I cook a lot, and this technique is genuinely unlike anything I've seen before. It makes perfect sense, and the 3 fry technique seems like it could take enough time that you're on the verge of braising the chicken thighs and inducing collagen breakdown for extra tenderness. It's brilliant. Using potato starch is brilliant. Spraying it is brilliant. There's so much more innovation to this video than meets the eye. I've got a whole new level of respect for you. Incredibly well done!
He talks through everything in grams which leaves no room for mistakes if you follow the recipe exactly. I’ve basically become an expert on making pizza from just his videos.
Where's the dancing?? I love Brian's channel because he keeps making good recipes and making it accessible to an audience. He hasn't given in to the temptation of over-photoshopped thumbnails with food "challenges" or rankings (e.g. "I tried every fast food hamburger in the United States). The dude is cooking and helping us be more enthusiastic about it. Props.
Thanks for saying that. Strait up recipe content has been declining a bit on YT so I think some other creators are trying to find the 2021/covid era viewership.
@@BrianLagerstrom I made your enchiladas tonight. Mexican rice last night. Bread last week. I hope the algorithm continues to bless you because your recipes are the best in the game and it’s not close.
Just want to say Brian... We (my wife and I) have tried several of your recipes over the years of watching you, and never once have you let us down. Everything you have presented us with, is easy to understand, execute and tastes good. Thanks for what you do. We definitely enjoy your work (and our own when we follow your instructions).
Yes!!!! 😍 But he answered that question last year in his video called "Opening a Restaurant? Recipe Fails? Revealing Relationship Secrets!". Its at about 30min in.
As a Japanese, this is one of the most accurate and authentic karaage recipes I’ve ever seen from outside of Japan. Just personally, I love using chicken WITH skin for karaage. It adds extra crispness, juiciness, and depth of umami!
if you compare the picture of your japanes karaage and yours you have that white outer stuff in some spots thats just loose starch and not the crunchy craggly bits you want, you can avoid this by letting the chicken sit after coating so the coating absorbs some of the marinade and sticks to chicken more (less chance of it falling off when agitated during frying) its kinda hard to describe but once the coating doesnt look as "dry" anymore its perfect and you wont get the extra starch just sitting on the outside
When you cut from quartered raw chicken thigh to you biting into the fully cooked end product around a minute in it took my brain a half second to catch up and I genuinely thought you were just munching on raw chicken like it was no big deal.
Brian - thank you so much for the complete written recipe for Karaage chicken. Not only you included the substitutes but you also indicated both measurements which makes it easier for your viewers to make this very yummy fried chicken in Japanese version. You're the best!
Your channel, Kenji’s channel, Souped up recipes, and just one cookbook are among my top UA-cam cooking channels to follow. You’re really good at explaining and making recipes accessible. Thank you so much.
Just finished eating this. 10/10. Chicken was soooooo juicy and flavorful while breading was crispiest I’ve ever had. Like beer battered texture but crispier.
I've been making Karaage a lot lately and it's really fun to see the differences and similarities between our recipes. The absolute must with this recipe is straight Potato Starch...the rest you can play with. 😁 Do I have a batch in the fridge marinating? Yes, yes I do. 🤣
I’ve never gotten frying chicken quite right, but perhaps this triple fry method I’m reading in the description is the key: I’ll have to give this a go some weekend. Also, recipe idea: Do you have a take on making & maintaining a Ginger Bug for use in various homemade sodas? I unsuccessfully made one last week, so fingers crossed on Day 2 of my new one. (I think I used too much sugar.)
Potato starch is amazing. I've had karaage that was crispy/crunchy over a week after I'd made it and put it in the fridge. Apparently sweet potato starch is crispier/crunchier but it only lasts a couple hours at most.
I made this yesterday together with some friends and I have to say that every single one of us found it mind-blowing! BEST chicken I have ever had! You are just the best Brian
I just recently made karaage for the first time! My sister & I are both Celiac and it's been AGES since we enjoyed fried chicken. As usual, Brian, your method & recipe are top tier and I can't wait to try!
