Last month, my crew left to go to the mountains leaving me home alone for a while
Usually, I fry up a mess of chicken livers or make beef liver and onions or a simple pot of butter beans to be eaten with rice for a few days
Growing up, my mother would fry chicken for us once in a blue moon. Hating the grease and the mess, she would literally place paper towels around the eye of the stove to aid the clean up effort
Nancy Singleton, who helped out at our pals the Schwartzes most Saturdays, would leave their house with her perfect fried chicken warm in their stove. Nancy’s fried chicken could have won awards. God bless the child who happened to be at our pals’ house on Saturdays for Nancy’s chicken.
Maryland Fried Chicken on Ribaut Road was our go to fried chicken spot. We did have a Kentucky Fried Chicken, but we didn’t darken its door.
On the inside of Maryland Fried there was a sign that read, “Buck King is my name. Frying chicken is my game.”
It was Mr. King who owned the place
He was up on his Game
The Palms in Ridgeland, SC, had fried chicken that shattered upon eating. See, e.g., my earlier post, Palm Sunday
Larry Taylor at the Beaufort Yacht Club and at his restaurant LT’s could fry the hell out of yard bird. Still can and does.
I used to be really good at it. Then I got really bad at it.
So, being home alone, I decided to make a mess of fried chicken to eat for the three nights I was a renewed bachelor
Fearless
One has to be fearless with frying
And I was
Fried yard bird. Cast iron skillet. Rice and gravy. Butter beans. Sliced tomato with a little salt and pepper. The perfect summer suppa three nights in a row, with only one night of real work frying the chicken.
I put a picture of the bird on the grams and was asked how to fry the chicken.
As my late great Aunt Lucy used to say about her wonderful potato salad, “All in the world I do is……”
Chicken thighs and legs (I hear there is this stuff called white meat, but I don’t truck with that)
Buttermilk
Hot sauce
Flour
A touch of corn meal
Salt
Pepper
Cayenne pepper
Large grocery store paper bag
Vegetable oil
Cast iron skillet
Candy thermometer
The night before frying the chicken, place the legs and thighs in a bowl and cover with buttermilk. Sprinkle in a few healthy dashes of hot sauce and mix with your bare hands. Cover and place in the fridge for at least 24 hours
The day of the fry, remove the chicken from the buttermilk and let drain on a wire rack set over a cookie sheet/toast tray for a least 3 hours or so. It needs to come up to room temperature.
Place a few handfuls of flour, a bop of cornmeal, salt, pepper and cayenne pepper into a paper bag. Add the dried chicken and shake well over your kitchen sink.
Place back onto the wire rack and let rest for 20 minutes or so
Heat oven to 250 while chicken rests
While the bird rests, place a good amount of oil into your heavy cast iron skillet. I put in enough to go about half way up a 10 inch skillet. Place on medium heat and let the oil come up to between 350 and 375 degrees as shown on the candy thermometer
Once it comes to temp, place the chicken in the skillet. I don’t do more than 3 or 4 pieces at a time.
It may pop and splattter
It may pop and lock
You will have to clean the stove and surrounding area
Either way, don’t mess with it
I don’t lid mine
Let it brown
At least 5 minutes or so
Make sure the oil stays in the 350 – 375 temperature with that handy candy thermometer touching the oil and not the skillet itself
Flip the bird once and let fry another 5
After the flip:

I don’t drain it on paper towels or brown paper, just on the wrack
It does stink up the kitchen, and, you might even break a sweat
While the chicken drains in the oven, I do make a white gravy with some of the left over grease, cracklins in the skillet, flour, salt, pepper, and milk to serve over that rice that’s been steaming on the back eye next to those simmering beans. I have already sliced, salted, and peppered that tomato, too
This would be my death row last supper
But, I would have to cook it
Or, if possible, I’d bring back Nancy Singleton or Buck King
How on Earth do you recall what was written on the menu at Maryland Fried Chicken? For us, the “tri-taters” kept us coming back (and the legs!).
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White meat = waste of calories. Wish I’d known Ms Singleton!
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That is exactly how Martha Shannon and my Mother taught me how to fry the yardbird. Of course Big Arthur would always have Martha Shannon serve him a bowl of pot liquor prior to eating the chicken!!!! Baba always called it Martha Shannon’s fried chicken but complained of the mess it made. I always have The Savannah Golf Clubs fried chicken as it comes very close to ours!!!! Just ordered 36 pieces for a party next Saturday for a neighbor. Keep frying!!!!! Cousin Arthur
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If only someone had stood with Martha and written down her receipts. As a new bride, Mannie Edmunds did a day with Martha and had her lemon meringue pie and pimento cheese down cold. I have her potato salad through your Mama
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