • *One extra tip: Don't ever turn chicken by piercing with a fork, all the juices will run out and the meat will be dry. Always use tongs and have a sharp spatula handy to get underneath just in case a little bit wants to stick. You don't want to lose that good breading! :).

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Reviews

  1. The Chicken came out lovely. I, as always modified it but the paper bag method is new to me, and I liked it. It makes things alot easier and there's less to clean later. My dish was the hit of the pot luck fundraiser we had to re install the Confederate flag to its rightful place over the state house!
     
  2. Absolutely OUTSTANDING, hence the 5 stars! I would give it 10, if I could. This is, by far, the BEST chicken recipe out there. Great job, Wildflour, on your concoction. I made chicken breast strips for the family, prepared following your instructions for the cut-up broiler-fryer chickens. I marinted for just two hours and coated the strips in the dry ingredients and then put them back into the buttermilk/hot sauce and once again into the dry ingredients. The strips were nicely crisped. The chicken was moist. The seasonings were right-on. No dipping sauce needed. Thank you for giving us a new family-favorite way to prepare chicken strips. Try this one; you won't be sorry.
     
  3. Wow, yum! This is great. The buttermilk really does marinate the chicken to create a really lovely moist and tender result. For us I used about 1 kilo of breast fillets cut into bite size pieces. Instead of one bag of flour mix I made up two and took the chicken from the marinade into the first bag, shook it off then into the drained off buttermilk then into the second bag of flour mix and onto the baking paper to sit. I served with baked potato gems and chicken gravox.
     
  4. I did everything exactly like the recipe said but my breading didn't stick!
     
  5. I used chicken tenders and they came out great! Breading is incredibly tasty. I used a little less garlic powder and cut seasoned salt down by half. My kids loved them.
     
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RECIPE SUBMITTED BY

Hello! Former caterer and restaurant owner taking life slower now and just enjoying photographing my food creations and blogging them! Pop on over to my blog to see over 800 of my recipes at Wildflour's Cottage Kitchen @ wildflourskitchen.com !
 
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