This video really is a godsend since I've recently developed an obsession with this japanese curry place near me that makes absolute bomb karaage fried chicken
Fried chicken across countries is a fascinating rabbit hole to go down. Ranging from AP flour to mochiko flour to potato starch combinations, plus having the right spices to spruce them up. Great stuff, I think you're spot on with this one (not that you need my approval).
Karaage is one of those things where you can easily say "What? It's just fried chicken." but once you have a good batch, you realize how game changing it really is.
100% on the graphic. I like "let's eat this thing", but I can kinda tell that in the past year or so, he's been feeling tired of it when it comes time to do it at the end of the video. I think that's a good way to maintain his roots while still feeling good about it.
Not only that, but sodium is one of the most important single elements of diet for proper function of all of our cells, and glutamate is the conjugate base of glutamic acid, which we need to survive. Granted, consuming it as a salt is fairly high concentration, and there are probably people who actually have a sensitivity (NOT ALLERGY) to high doses of glutamate, as it is a mediator of neurological excitation. But ain't nobody having major reactions to msg. Check the episode of This American Life called The Long Fuse for a fascinating dive into where our societal prejudices against msg came from.
I might be wrong, but I believe by using only potato starch, it’s actually categorised as “Tatsuta-age”! Which I think is such an interesting variant of fried chicken.. hehe :) and I think the addition of potato starch to karaage is much more common nowadays SPECIFICALLY for the texture of crunch :0
It used to be that way but now it is used interchangeably. So they are technically the same now today. Because many shops in Japan sells Karaage but only use potato starch and call/market it as Karaage.
lol I do think it should be a staple in people's pantries. Also kewpie mayo is so freaking good. Started putting it on things I never would normally do with regular mayo, like my hotdogs now.
Ngl, I think msg is kinda overrated. It really doesn't go in everything. Ever since Asian food went big on the internet, people have been losing their minds over it
im japanese, and over the years i've been cooking less and less japanese stuff and moving towards chinese and korean things cuz i like em more. karaage is the one of like, two japanese things you just can't beat. the other is beef bowl. and hey, tips for any vegetarians; you don't need meat for either of these. for karaage, you can sub with oyster mushrooms. all the flavor's in the marinade and stuff anyway, and oysters have great texture and hold onto the marinade really well. beef bowl, sub with textured veg protein. the beef used for beef bowl is best when it's nice and fatty, so add a ton of extra oil to compensate. i use a mix of neutral and sesame oil, turns out great.
I think texture wise potato starch is crucial, but for taste I think you should mix it at some ratio with flour. I think corn flour (not corn starch) could provide more crispiness. Maybe a blend of 50% potato starch and 25% corn flour and 25% APF.
This reminds me of my time enlisted with the Colonel. There was a specific method to breading the chicken that involved pressing the flour mixture into the chicken to help create a better crust. Same with the extra tasty crispy.
Are you certain it was whale? It's not unheard of for dolphin meat to be sold as whale meat. Both really shouldn't be on a plate. Too many are endangered. Also, there's no tracking down msg. It's sold in almost any grocery store under the Accent brand in the spice aisle next to the salt.
Thank you! This recipe gave me the crispiest karaage! I have tried so many. I am going to try kfc next. I am Korean so I am looking forward to it! Thank you!
Nothing wrong with MSG. The prejudice against it comes from racism and xenophobia, from way back when Chinese restaurants were the only non-Western restaurants in many US cities and towns, and was often low-cost chop suey houses. MSG is natural and perfectly safe.
Karaage has four syllables: ka-ra-a-ge, not three. Just put a glottal stop between the second and third to get kara'age. (At least he didn't call it an entirely different dish through the whole video, like that tonkatsu/tonkotsu mess.)
