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Even when all we knew about fat was that
it was fattening, Americans struggled to imitate the inimitable:
the taste of fried food. The food technologists have given us baked
tortilla chips, baked potato chips, and fast-food fries that are,
at least, cooked in unsaturated vegetable oil instead of suet, lard
or hydrogenated shortening, but I've always credited my Great-Aunt
Pauline from Baltimore with the first attempts at "oven-fried" chicken.
At one time, I would have sworn she was the inspiration for Shake
'N Bake.
Then I started to do some research. Of
course, my aunt, whose grandchildren weren't born until the 1950s,
was inspired at that time by magazine stories galore about how to
"fry" chicken in the oven. There was the buttermilk method, the
sour cream method, the Rice Krispie and Corn Flake crumb versions
(obviously opportunistic recipes created by Kellogg), and a slew
of recipes using breadcrumbs (homemade and store-bought) with various
flavorings. Almost always, however, as in Aunt Pauline's recipe,
fat was poured over the coated chicken pieces before they were put
in the oven. Naturally, given that and the fact that the fatty chicken
skin was left on the meat, these recipes didn't save as much fat
as they saved the cook the trouble of having to stand by the stove
tending fried chicken, then having to clean up the spattery mess.
To this day, recipe developers are still
trying to come up with the ideal low-fat "oven-fried" chicken. In
"Roasting,"
by Kathy Gunst (MacMillan), a 3 1/2-pound chicken cut into eight
pieces is marinated in 1 1/2 cups of (no fat or low fat) buttermilk
for four to 48 hours, then dredged in 3 cups of coarse, fresh breadcrumbs
seasoned with salt, pepper, 3 tablespoons of fresh rosemary (1 tablespoon
dried) and 1/2 cup chopped fresh chives or parsley. The coated chicken
is then baked at 400 degrees for 45 minutes. For a crisper breading,
Gunst says to slide the chicken under the broiler for an additional
3 to 5 minutes. And although Gunst doesn't suggest it, for an even
lower-fat product, remove the chicken skin before marinating and
breading the pieces.
Another method for "oven-fried" chicken
is in another book, "Lighter,
Quicker, Better" by Richard Sax and Marie Simmons (Morrow).
It is called " 'Un-Fried' Fried Chicken" and it's a streamlined
version of the old sour cream method. In this case, you drain non-fat
yogurt to make a thin yogurt cheese, spread it on 8 skinless chicken
pieces, then dredge them in 2 cups of soft breadcrumbs seasoned
with 1/4 teaspoon paprika and 1/4 teaspoon cayenne. The chicken
parts are then chilled in the refrigerator for 30 minutes -- to
set the breading -- drizzled with 3 tablespoons of olive oil and
baked in a 400-degree oven for 60 to 70 minutes.
Following is (more or less) my Aunt Pauline's
recipe as outlined by Michael Stern, food columnist (with his wife,
Jane) for Gourmet magazine, whose mother also made the dish
in the '50s. "Of course," writes Stern, "it is no replacement for
chicken pan-fried in lard; but it is easy, delicious in its own
right, and it is fun."
My Aunt Pauline was kosher, so she didn't
use butter with chicken. She either dotted hers with margarine or
drizzled it with vegetable oil. Stern contributed this to "365
Ways to Cook Chicken" by Cheryl Sedaker (HarperCollins), which,
by the way, has several other baked "fried" chicken recipes.
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