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Google "Wendy's Spicy Chicken Recipes"and you will basicly find
the sasme recipe: 1) Make mixture of flour, onion powder, garlic powder, paprika, cayenne pepper, pepper, salt. 2) Make a mixture of Franks Red Hot Sauce and water. 3) Take a chicken breast coat with mixture, dredge through diluted hot sauce, coat the chicken with mixture again. 4) Deep fry breast. Now I have a basic problem with deep frying the chicken. I would like a healthier alternative. So I would like to bake instead of frying the chicken. Two problems: 1) The powder does not stick and cook as well. 2) The chickien comes out tasting like it was marinaded in vinegar. Both problems probably come from the same source. The diluted hot sauce probably is not dense enough for the powder to stick well. The vinegar in the hot sauce leaches into the chicken while baking. So I would like to make a substitute. The first thing that I think of is mixing eggs with cayenne powder garlic (the principle ingredients of Franks aside from water and vinegar ) and using that. I'm single though so I would probably wind up throwing away most of the egg ( plus the cholesteral, but I'm not too worried about that since I probablyh use so little egg ). So can someone suggest an alternative? Thanks -------------------------------------------------- Thaddeus L. Olczyk, PhD Think twice, code once. |
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The reason to use egg white is because it is almost all protein so the
stuff would stick to it. Why not try just buttermilk. Buttermilk is high enough in protein. |
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Thaddeus L Olczyk wrote in
: Google "Wendy's Spicy Chicken Recipes"and you will basicly find the sasme recipe: 1) Make mixture of flour, onion powder, garlic powder, paprika, cayenne pepper, pepper, salt. 2) Make a mixture of Franks Red Hot Sauce and water. 3) Take a chicken breast coat with mixture, dredge through diluted hot sauce, coat the chicken with mixture again. 4) Deep fry breast. Now I have a basic problem with deep frying the chicken. I would like a healthier alternative. So I would like to bake instead of frying the chicken. Two problems: 1) The powder does not stick and cook as well. 2) The chickien comes out tasting like it was marinaded in vinegar. Both problems probably come from the same source. The diluted hot sauce probably is not dense enough for the powder to stick well. The vinegar in the hot sauce leaches into the chicken while baking. So I would like to make a substitute. The first thing that I think of is mixing eggs with cayenne powder garlic (the principle ingredients of Franks aside from water and vinegar ) and using that. I'm single though so I would probably wind up throwing away most of the egg ( plus the cholesteral, but I'm not too worried about that since I probablyh use so little egg ). So can someone suggest an alternative? Thanks -------------------------------------------------- Thaddeus L. Olczyk, PhD Think twice, code once. How about instead of dredging in the Franks hot sauce, baste the chicken with it while it cooks? Andy |
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On 20 Apr 2006 06:28:02 -0700, "Yogi Gupta"
wrote: The reason to use egg white is because it is almost all protein so the stuff would stick to it. Why not try just buttermilk. Buttermilk is high enough in protein. In the end my question comes down to, what can you use to get flour/bread crumbs/whatever stick to chicken ( or meat in general ) to make a crust. I'm pretty sure that buttermilk would work, but won't it give the chicken a sour taste? -------------------------------------------------- Thaddeus L. Olczyk, PhD Think twice, code once. |
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On Thu, 20 Apr 2006 15:38:59 -0500, Andy q wrote:
How about instead of dredging in the Franks hot sauce, baste the chicken with it while it cooks? Hmm. Right eliminate the vinegary taste in the chicken by basting with vinegar. Of course basting like this will help the flour crust stay on. -------------------------------------------------- Thaddeus L. Olczyk, PhD Think twice, code once. |
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In article ,
Thaddeus L Olczyk wrote: On 20 Apr 2006 06:28:02 -0700, "Yogi Gupta" wrote: The reason to use egg white is because it is almost all protein so the stuff would stick to it. Why not try just buttermilk. Buttermilk is high enough in protein. In the end my question comes down to, what can you use to get flour/bread crumbs/whatever stick to chicken ( or meat in general ) to make a crust. I'm pretty sure that buttermilk would work, but won't it give the chicken a sour taste? I doubt it. Try it and find out. Also, instead of frying the chicken, spray it with Pam or some other similar product and bake it. The most unhealthy aspect of Wendy's spicy chicken sandwich is that its deep fried and that adds a huge amount of fat and calories to it. You can probably reduce the fat and calories by half simply by baking the chicken. |
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Thaddeus L Olczyk wrote: Google "Wendy's Spicy Chicken Recipes"and you will basicly find the sasme recipe: 1) Make mixture of flour, onion powder, garlic powder, paprika, cayenne pepper, pepper, salt. 2) Make a mixture of Franks Red Hot Sauce and water. 3) Take a chicken breast coat with mixture, dredge through diluted hot sauce, coat the chicken with mixture again. 4) Deep fry breast. Now I have a basic problem with deep frying the chicken. I would like a healthier alternative. So I would like to bake instead of frying the chicken. Two problems: 1) The powder does not stick and cook as well. 2) The chickien comes out tasting like it was marinaded in vinegar. Both problems probably come from the same source. The diluted hot sauce probably is not dense enough for the powder to stick well. The vinegar in the hot sauce leaches into the chicken while baking. So I would like to make a substitute. The first thing that I think of is mixing eggs with cayenne powder garlic (the principle ingredients of Franks aside from water and vinegar ) and using that. I'm single though so I would probably wind up throwing away most of the egg ( plus the cholesteral, but I'm not too worried about that since I probablyh use so little egg ). So can someone suggest an alternative? Thanks When your imitation trash comes out like, well, trash, why are you surprised? -------------------------------------------------- Thaddeus L. Olczyk, PhD Think twice, code once. --Bryan |
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