I hope the next time you're in NYC you go check out some of the really good karaage spots. I was amazed at how different each place treats this particular dish. And they all taste/feel completely different. They were all fantastic, but the treatment and the techniques, even oil temp was diff 😂
If you ever get back to Japan, Gramercy Table in Ginza makes a duck Karaage that is absolutely outstanding. They do rotate their menu frequently, but I'm sure it'll be back at some point.
Hi Bri! I’m trying to have a bean girl summer and need your help! Can you share more bean recipes? 🙏🏻I just tried the refried bean tostadas and they were so good
that seems like a great way to fry anything that can stand up to triple frying ... will try next time i make sweet and sour pork, mongolian beef, etc. thank you for making helpful, entertaining, educational and well made videos. I'm making your tonkatsu tonight and the water spritzing the potato starch in this recipe makes me wonder if it would enhance the tonkatsu?
I make a version of karaage that is 95% as good as this, but it’s shallow fried. This lets me use a quarter of the amount of oil that you’re using here. For such small bits of chicken, deep frying really isn’t as necessary as it is, say, for large chicken pieces like for US style fried chicken.
Unironically i love LMNT 💯 its my favorite electrolyte mix and it actually has a good anount electrolytes (unlike gatorade or smth) my favorite is the grapefruit and raspberry flavors
Kewpie isn't just better because of the MSG and Egg Yolks. It also has no sugar and no water to thin it down. Making it more tangy as well as umami as well as just concentrated. Great stuff! There is an American version of Kewpie mayo that is similar to western Mayo, and the easiest way to tell is just look at the ingredients, if it has No MSG, but has water and sugar, then it's not the Japanese version!
Another great video Brian. I am definitely intrigued and curious to try potato starch for frying, I've always relied on rice flour to achieve good crispness. I am also a fan of multiple fry sessions, that's how the best fries are made. Anyways, great work as always on your video. I definitely have an appreciation for how complicated filming is now that I do it myself
This is a very interesting approach that I'm eager to try. I grew up in the southern US and ate pan fried (rather than deep fried) chicken at home, dredged in flour. It's exceptional, but I am really curious about potato starch instead. I don't deep fry at home, so I wonder if the potato starch will work as well with shallow fat pan frying. I have a bag of it in my pantry from something I tried during the lockdown (but I have not memory of what that was).
Can you pre-make this by doing the first or first and second fry and then doing the third fry when guests arrive if you wanted to make this for a fun Friday happy hour?
Brian: Thanks for thuh reply. One more thing: How do you deal with leftover fry oil? Do you reuse? I filter, funnel back into thuh jug, and, try tuh get 4, maybe 5 frys out of a gallon. Wut say you?
I really like your video style, you're not flashy, not boring, you offer substitutions for ingredients not commonly found, you have chapters in the video to skip over sponsors, and your recipes are things I'd make for a family dinner, even though I mostly just watch these videos for comfort.
I cook a lot, and this technique is genuinely unlike anything I've seen before. It makes perfect sense, and the 3 fry technique seems like it could take enough time that you're on the verge of braising the chicken thighs and inducing collagen breakdown for extra tenderness. It's brilliant. Using potato starch is brilliant. Spraying it is brilliant. There's so much more innovation to this video than meets the eye. I've got a whole new level of respect for you. Incredibly well done!
I swear this is the best cooking channel on UA-cam
He talks through everything in grams which leaves no room for mistakes if you follow the recipe exactly. I’ve basically become an expert on making pizza from just his videos.
Agreed. The recipes are unique and well thought out. Much appreciated. I have made many many things from this channel and never been disappointed.
Yes I Agree He Kills It Always
Very much agree
100%
Where's the dancing??
I love Brian's channel because he keeps making good recipes and making it accessible to an audience. He hasn't given in to the temptation of over-photoshopped thumbnails with food "challenges" or rankings (e.g. "I tried every fast food hamburger in the United States). The dude is cooking and helping us be more enthusiastic about it. Props.
Thanks for saying that. Strait up recipe content has been declining a bit on YT so I think some other creators are trying to find the 2021/covid era viewership.
