Tips PLEASE on cooking breaded chicken

Anonymous
You need a non-stick pan.
Anonymous
From the comments on one of PP's links.
Two additional points that haven't really been covered here yet.

Yes, to summarize:

Make sure the meat is dry -- dry off with paper towels if necessary.
Dip in flour, then egg, then flour/crumbs/nuts/whatever.
If you have time, place coated pieces on a rack and allow to dry out a bit. If you are really working ahead, put 'em in the fridge for 30 minutes to an hour.
Make sure pan is hot enough to start.
Don't crowd the pan -- leave space between the pieces. Otherwise the food will start to steam rather than crisp.
DON'T MONKEY WITH IT. Leave the pieces alone -- don't move 'em, don't lift 'em up to check every 30 seconds, don't flip-flip-flip.
They should cook completely on one side, then turn ONCE to cook on the other. Done. Depending on thickness and desired degree of doneness, most boneless slabs-o-protein need on average 3 to 5 minutes per side. When I'm cooking thin fish fillets, 2 minutes per side.


Anonymous
I usually do milk/breadcrumbs/fry. But would love a good baked breaded or cornflakes recipe for nuggets.
Anonymous
I much prefer baking my breaded chicken, sometimes I do it in a cooling rack in the pan. Also, if you want it to be crispy, just spray some olive oil on the coating and it will crisp up pretty well.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I recently discovered a great trick for baking/broiling breaded chicken ... cook it on a cooling rack (with baking pan underneath to catch crumbs). With this technique both sides cook and one is not mushy. Not sure why I never heard of this before. It works great.


I just started doing this too..works great!
Anonymous
Flour, egg, breadcrumbs (panko is my fave). Put it hot, cracking vegetable oil. Turn once.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:You need a non-stick pan.

No you don't. I do it all the time with stainless steel.
Anonymous
You have to use a lot of oil. The pieces should be floating and NOT touching the bottom of the pan. And for the love of cooking gods, DON'T use olive oil. Regular vegetable oil will do. Stick to flour, egg, breadcrumbs for the breaking. Don't crowd the pan.
Anonymous
You have to use a lot of oil. The pieces should be floating and NOT touching the bottom of the pan. And for the love of cooking gods, DON'T use olive oil. Regular vegetable oil will do. Stick to flour, egg, breadcrumbs for the breaking. Don't crowd the pan.


You can do this if you want, but you don't have to. That's deep-frying, not pan-frying. If you're not stingy with the oil, and the oil is hot (but not scorching), you'll be alright.

Hot pan, cold oil, swirl till hot and shimmering, don't crowd the pan, and once you put it in (sizzle, sizzle), leave it alone till it's ready to flip. You'll be good.

Salt it as soon as it comes out.
Anonymous

Anonymous wrote:You need a non-stick pan.

No you don't. I do it all the time with stainless steel.


+1


post reply Forum Index » Food, Cooking, and Restaurants
Message Quick Reply
Go to: