Julie Van Rosendaal makes KFC's leaked fried chicken recipe
'There's not enough salt in this,' says Calgary Eyeopener's Angela Knight
There's been a rumourswirling around the fast-food worldthat Colonel Sanders' fried chicken recipe has been discovered.
A reporter from the Chicago Tribune claims he saw the original,handwrittenrecipein ascrapbook at the Harland Sanders Cafe and Museum inKentucky.Then he went ahead and published it.
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So, is it as fingerlickin' good as what you would get at the KFCdrive-thru? The CalgaryEyeopenerdecided to put the leakedrecipeto the test.
Well,Julie VanRosendaalmade it andthey ate it.
Not the real deal
Everyone on the Calgary Eyeopener agreed that the leaked recipe was not the real deal.
"I've had a lot of KFC and there's not enough salt in this.The recipe is still in the vault," said CBC Calgary traffic reporter, Angela Knight.
Van Rosendaalthought it was strange that the coating called for ground ginger and thought it was"unusually spicy" for a fried chicken recipe.
But maybe that's the wayColonel Sanders made it backin 1940.
"My guess is that it's gone through a few variations," said Van Rosendaal."This could be the original recipe, but I'm not sure thatit reflects what you'd buy if you walked into a KFC today."
KFC says it is fake and the original recipeislocked up in a digital safe encased in two feet of concrete and monitored 24hours a day by a video and motion detection surveillance system.
Homemade KFC recipe
Method
Take your chicken out of the fridge and leave it on the countertop for half an hour to take the chill off before you start to cook.In a shallow bowl or pie plate, whisk together the buttermilk, water and egg. In another dish, stir together the flour and 11 herbs and spices.
Working with one piece of chicken at a time, dip in the buttermilk mixture, letting the excess drip off. Dredge in the flour mixture, and set aside on a wire rack set over a baking sheet. Repeat the process,re-dipping each piece in buttermilk, then in the flour mixture, pressing on the wet pieces of batter that work their way into the mixture.
In a wide pot, heat a couple inches of oil to 325F. (It should be hot, but not smoking; a scrap of bread or a bit of the breading should sizzle when dipped in.)
Cook 3-4 pieces at a time, without crowding the pot, for 10-14 minutes. Thelarger pieces will take a few minutes longer, and the white meat will cook more quickly, turning with a fork or tongs as they turn golden.
Set aside on another rack set over a baking sheet while you finish the rest. Insert a meat thermometer into the thickest part of the chicken, without touching the bone. Thecooked pieces should register 160F.
With files from the Calgary Eyeopener