@@BrianLagerstrom I made your enchiladas tonight. Mexican rice last night. Bread last week. I hope the algorithm continues to bless you because your recipes are the best in the game and it’s not close.
Yeah I stopped watching JW for those reasons you mentioned
Bri’s food descriptors are always next level. Dude just casually called his fried chicken “effervescent” like it’s normal
Haha I had to whip out the old dictionary there
Just want to say Brian... We (my wife and I) have tried several of your recipes over the years of watching you, and never once have you let us down. Everything you have presented us with, is easy to understand, execute and tastes good. Thanks for what you do. We definitely enjoy your work (and our own when we follow your instructions).
Karaage is sooooo underrated here.
Sooo, when you are writing a cookbook? And obviously it would be called "Let's Eat This Thing" 😍
I second this
This! A million times!
Yes!!!! 😍 But he answered that question last year in his video called "Opening a Restaurant? Recipe Fails? Revealing Relationship Secrets!". Its at about 30min in.
Damn, thats a perfect title. Well done.
As a Japanese, this is one of the most accurate and authentic karaage recipes I’ve ever seen from outside of Japan. Just personally, I love using chicken WITH skin for karaage. It adds extra crispness, juiciness, and depth of umami!
if you compare the picture of your japanes karaage and yours you have that white outer stuff in some spots thats just loose starch and not the crunchy craggly bits you want, you can avoid this by letting the chicken sit after coating so the coating absorbs some of the marinade and sticks to chicken more (less chance of it falling off when agitated during frying) its kinda hard to describe but once the coating doesnt look as "dry" anymore its perfect and you wont get the extra starch just sitting on the outside
I always hear MSG makes food better, but never why. Thank you so much for that information!
to be fair its difficult to explain why salt makes food better too other than it intensifies the flavour in a weird way
When you cut from quartered raw chicken thigh to you biting into the fully cooked end product around a minute in it took my brain a half second to catch up and I genuinely thought you were just munching on raw chicken like it was no big deal.
😂 I guarantee he got most of us
That’s just how Bri rolls 🤙🏼
Chicken sashimi is actually a thing in Japan
@@jedbowtell6844 I know, but poultry cleanliness standards in the US make it a really bad idea to have here.
Casually microdosing on raw chicken to attempt to gain immunity to salmonella and bird flu lmao
Brian - thank you so much for the complete written recipe for Karaage chicken. Not only you included the substitutes but you also indicated both measurements which makes it easier for your viewers to make this very yummy fried chicken in Japanese version. You're the best!
Your channel, Kenji’s channel, Souped up recipes, and just one cookbook are among my top UA-cam cooking channels to follow. You’re really good at explaining and making recipes accessible. Thank you so much.
Are you me? Check out Pailin's Kitchen for Thai recipes. She's also amazing.
Your Karaage looks spectacular! Thanks so much for doing the research and going the extra mile on perfecting deep frying. I can't wait to try it.
Just finished eating this. 10/10. Chicken was soooooo juicy and flavorful while breading was crispiest I’ve ever had. Like beer battered texture but crispier.
I've been making Karaage a lot lately and it's really fun to see the differences and similarities between our recipes. The absolute must with this recipe is straight Potato Starch...the rest you can play with. 😁
Do I have a batch in the fridge marinating? Yes, yes I do. 🤣
I’ve never gotten frying chicken quite right, but perhaps this triple fry method I’m reading in the description is the key: I’ll have to give this a go some weekend.
Also, recipe idea: Do you have a take on making & maintaining a Ginger Bug for use in various homemade sodas? I unsuccessfully made one last week, so fingers crossed on Day 2 of my new one. (I think I used too much sugar.)
Karaage is top tier, everyone needs to try it. Your recipe looks incredible and I'm stoked to try your spin on it.
Potato starch is amazing. I've had karaage that was crispy/crunchy over a week after I'd made it and put it in the fridge. Apparently sweet potato starch is crispier/crunchier but it only lasts a couple hours at most.
