how much oil dose it takes to deep fry chicken?

lizzys
lizzys Posts: 841 Member
edited September 2024 in Food and Nutrition
your fry chicken how much oil do you really use when theri is so much left in the pan . after its done. how much do you count

Replies

  • Kristhin
    Kristhin Posts: 442 Member
    0 because you shouldn't be frying chicken.
  • TinaS88
    TinaS88 Posts: 817 Member
    Bump!
  • mericksmom
    mericksmom Posts: 222 Member
    you measure the oil before, then fry the chicken and measure it again, the difference is what you used.
  • JennLifts
    JennLifts Posts: 1,913 Member
    I've always wondered how much it takes to fry something too! Bump!
  • TinaS88
    TinaS88 Posts: 817 Member
    0 because you shouldn't be frying chicken.

    Geez, judgmental much? People can indulge once in a while :/
  • squitzwife
    squitzwife Posts: 51 Member
    indulge once in a while but just count it!
  • fatboypup
    fatboypup Posts: 1,873 Member
    Whatever oil is left you sop up with the biscuits .... Mmmmm can I haz some fried chicken please!?
  • GingerDarlene
    GingerDarlene Posts: 164 Member
    you measure the oil before, then fry the chicken and measure it again, the difference is what you used.

    I like that idea!!
  • robin52077
    robin52077 Posts: 4,383 Member
    instead of putting a bunch in the pan and having some left over, just put a tablespoon or 2 in the pan to brown your food with and count all of it. It doesn't need to be swimming in it, just enough to coat it and brown it...
  • reneepugh
    reneepugh Posts: 522 Member
    You know, I'm not sure. However, whenever I fry things, I try to use olive oil because it's healthier. I think my mom used an entire bottle of oil and just reused it and stored it with the deep fryer.
  • JennLifts
    JennLifts Posts: 1,913 Member
    Whatever oil is left you sop up with the biscuits .... Mmmmm can I haz some fried chicken please!?

    LOL there you go!
  • astovey
    astovey Posts: 578 Member
    I would just say...don't fry it.
  • CakeFit21
    CakeFit21 Posts: 2,521 Member
    make it your cheat meal, (one a week or month or whatever) and don't count it all.

    It's hard to use the subtraction method because you have evaporation and splatter. If you have your oil hot enough not that much oil should be absorbed at all, but I still can't think of how you'd accurately measure it.
  • suzycreamcheese
    suzycreamcheese Posts: 1,766 Member
    id either shallow fry it, or not even bother trying to log it because itll just be depressing
  • fatboypup
    fatboypup Posts: 1,873 Member
    I hate this thread it made me run to KFC for a bucket of extra crispy a tub of slaw and a dozen biscuits :X
  • TinaS88
    TinaS88 Posts: 817 Member
    I hate this thread it made me run to KFC for a bucket of extra crispy a tub of slaw and a dozen biscuits :X


    Haha it must be nice!!
  • If you fry properly, very little of the oil stays on the food. There's nothing like measuring before and after yourself, but I'd ballpark it at about a teaspoon, maybe two, for an entire chicken, and here's why:

    Alton Brown measured his oil before and after making fish & chips with four pieces of fish and about 4 russet potatoes worth of fries (I say about 4, because it looks like he started with five, but discarded about 1/4 of each potato that couldn't be sliced safely with his V-slicer/mandolin). For all of that, he found that he had only used about 1.5 teaspoons of oil.

    An entire chicken is six pieces (two half breasts, two thighs, two drumsticks). The average surface area of the pieces looks roughly equivalent to the surface area of Alton's fish pieces, and he had all those fries to cook, which is a lot of surface area. Surface area matters for this.

    You should only fry until the bubbling slows down, never until it stops, because bubbling is moisture turning into steam. As soon as the moisture is gone, it's no longer pushing out, at which point the oil is literally sucked into the food. As long as steam is pushing out, oil is being pushed away. Only some of the surface oil from when you remove the food will remain with it (some of it will drain, and a tiny bit will be absorbed as it cools).

    The surface oil will remain on the food when you pan fry, too, no matter how little oil you use, and it's just as possible to leave the food in too long when pan frying, thus causing oil to be sucked in. So pan frying is not inherenlty healthier than deep frying. You just have to know what you're doing.

    Drain your chicken on a wire rack. If you drain it on a paper towel, your food is still in contact with the grease.

    Good Eats S2E9P1: Fry Hard (part 1): http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s1bKvLrz_lI
    Good Eats S2E9P2: Fry Hard (part 2): http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=endscreen&NR=1&v=CY49Xxol_WY
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