This recipe is from Kim’s Aunt Georgia, and it’s the crispiest chicken ever. The pieces are coated in potato starch and fried twice before being tossed in a spicy, soy sauce glaze. I've fried things all sorts of ways such as in a simple flour coating, in a three-step breaded coating, in nut crusts, etc. But, this was my introduction to using potato starch. It really does make an incredibly crunchy exterior. I used thighs, legs, and lots of wings from Shirttail Creek Farm. The sauce was a mix of oil, sliced garlic, sliced jalapenos, brown sugar, and soy sauce. It was warmed until bubbling in a skillet, and the twice-fried chicken was turned in it before plating. An important accompaniment is the Chicken Radishes. They are simply pickled radishes in distilled vinegar that go perfectly with the rich, fried chicken, and I luckily had some local radishes to use the day I made them.
Bright, acidic radishes with the crunchiest, spicy chicken was a fantastic combination. I highly recommend the duo. It can’t be easy for immigrants like Kim’s parents to navigate unfamiliar ingredients in attempting to make the kind of food they know and love. But, this book shows the evolution of just that and how new dishes came to be. We’re lucky to get to share in their inventiveness.
Aunt Georgia’s Soy Sauce Fried Chicken with Jalapeños
Recipe reprinted with publisher’s permission from Korean American.
My Aunt Georgia’s fried chicken is unmatched. I love how simple her recipe is, and within its simplicity—the careful combination of garlic, jalapeños, brown sugar, and soy sauce—lies great complexity. Her chicken stays crunchy for hours, thanks to the potato starch coating and the double fry, not to mention the savory, spicy glaze that candies the outsides. For balance, be sure to have this with the Somaek and the Chicken Radishes.
1 whole chicken (3 to 3½ pounds), cut into 10 serving pieces
Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper
2 cups potato starch
Vegetable oil
7 large garlic cloves, thinly sliced
3 large jalapeños, thinly sliced
1/4 cup packed dark brown sugar
1/4 cup soy sauce
SERVES 6 TO 8
1. In a large bowl or resealable plastic bag, add the chicken pieces and season with salt and pepper. Add 1 cup of the potato starch and toss to coat each piece. Remove the chicken pieces and repeat. Add the pieces to the bowl or bag, sprinkle in the remaining 1 cup potato starch and toss to coat each piece again. Set aside on a plate until the starch on the chicken begins to look wet, about 15 minutes.
2. Pour 2 inches oil (enough to cover the chicken pieces while frying) into a large Dutch oven. Heat over medium-high heat to 350°F.
3. Line a plate with paper towels. Working in batches of a few pieces at a time, add the chicken to the hot oil and fry until lightly golden, about 4 minutes per batch. Transfer the fried chicken to the paper towels. Then, fry these same pieces a second time until golden brown, about 8 minutes per batch. Set these twice-fried chicken pieces aside on a wire rack until you’ve double-fried all of the chicken.
4. In a medium skillet, combine ½ cup vegetable oil, the garlic, 2 of the jalapeños, the brown sugar, and soy sauce and set over medium-high heat until it bubbles up. Add a few pieces of the fried chicken to the sauce and use tongs to quickly turn them over in the glaze just until coated. Remove and transfer to a serving platter. Repeat with the remaining chicken.
5. Garnish the fried chicken with the remaining jalapeño slices and serve immediately or at room temperature, when the soy sauce glaze on the outside will be at its crunchiest.
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I've never used potato starch, and this is such an interesting use of it. Need to try both the technique for coating the chicken, and this recipe. Thanks!
ReplyDeleteThey look super crisp! At home, my mom always uses potato starch to make the coating...so crunchy!
ReplyDeleteYour description and photos are making my mouth water!!! Nothing better than crispy chicken!!
ReplyDeleteuna ricetta gustosissima! mi piacerebbe tanto provarla! Grazie!
ReplyDeleteSounds like such a simple technique for making crispy chicken- never thought of using potato starch before. My daughter-in-law is Korean- I'm not a fan of kimchi but I do like gochigaru!
ReplyDeleteWhat an interesting fried chicken dish. I've certainly never had anything like it!
ReplyDeleteWhile I don’t fry often, this recipe certainly sounds good. Karen (Back Road Journal)
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