I made this yesterday together with some friends and I have to say that every single one of us found it mind-blowing! BEST chicken I have ever had! You are just the best Brian
Fantastic! Thanks very much for making. Cheers
Even when your recipe looks like something I'd ever try, I watch for the entertainment value. You're just too cute.
Isn't he, though? I miss the way he dances.
I just recently made karaage for the first time! My sister & I are both Celiac and it's been AGES since we enjoyed fried chicken. As usual, Brian, your method & recipe are top tier and I can't wait to try!
Brian, I really love your videos. You and your channel inspire me and my brother to cook more than we usually do. Keep dancing and we appreciate you.
This video really is a godsend since I've recently developed an obsession with this japanese curry place near me that makes absolute bomb karaage fried chicken
now i'm interested in what 80% potato starch 20% evercrisp would be like...
Every time I want to make something I always check to see if Bri man has a version on here I can trust and follow
Fried chicken across countries is a fascinating rabbit hole to go down. Ranging from AP flour to mochiko flour to potato starch combinations, plus having the right spices to spruce them up. Great stuff, I think you're spot on with this one (not that you need my approval).
Not going to be watching any more of your content, until after I have had my dinner, drooling like a dog here.
But also very entertaining
This was freaking amazing. The cabbage "salad" needs an upgrade!Pro trick: You can make these up in advance and freeze them before frying.
I used shichimi instead of ichimi when I made mayo for karaage, the slight bitterness adds a lot to the creamy mayo.
Karaage is one of those things where you can easily say "What? It's just fried chicken." but once you have a good batch, you realize how game changing it really is.
Looks really good and the multi-stage fry is such a good technique
I've made this, it is at least as goof as the best Karaage chicken I can find in L.A. WOW!
Karaage is by far my favorite type of fried chicken but I've never tried making it myself, I gotta try this
That's an incredible crunch on that chicken
I thought that you were going to use corn starch here. I am blown away with the potato starch. All the best to you and your family!
Former chef, and people are always asking me for recipe recommendations. I just point them to your channel 😄
I use Cici Li’s Taiwanese Popcorn Chicken recipe and she uses Sweet Potato Starch, which I find makes a delightful light crisp after a double fry.
These are my favourite videos. I love the attention to detail you go to.
Awesome. Also, well done on the “let’s eat this thing” graphic. Looks great!
100% on the graphic. I like "let's eat this thing", but I can kinda tell that in the past year or so, he's been feeling tired of it when it comes time to do it at the end of the video. I think that's a good way to maintain his roots while still feeling good about it.
FINALLY! Someone else who gets that MSG is safe for you! It's literally created from seaweed!
Not only that, but sodium is one of the most important single elements of diet for proper function of all of our cells, and glutamate is the conjugate base of glutamic acid, which we need to survive. Granted, consuming it as a salt is fairly high concentration, and there are probably people who actually have a sensitivity (NOT ALLERGY) to high doses of glutamate, as it is a mediator of neurological excitation. But ain't nobody having major reactions to msg.
Check the episode of This American Life called The Long Fuse for a fascinating dive into where our societal prejudices against msg came from.
natural doesn't mean safe. cyanide is in lots of fruits and nuts.
msg good tho
All the msg haters don't realize most processed foods they love have msg.
This is common knowledge by this point. It's not 2006 anymore
@@IscariottActual You'd be surprised how many people still fall for the myth that MSG is bad for you. It's sad.
I might be wrong, but I believe by using only potato starch, it’s actually categorised as “Tatsuta-age”! Which I think is such an interesting variant of fried chicken.. hehe :) and I think the addition of potato starch to karaage is much more common nowadays SPECIFICALLY for the texture of crunch :0
It used to be that way but now it is used interchangeably. So they are technically the same now today. Because many shops in Japan sells Karaage but only use potato starch and call/market it as Karaage.
Can’t wait to try this, looks really good! Thank you
Who has to go out of their way to get MSG? Accent is 100% MSG and is available everywhere
It’s a requirement as far as I’m concerned for just about everything.
