Mike G wrote:I have to admit, if I really
really wanted fried chicken, I'd be tempted to come up with however many other reasons it would take to justify a road trip
here:
(If you're about to ask where it is, follow the link on the word "here.")
Mike, if you had not posted this, I would have. Folks, just face it that there is no truly excellent fried chicken in Chicago. Sure, there are OK versions sold at Harolds and a few others; OK for a snack, but it's all deep fried, which is a major compromise. Deep frying sorta works, because they coat the chicken in about a 1/4 inch of breading, but there is no subtlety in this, and it shows in the final product. Good fried chicken = pan-fried chicken, lightly coated in flour (not thick breading), turned by hand until done. It is very labor-intensive. Chicago does not have a fried chicken culture that supports the proper preparation of the dish because there is no real demand for it from commercial kitchens here (I am sure there are plenty of households making excellent, pan-fried chicken throughout Chicagoland; just not for sale in a restaurant). Why is this? Maybe because so few in this area seem to know what it is they are missing. It's as if everyone just said, "McDonald's makes an OK hamburger; a Quarter Pounder goes down pretty easy, so why do we need a place like Kuma's or Kewpies?" Go to Indianapolis (The Northernmost City of the South®) and find fried chicken made right. Also, have a couple of biscuits.
JiLS