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| Similar to our beloved southern fried chicken, a boneless, skinless chicken breast is pounded thin, dredged in flour and fried. Served with a drizzle of creamy milk gravy made from some of the pan drippings, it is truly good ole comfort food. |
Chicken Fried Chicken
Sounds a little silly doesn't it? I mean fried chicken is just, well, fried chicken, how could it be a chicken fried chicken? Right? A Facebook reader posed that very oddity when I mentioned I was making Chicken Fried Chicken for Sunday supper. It really just refers to the preparation - a method similar to chicken fried steak - and, what sets it apart from traditional bone-in fried chicken. For this dish, a boneless, skinless chicken breast is pounded flat, sort of like a schnitzel, then dredged in flour and fried. Then, like it's kissing cousin, it is served with a drizzle of creamy milk gravy made from some of the pan drippings. Good ole southern comfort indeed.One advantage to the huge chicken breasts that you find in the stores today is that once you pound them out, you can usually get two cutlets out of one breast. You're not tenderizing here, so all you need is a simple rubber mallet, the flat side of a tenderizer, or even a simple rolling pin to pound the thicker part of the breast flat. Once flattened and cut, season the chicken on both sides with a light sprinkling of Cajun seasoning.
Dredge the chicken cutlets in flour seasoned with salt and pepper and set aside on a rack. Heat about an inch of canola oil in a skillet with a couple tablespoons of bacon fat for extra flavor.
I like to give them another dredge in the flour just before frying them. Drop them in the hot oil, cook until golden brown on both sides, and drain on a clean rack while you make some gravy out of the pan drippings and some milk.
To save time, you can extract 1/4 cup of the pan drippings from the chicken fryer before you start the last batch of chicken frying and get the gravy going in a separate skillet, while you finish the chicken. Taste the gravy, season with salt and pepper and adjust to your taste.
Plate immediately, spooning some gravy over the chicken, and serve with some homemade mashed potatoes and a green vegetable. Pure heaven y'all.

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Recipe: Chicken Fried Chicken with Southern Peppered Milk Gravy
© From the Kitchen of Deep South Dish
Prep time: 15 min |Cook time: 15 min | Yield: 4 servings
Ingredients
For the Gravy:
- 2 cups of White Lily self rising flour
- Pinch of kosher salt
- 6 turns of the pepper grinder
- Cajun seasoning (like Slap Ya Mama)
- 3 to 4 boneless, skinless chicken breasts, pounded flat
- Canola oil for the skillet, plus 2 tablespoons of bacon fat
Instructions
- Pan drippings to equal 1/4 cup
- Reserved 1/4 cup of seasoned flour
- 1-1/2 cups of milk
- Kosher salt, to taste
- Freshly cracked black pepper, to taste
Use a rubber mallet to pound the thicker part of the chicken breasts between two sheets of plastic wrap until breast is flattened and even. Remember you're not tenderizing - just making them even. Cut in half if large. Place a rack over a baking sheet covered with paper towels; set aside.
Whisk together the flour, salt and pepper; remove and set aside 1/4 cup of the seasoned flour mixture for the gravy. Lightly sprinkle the flattened chicken breasts with the Cajun seasoning and dredge them in the remaining flour, shaking to remove the excess flour. Reserve the flour. Let them rest at room temperature for about 10 minutes. Just before cooking the chicken, dredge them into the flour again if desired, shaking off excess.
Heat the canola oil and bacon fat in a cast iron or heavy bottomed skillet over a medium high heat. Cook the chicken in batches to avoid overcrowding the skillet, until browned on the bottom; turn and finish cooking until golden brown and cooked through. Place onto the rack of the prepared pan and tent very loosely with aluminum foil to hold.
Remove all of the oil from the skillet except for 1/4 cup (or transfer 1/4 cup of pan drippings into a new skillet), and over medium heat, sprinkle in the 1/4 cup of reserved seasoned flour a little at a time. Cook, stirring constantly until a light blond color. Slowly whisk in the milk until fully incorporated and until mixture begins to thicken. Bring to a boil, reduce heat and let cook for a few minutes. Add additional milk or water if needed to reach desired consistency. Taste, season with salt and plenty of pepper.
Place a piece of chicken on each plate and spoon a bit of the gravy across the center of the chicken. Serve immediately with homemade mashed potatoes and a green vegetable.
Tip: Remove 1/4 cup of the pan drippings and start the gravy in another skillet while the last batch of chicken is cooking to speed things up.
Note: If you have time, brine the chicken in advance. Place into a zipper bag filled with water and 2 tablespoons of kosher salt for about 2 hours. Drain well and proceed.