I think he meant you might have to go out of your way to get potato starch.
lol I do think it should be a staple in people's pantries. Also kewpie mayo is so freaking good. Started putting it on things I never would normally do with regular mayo, like my hotdogs now.
I don't think I ever knew that. Why is it called Accent if it's only MSG?
Ngl, I think msg is kinda overrated. It really doesn't go in everything. Ever since Asian food went big on the internet, people have been losing their minds over it
Thx for doing this, filming it and sharing it with us.
im japanese, and over the years i've been cooking less and less japanese stuff and moving towards chinese and korean things cuz i like em more. karaage is the one of like, two japanese things you just can't beat. the other is beef bowl.
and hey, tips for any vegetarians; you don't need meat for either of these. for karaage, you can sub with oyster mushrooms. all the flavor's in the marinade and stuff anyway, and oysters have great texture and hold onto the marinade really well.
beef bowl, sub with textured veg protein. the beef used for beef bowl is best when it's nice and fatty, so add a ton of extra oil to compensate. i use a mix of neutral and sesame oil, turns out great.
I think texture wise potato starch is crucial, but for taste I think you should mix it at some ratio with flour. I think corn flour (not corn starch) could provide more crispiness. Maybe a blend of 50% potato starch and 25% corn flour and 25% APF.
This reminds me of my time enlisted with the Colonel. There was a specific method to breading the chicken that involved pressing the flour mixture into the chicken to help create a better crust. Same with the extra tasty crispy.
PSA: MSG is available at any grocery store. It's called "Accent - flavor enhancer" and it's by the salt. You've probably seen it.
Made this for dinner tonight. It was awesome. Great recipe. Thanks!!
After coating chicken with potato starch, let them sit until the starch soak up juice from the chicken.
唐揚げ美味しいよね
Next up in the "Asian fried chicken" lineup, you should make Taiwanese popcorn chicken with fried basil! A true night market/boba tea shop classic.
Are you certain it was whale? It's not unheard of for dolphin meat to be sold as whale meat.
Both really shouldn't be on a plate. Too many are endangered.
Also, there's no tracking down msg. It's sold in almost any grocery store under the Accent brand in the spice aisle next to the salt.
Thank you! This recipe gave me the crispiest karaage! I have tried so many. I am going to try kfc next. I am Korean so I am looking forward to it! Thank you!
Nothing wrong with MSG. The prejudice against it comes from racism and xenophobia, from way back when Chinese restaurants were the only non-Western restaurants in many US cities and towns, and was often low-cost chop suey houses. MSG is natural and perfectly safe.
If you write a book I am buying it for sure! You are great
Brian this chicken looks and sounds heavenly! I love your videos!
Karaage has four syllables: ka-ra-a-ge, not three. Just put a glottal stop between the second and third to get kara'age. (At least he didn't call it an entirely different dish through the whole video, like that tonkatsu/tonkotsu mess.)
I make karage at home, for the starch, try using tapioca or rice flour. I use a 50/50 mixture of both of those and they come out extremely crispy.
Kara-age is amazingly delicious. It's so good.
I've done 1/2 AP and 1/2 potato starch for a couple years. I will try all potato starch and the triple fry. Looks delish!
I hope the next time you're in NYC you go check out some of the really good karaage spots. I was amazed at how different each place treats this particular dish. And they all taste/feel completely different. They were all fantastic, but the treatment and the techniques, even oil temp was diff 😂
If you ever get back to Japan, Gramercy Table in Ginza makes a duck Karaage that is absolutely outstanding. They do rotate their menu frequently, but I'm sure it'll be back at some point.
Pro tip: use these as a topping for Japanese curry
That smile of pride when you make your wife laugh by kissing a piece of fried chicken... *warm and fuzzies*
Chili mango LMNT is my weakness!! It’s so good!! Been using LMNT for about a year now.
I used to get this all the time for lunch on Okinawa. Very popular.
