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FRIED CHICKEN

CUISINE OF WHICH CONTINENT?

Smithsonian Magazine reports that the first recipe for fried chicken printed in America was in a tome titled The Virginia Housewife, or Methodical Cook, published in 1825 by Mary Randolph, the daughter of a wealthy, socially connected (her brother was married to Martha Jefferson, Thomas Jefferson’s daughter), slave holding Virginia plantation family. Mary’s cookbook, the first published in America, emphasized regional ingredients and was very well received; her recipe for fried chicken would have been well known to southern housewives of the time. She instructs her readers to cut the birds up “as for the fricassee, dredge them well with flour, sprinkle them with salt, put them into a good quantity of boiling lard and fry them a light brown.” She recommends serving the chicken with small pieces of fried cornmeal, and offers the first published American recipe for what would later be called hush puppies. New York Times food writer Julia Moskin commented that her chicken recipe has “never been substantially improved upon.”

But while Mary Randolph may have been the first to record and publish a recipe for fried chicken, the origins of the recipe may stretch back much farther. British cooks would have been more likely to boil or roast a chicken than to fry it in boiling lard. That has lead some to postulate that fried chicken may have arrived in America with West African slaves. Another New York Times writer, Raymond Sokolov, writes in his book The Cooks Canon, “Millions have been made on chicken pieces fried in deep fat. And millions of Americans care deeply about their notion of where it came from and how it should be cooked…I know that the southern part of “southern fried” is a polite way of claiming for Dixie what came to the prebellum South in the minds of slaves from West Africa…How do I know for sure that southern frying is really African frying? Because I have seen and tasted “southern fried” food all over the Caribbean and in parts of South America with significant black populations descended from slaves.”

Whether you consider your fried chicken African or southern, always approach hot oil with extreme caution:

Once fried, your chicken can be served hot, warm or cold. At room temperature. it is a great choice for picnics.

AUSTRIAN-STYLE FRIED CHICKEN WITH TOMATO CHUTNEY
CHICHARRONES DE POLLO (South American)
CUBAN CREOLE FRIED CHICKEN
INDONESIAN FRIED CHICKEN
JAMAICAN CURRY FRIED CHICKEN
KOREAN FRIED CHICKEN (yang-nyum tong dak)
FRIED CHICKEN MASALA
SOUTHERN FRIED CHICKEN (from Virginia)
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