Granny
sometimes killed her own chickens for frying,
but if she bought the chicken, she never
bought one that was already cut up. They
cost more, and she said that was a waste
of money. She washed the chicken thoroughly
(sometimes even sprinkling a little baking
soda on the chicken and rinsing it off to
make sure it was clean). Then she patted
it dry and cut it into twelve pieces: two
legs, two thighs, two wings, the wishbone
cut off the top of the breast, and the neck.
Then she cut both the breast and the back into
two pieces. And she’d also fry the liver
and gizzard.
Next she rubbed the chicken
with salt and pepper and a cut clove of garlic.
Then she let it sit awhile in the bowl, maybe
thirty minutes, “so the seasoning can go through
it,” she would say.
She would put some flour
in a brown paper bag from the grocery store
then she’d
drop in the chicken and toss it around to coat
it. And while she was doing that she was melting
Crisco shortening (not Crisco oil) in a big
cast-iron skillet on the stove. When the melted
shortening was just starting to smoke, she
would gently drop in the chicken. She would
keep the grease pretty hot to brown the chicken
on both sides. It takes awhile to cook chicken—anywhere
from 20 to 45 minutes, depending on the size
of the pieces.
Granny would wait until
each piece floated to the top of the grease
to determine if it was ready. Some pieces,
like the neck, cook a lot faster than the
breast. So you need to keep a careful eye
on it. And you don’t
want to crowd it in the grease. Usually it
would take Granny two or three batches to get
the whole chicken cooked. Granny cooked some
major fried chicken, sister, let me tell you!
Fried Chicken,
Mama T’s
Way
Albertson’s take-out. Honey, they
make some goooooood fried chicken!
Excerpted with permission
from Listen
Up, Honey by Thelma Wells, © 2006
Thelma Wells. Published by W Publishing Group,
a division of Thomas Nelson, Inc. All Rights
Reserved.
|