Hi Bri! I’m trying to have a bean girl summer and need your help! Can you share more bean recipes? 🙏🏻I just tried the refried bean tostadas and they were so good
Wtaf is bean girl summer
I really appreciate the Ethan Chlebowski style ingredient testing.
Hey Bri! Looks amazing and I'm sure it tasted as good! Much ❤ to you and Lorn! 🙂😋😎
props for not being scared of msg
that seems like a great way to fry anything that can stand up to triple frying ... will try next time i make sweet and sour pork, mongolian beef, etc. thank you for making helpful, entertaining, educational and well made videos. I'm making your tonkatsu tonight and the water spritzing the potato starch in this recipe makes me wonder if it would enhance the tonkatsu?
I make a version of karaage that is 95% as good as this, but it’s shallow fried. This lets me use a quarter of the amount of oil that you’re using here. For such small bits of chicken, deep frying really isn’t as necessary as it is, say, for large chicken pieces like for US style fried chicken.
I feel so proud of my cooking skills that I have everything in my kitchen except the potato flour. And there is a chance I do have that.
Unironically i love LMNT 💯 its my favorite electrolyte mix and it actually has a good anount electrolytes (unlike gatorade or smth) my favorite is the grapefruit and raspberry flavors
I've got to try this one! Looks great!
Kewpie isn't just better because of the MSG and Egg Yolks. It also has no sugar and no water to thin it down. Making it more tangy as well as umami as well as just concentrated. Great stuff!
There is an American version of Kewpie mayo that is similar to western Mayo, and the easiest way to tell is just look at the ingredients, if it has No MSG, but has water and sugar, then it's not the Japanese version!
Another great video Brian. I am definitely intrigued and curious to try potato starch for frying, I've always relied on rice flour to achieve good crispness. I am also a fan of multiple fry sessions, that's how the best fries are made. Anyways, great work as always on your video. I definitely have an appreciation for how complicated filming is now that I do it myself
The video we don't deserve but have been missing in our lives!
Underrated comment
Karaage is the best food ever
Damn that is a good recipe. I’ll be trying it out on Sunday
Are the 2nd and 3rd fry also at 325F or do you raise the temp? Thanks.
I got all the Ingredients ... including the hard to find MSG. Im super super pumped. Lets GGGOOOOO🔥
Hope you enjoy!
Tried it with my friends and we devoured 1kg of chicken with 3 people, it was so delicious 😭
I made this recipe a year ago first time. Delicious
Actually "if you're anti-MSG," you're just wrong.
Some folks have a legitimate intolerance, that may fuel ongoing confusion about it
Try frying in beef tallow or lard. Amazing
Bri's video is here ❤
This is a very interesting approach that I'm eager to try. I grew up in the southern US and ate pan fried (rather than deep fried) chicken at home, dredged in flour. It's exceptional, but I am really curious about potato starch instead. I don't deep fry at home, so I wonder if the potato starch will work as well with shallow fat pan frying. I have a bag of it in my pantry from something I tried during the lockdown (but I have not memory of what that was).
Can you pre-make this by doing the first or first and second fry and then doing the third fry when guests arrive if you wanted to make this for a fun Friday happy hour?
Just made this OMG!
That jump scare @0:48, thought you we're snacking on a raw chicken for half a second there :D
Rice flour is really good for crispiness
Thank you for offering a gf fried chicken! Can't wait to try it!! ❤
Brian: Thanks for thuh reply. One more thing: How do you deal with leftover fry oil? Do you reuse? I filter, funnel back into thuh jug, and, try tuh get 4, maybe 5 frys out of a gallon. Wut say you?
Fantastic video Brian!
I really like your video style, you're not flashy, not boring, you offer substitutions for ingredients not commonly found, you have chapters in the video to skip over sponsors, and your recipes are things I'd make for a family dinner, even though I mostly just watch these videos for comfort.
Great recipe, but potato starch is a must! Give it a try and compare the two--and you shall become a believer.
In Bri we trust