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Fried Chicken

From Observatory
1111
Ingredients
  • Chicken
  • Salt
  • Pepper
  • Flour
  • 1 cup lard or similar fat
Utensils
  • Meat-knife
  • Covered saucepan
  • Colander
  • Bread-board
  • Deep frying-pan
  • Long-handled fork
Directions
  1. With a meat-knife separate the legs and wings of the chicken from the body, cut the body in two, lengthwise along the back-bone, and cut each half of the body into two parts.
  2. Wash the pieces of chicken, and dry them on a clean cloth.
  3. Unless the chicken is very young (in which case it will not be necessary to boil it before frying) put the pieces into a saucepan, and barely cover them with boiling water. Cover the saucepan, reduce the heat so that the water will simmer, and cook for about an hour, or until the chicken is tender.
  4. Take the saucepan from the fire, drain off the water, and allow the chicken to cool.
  5. Sprinkle the bread-board thickly with flour and roll each piece of chicken in the flour, coating it thoroughly.
  6. Set the frying-pan on the fire, put the fat into it; and when the fat melts and begins to smoke, put the pieces of chicken into it. Brown the chicken well on both sides, taking each piece from the fat as it is done and shaking a little salt and pepper over it.
  7. Prepare gravy as directed in the following recipe, and pour it over the chicken on a hot platter.

This work is in the public domain in the United States because it was published before January 1, 1929. It was adapted by the Observatory from a version produced by Wikisource contributors.

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Please note that the original source material has been altered by a human editor or was human-edited with AI-assist to be easier to read and search for on the Observatory. To find the original source material as it was originally written and/or formatted, please click here.

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