Best Buttermilk Fried Chicken

April 15, 2010 · 99 comments

Buttermilk brined fried chicken with buttermilk biscuits.

Bacon aside, there are few things I love more than fried chicken. What can possibly be more soul satisfying than a moist flavourful piece of chicken encased in a thick, crunchy crust? Not much, I say.

Yet despite my affinity for fried chicken, the crispy skinned allure of Colonel Sander’s Original Recipe overruns my better judgement a few times a year. Every time I step foot into a KFC to sate my hankering, I feel a twinge of hypocrisy, and yet I’m at the mercy of the fast food fryer. Well today, I said enough is enough, and I set out to come up with the best buttermilk fried chicken recipe. A fried chicken that the Colonel himself would swoon over, with a thick, crunchy, aromatic crust, and a tender juicy interior that’s infused with flavour, right down to the bone.

Brined in Buttermilk, and dredged in two coatings of seasoned flour.

I know, this is a bold statement. Some may even call them “fightin’ words”, but I wouldn’t say it if I didn’t think I could back it up. If you’ve been following along for any length of time, you know I have a history of making audacious claims when it comes to poultry.

To make my ultimate fried chicken, I’ve employed a few tricks that I’ve learned over the years. The first is to brine the chicken. This is a must for any roast chicken, and it works equally well in fried applications. The fundamentals of brining are simple, you’re soaking the chicken in a salt and sugar solution that flavours the meat, much like a marinade would, while increasing the chicken’s moisture content. For my fried chicken, I decided to user buttermilk instead of water, and I stuffed it full of aromatics such as onion juice, garlic, celery seed and rosemary. After a night soaking in the buttermilk brine, the chicken is literally bursting with flavour, from the inside out.

The best fried chicken recipe

Satisfied that I’d given the chicken the love and flavour that it needed, I moved onto the skin. In fried chicken circles, there’s much debate over how to get a nice crunchy crust. I’ve found the double dredge gets a nice thick crinkled crust that stays crunchy long after the chicken has turned cold (not that there would ever be chicken left on the plate long enough to go cold). Since the brine is quite salty, I avoided adding any salt to the flour, but that didn’t stop me from cramming in more flavour with spices like onion powder, paprika and more celery seed.

Chicken after its second dredge in seasoned flour

The last secret to making the best fried chicken is to let the coated chicken air dry for about an hour before frying it. This does two things. The first is that it gets the chicken up to room temperature, which helps it cook evenly once it’s in the oil. The second benefit is that some of the surface moisture evaporates, making the chicken crisp up nicely as it’s fried.

I won’t lie to you, this is a rather involved recipe that takes some time, but it’s not impossible to make on a work night if you put the chicken in the brine the night before. I like serving this with fluffy biscuits and plenty of honey to drizzle on both the biscuits and chicken.

Equipment you'll need:

Best Buttermilk Fried Chicken

1 tsp celery seed
1 tsp dried rosemary
1/2 tsp black peppercorns
1 bay leaf
2 cloves garlic finely grated on a microplane
1/2 small onion finely grated on a microplane
2 C cultured buttermilk
2 Tbs kosher salt (halve if using table salt)
1 Tbs sugar

4 whole chicken legs (thigh and drumstick connected)

1 1/2 C all purpose flour
1 Tbs onion powder
2 tsp paprika
1 tsp celery seed grounds
1/4 tsp black pepper ground

1 L of vegetable oil for frying

Put the celery seed, rosemary, peppercorns, and bay leaf in a spice grinder and grind. Add the spices, onion and garlic into a gallon sized freezer bag with the buttermilk, salt and sugar. Seal the bag and shake to combine. Add the chicken legs and seal the bag, pushing out as much air as possible, so the chicken is submerged in the buttermilk. Refrigerate overnight.

In a gallon sized freezer bag, combine the flour, onion powder, paprika, celery seed and black pepper and shake to combine. Remove the chicken from the buttermilk brine and use paper towels to dry off the chicken and remove any extra bits of spices. Add the dried chicken into the freezer bag with the flour one at a time and toss to coat. Shake any excess flour off as you transfer the chicken to a wire rack.

Strain the buttermilk brine through a sieve to remove the spices. Dip the chicken in the buttermilk mixture then put each piece back in the bag with the flour and apply a second thicker coating of flour. Place the chicken on the rack and let it air dry for at least 1 hour.

In a large heavy bottomed pot, add the oil. The oil should be at least 2″ deep. Heat over medium high heat until it reaches 340 degrees F. Carefully add the chicken to the hot oil. The temperature will fall a bit, and you want to keep the oil right around 320 degrees F for the duration of they frying, so adjust the heat source as needed. The chicken will take about 12-15 minutes to cook through and should be golden brown on the outside. You can use a meat thermometer to check and see if the chicken is cooked on the inside, but take the chicken out of the oil once before checking, or the juices coming out of the chicken will make the oil splatter.

As the chicken is done, remove them from the oil and drain on a paper towel lined wire rack. Let the fried chicken rest for a few minutes and serve.

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  • Specwar2006

    oh please. Don’t be so dramatic about the sugar.  It serves a purpose, and if you were any kind of cook/chef, you would know that this is a VERY small amount compared to the overall size of the batch.