Variation: Increase flour to 4 cups and season with salt and pepper; take out 1/4 cup of the seasoned flour and set that aside for the gravy. Divide the remaining seasoned flour into 2 bowls. Crush one sleeve of saltine crackers fine and mix with one bowl of the flour. Whisk together 1 cup of milk with one egg. Dredge the chicken in the seasoned flour. Dip into the milk and egg mixture and dredge in the cracker crumb mixture. Set on a rack until ready to fry.
Source: http://deepsouthdish.com
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Definitely heavenly!
ReplyDeleteThis just looks outstanding but brings up the question of "which came first, the chicken or the steak?"
ReplyDeleteChicken Fried Chicken-
ReplyDeleteenough said!!
Looks/sounds delsih!
I hope your day is blessed!!
Oh this looks great! Thanks so much for sharing this!
ReplyDeleteoh, mary that looks good!! comfort food at it's best! anne
ReplyDeleteI had to come check out this recipe as soon as you posted it on Facebook. Now, this is some good Southern cooking. I will definitely make this one. I know the gravy just makes the dish, too. Thanks!
ReplyDeleteOh my goodness! If I had the ingredients, I'd run into my kitchen and make this right now! Seriously!
ReplyDeleteI've been craving Chicken Fried Steak and now thanks to you I'll be craving Chicken Fried Chicken! Looks fabulous Mary.
ReplyDeleteMaybe it would be more clear to call it "chicken fried steak chicken", ha ha. I love it!
ReplyDeleteI need to run home and gather the ingredients to make this NOW!! Looks wonderful!
ReplyDeleteVery good! I was wondering if I could post your chicken pot pie recipe on my blog. It was the most phenominal pot pie I have ever had.
ReplyDeleteMel
Enjoy y'all!!
ReplyDeleteHi Mel! Thanks so much for asking. I looked for a way to email you but didn't see one, so I'll respond here & hope that you re-visit! Since that is one of my original recipes, I would certainly be honored to have you link to my recipe from your site with your pictures, but I prefer that the recipe not be simply reposted elsewhere in order to protect my copyright on it. That's is one recipe that will be in my future cookbook!
Thanks.
This is definitely detrimental to my efforts to abstain from fried food! Looks delicious, and based on your other recipes I've tried, it will be! Can't wait to try it!
ReplyDeleteI LOVE chicken fried chicken! Can't wait to make this.
ReplyDeleteI'm going to make this asap, but Mary: COOKBOOK??!!! *dies of joy*
ReplyDeleteThe only thing that could improve this site would be to have an actual print cookbook. Everyone loves cookbooks, with their shiny pages, and lovely introductions. Cannot. Wait.
I can't believe it. You are the first food blog or any website fixing fried chicken exactly the way my family does. I love it. Most people do the egg dip and then flour. You also fix your gravy the same way. There's nothing like it.
ReplyDeleteOh Mary you know I love your chicken dishes. I always just assumed the double chicken verbiage referred to the steak recipe using chicken, thanks for confirming.
ReplyDeleteFYI- I never could prepare a decent cream gravy until I found your blog. My family thanks you!
Oh I can't wait for the cookbook! I might make this this weekend
ReplyDeleteCannot wait to try this!
ReplyDeleteYummy yum yum.....
ReplyDeleteMy birthday is in May. If your cookbook is out by then, I know what to tell my husband to get me!!!
ReplyDeleteThanks Kathy - I'd sure love to have it!
ReplyDeletewow this was an epic fail for me. I followed the recipe as directed - the flour melted into the oil and there was no "crust" - you do not specify the amount of oil and I think that is the problem. The flavors were good and the gravy turned out great - I had to add more milk - but there was no batter crust on the chicken. So unhappy. Any other readers have guidance on how to get the fried crust?
ReplyDeleteHmmmm... well... what you see here in the step by step pictures and the end result pictures is exactly what I did and exactly how I wrote the recipe below there, so I really don't know what to say. It's always difficult to judge what could have gone wrong with a recipe when you aren't right there in the kitchen with someone when they tried to make it!
DeleteAs to the oil, when frying the amount will always depend on the size skillet you are using. This is a shallow fry as seen in the photograph above. I have no idea why your flour "melted" into the oil. Educated guess is that it could be not enough flour, or your oil was not deep enough or not hot enough. I'll go back & check the recipe to see if I can be a bit more specific. As far as gravy goes, any liquid given in a gravy recipe is always gonna be an estimate. You should add enough liquid for the consistency you like. Sometimes you may need more, sometimes less.
I'm sorry you are unhappy with my recipe and my instructions and that this didn't work out for you, but again, without being right there with you I really don't know why! I think it's a reliable recipe. Thanks for stopping by however & letting me know of your displeasure and that maybe I could clarify my directions a bit better. I am only a home cook sharing my recipes on a website, I am not a big corporate site with a test kitchen or anything close to a professional chef. My apologies that it didn't work out in your kitchen.