Update my dinner status, I'm making this tonight.
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Servings: 12 Servings
Total Time (median): 3 : 00 Active Time: 1 : 00
US/Metric: [convert to metric]
Ingredients
- 5 pounds Chicken parts (see notes)
- 1 pint Oil (see notes)
- 6 Eggs
- 1 tablespoon Oil
- 1 tablespoon Water
- 1 can Breadcrumbs (15 ounces) Italian-style
- 1 cup Parmesan cheese (yes, in the green can. Cope.)
- 1 tablespoon Garlic powder (I use granulated garlic)
- 1/2 teaspoon Salt
- 1/4 teaspoon Pepper
- 1 teaspoon Dried basil
Preparation
Mix the eggs, 1 T oil, and 1 T water in a shallow dish/bowl big enough to dip a piece of chicken into. In a second shallow dish, combine the breadcrumbs, cheese, garlic, salt, pepper, and dried basil.
With one hand, dip the chicken pieces one at a time into the egg mixture. Place the chicken into the breading dish and use the *other* hand to cover the chicken with bread crumbs. This way, you won't bread your fingers. Bread all the chicken pieces one at a time that way, and place them on a dish that will fit in your fridge (layers are fine). Let rest for 30 minutes to 3 hours in the fridge.
If you're making pancakes, mix the bread crumbs and add 1 to 1.5 cups of water to the mixture to make a thick batter, then let sit covered in the fridge until the chicken is done frying.
Preheat oven to 350F. Fill a heavy frying pan (I use cast iron. Mom often used whatever she had handy, and for a while, she used an electric skillet) with enough oil to go up about halfway on the chicken pieces. I started with about a pint in my 10-inch iron skillet. Heat on medium-high until a piece of breading sizzles when it hits the oil.
Fry a few pieces at a time (as many as will fit in your skillet -- I did 3 at a time), turning once, until both sides are browned as brown as you like it. Place the fried pieces on a cookie sheet in the oven. Mom says to tell you it's not done yet. Keep frying and adding the new pieces to the oven to finish cooking. By the time you're done, the pieces you put in first will be perfect.
To make the pancakes, just fry 1/4 cup or so portions of the batter, turning once, until they're as brown as the chicken or a little browner. Don't worry if the oil foams up so you can't see the pancakes -- it'll die down in time for you to flip them.
NOTES:
Oil: I used more than a pint but less than a quart for this amount of chicken.
Chicken: Mom does 10 pounds of leg quarters. I did 5.25 pounds of thighs. When I was little, she would fry up a whole cut-up chicken or two, but most of us only liked the dark meat, so she gradually took to just doing the legs.
For the nutritional analysis for this recipe, I entered 1 cup of the frying oil, because most of the oil is used to fry but stays in the pan.