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  • Cindy_hill

    that sounds awsome so have the chicken soaking in buttermilk and will try your recipe tonight…thanks

  • Skott Chiu

    this is a good recipe just by reading it.  rome was not built in a day and so good fried chicken cannot be made in few hours.  my questions is does kfc use msg?

  • Dyksinski

    I brined my chicken last night in a simple salt solution, wish I had read this first.  I will try the flouring and cooking technique though — sounds yummy

  • http://www.calldenverhome.com/ Denver Realtor

    Yumyum, that looks incredible!

  • Andrew Leung

    This is great! I have tried other fried chicken recipes (i.e. pan frying, pan + oven cooking, different spices for the coating, brining then marinating in buttermilk, etc.) and combined parts of them into my own recipe. After making Alton Brown’s Good Eats turkey last Thansgiving, I knew there was something missing in my fried chicken recipe that can make it better… I felt using a brine should make a HUGE difference. All the recipes I’ve seen only use buttermilk to marinate but this was the first one I found to put aromatics into the buttermilk, making it a hybrid buttermilk-brine. Very smart!

    I tried out this recipe last night, using this buttermilk-brine base with my recipe. This improved my fried chicken immensely! The buttermilk-brine brought more flavors IN-to the chicken than just the outer part of the chicken. My wife & I loved it! I will definitely keep experimenting from here to improve my recipe… err, my new ‘no recipe’. :-)

    Thanks for sharing!

  • SB

    Wondering if this would work with boneless chicken pieces and a partial frying and then on to finish off the baking in the oven?

    • http://norecipes.com Marc Matsumoto

      It should work, but you’ll need to experiment with times to figure out what works best. I’d probably fry until it gets to a light brown color, then bake until it’s a full golden brown.

      • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=726965304 Steve Brown

        Hi Marc, I have had this recipe saved for months now, and I have been looking forward to trying it for as long. The chicken is in my fridge lapping up the marinate now. I am a newbie in the the kitchen I am experimenting quite a lot. My question is do I cover the the chicken while it is cooking in the oil?

      • http://norecipes.com Marc Matsumoto

        Hi Steve, glad to hear you’ve discovered the kitchen:-) When you deep fry something the idea is that the oil is much hotter(160-190C) than the boiling point of water (100C), so when you add an ingredient that contains water to the oil, it not only cooks the ingredient, but it drives off all the surface moisture on the food, thus making the exterior crispy/crunchy. If you covered the pot with a lid, you’d trap all that water vapor, which would then fall back into the oil, causing it to bubble violently, possibly causing the oil to over flow and catch on fire. In short, never cover the pot with a lid when deep frying.

      • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=726965304 Steve Brown

        Thanks for the speedy reply Marc. I sensed that covering the oil would not be a good idea. So tonight’s the night! I will let you know how it turns out

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  • SteveK

    Made this for my family and they gobbled it down like they hadn’t eaten in a month. Didn’t have any rosemary so I chopped up some fresh basil added. It was great.

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  • Mike

    When you double dredge with this recipe, should you use egg or use the buttermilk? first time trying this.

    • http://norecipes.com Marc Matsumoto

      Sorry if the recipe was confusing, but you used the strained buttermilk for the second dredge.

  • Allie

    Is there a faster way to do this for weeknights?

    • http://norecipes.com Marc Matsumoto

      I can’t think of any good shortcuts that can be made that wouldn’t effect the dish, but I’ll see if I can come with a faster weeknight version like I did with my Spaghetti and Meat Sauce a few weeks ago: http://norecipes.com/blog/spaghetti-meat-sauce-recipe/

  • KenC

    I tried this recipe this last Sat. and I say this is the best recipe I have come across so people I say this is a must have.

  • shorty

    will i get the same results if i cook the chicken in a deep fryer at 356 for the 12-15 min? thats as close to 350 as i can get on my deep fryer. I think the fryer might have a temp close to 320..should i do the 320 in the deep fryer instead?

    • http://norecipes.com Marc Matsumoto

      356 in a deep fryer should be fine. If it looks like it’s browning too quickly, you can turn down the heat.

  • malvinder kaur

    nice i myself like to brine/marinade meats for flavor !

  • cassandra

    you writing is too light to read comfortably.

  • Aaliyah

    My name is Aaliyah ,im 13 and Last Sunday I cooked Your Buttermilk Fried Chicken It was A hit!!!! Im cooking it again this sunday with a spike in the sides Thanks So much!!!!

    • http://norecipes.com Marc Matsumoto

      Glad to hear everyone enjoyed it!

  • Jeremy

    Hi Marc, could you tell me what the point is of adding sugar to a brine?

    • http://norecipes.com Marc Matsumoto

      It balances out the salt, giving the chicken a mellow savory taste. It’s not intended to make the chicken sweet.

      • Jeremy

        Thank you, I thought it contributed in some way to the chemical processes that render the chicken more moist

  • Margaret

    Hi Marc,

    Your recipe of 4 whole chicken legs is about how much in weight?

    • http://norecipes.com Marc Matsumoto

      It depends on the size of the chicken. There’s plenty of brine and flour to coat larger legs, but you may need to increase the frying time if they are very large.

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