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Actually Crispy? Just Add Baking Soda

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  • Actually Crispy? Just Add Baking Soda

    I never knew this. I have always just turned up the heat to just a little cooler than the flames of hell to try to get that crispy stuff going on with chicken skin. I would imagine that it not only works in an oven, But on a grill, smoker, on a hot river rock or some hot chic's rear end. who knows unless ya try. But, here is some science behind this baking soda crisp it up stuff.
    I am sure it works all all parts of chicken.



    Is there anything better than crispy, saucy, fall-off-the-bone chicken wings? The kind that get deep fried and served up by the dozen at your favorite sports bar? I sure didn't think so. Which is why, when I was asked to develop a recipe for Basically Buffalo Wings, I truly never imagined being able to recreate anything nearly as delicious at home. I thought the deck was stacked against me.

    They were going to be baked chicken wings for sureI am the kind of person who would rather chop 1,000 tear-jerking onions than deep fry anything at home. The grease splattering around on your favorite shirt and/or cat, the smell that doesn’t go away for days, and after all of that you have to figure out how to properly dispose of a vat of hot oil. No. Thanks.


    But after consulting a ton of recipes for baked chicken wings and lots and lots of testing, I proved myself wrong. With a little technique, I was able to make a version of Buffalo wings that required no frying but were every bit as satisfying as the restaurant wings I know and love. Baking the chicken on a wire rack set in a sheet pan helped a lot—it helped to keep hot air circulating around the wings, which crisped them more evenly without having to flip them halfway through. And starting the wings at a low temperature—which allowed fat in the chicken skin to render out and surface moisture to evaporate—before blasting them at a higher temperature was the one-two punch they needed to really get cracklin'. But it was the addition of one very unusual ingredient that really made the difference: baking soda. Regular old baking soda! Incorporating just a half teaspoon of the stuff into the mixture of kosher salt, garlic powder, and onion powder that I tossed the wings with before baking pushed them over the edge, yielding chicken skin that was uniformly browned and crunchy. Weird, right?

    Here's why it works. Baking soda is alkaline, so it raises the pH level of chicken skin, breaking down the peptide bonds and jumpstarting the browning process, meaning the wings got browner and crispier faster than they would on their own. (If it makes you feel better, we don't really get what that means either, but it works!) The only challenge is that baking soda can have a intense and unpleasant flavor when used in large quantities, so you can only get away with using a very small amount. That meant that I had to figure out how to distribute that half of a teaspoon evenly over three pounds of chicken wings. The solve? Incorporating it into a larger quantity of a simple dry rub, which made dispersing it a breeze.




    Science is cool! And so are Buffalo wings! And so is making them at home with a minimum of fuss, maximum crispiness, and no splattering fry oil. Go forth and bake those wings!














    sigpicWal-Mart shopping cart undergoing heavy mods.
    nano second fast camo titanium splash proof thermo pen


    need a larger spatula for early morning road kill removal.

    As the venomous south American hissing skunk rat is growing fast and needs larger portions.

  • #2
    I always learn something new. Thank you
    Island of Misfit Smokers Member #92

    How to heal the world. Love people and feed them tasty food.

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    • #3
      I saw this on Youtube. Basically a lady added cornstarch, and baking POWDER to her rub. I'll see if I can find the video. I am sure it was powder and not soda, but I am noit completely sure. Isn't there Aluminum in Soda?


      Found the video. She yammers a lot, but it has enough info to be helpful.
      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qj4C3xFCaBk
      Last edited by freemegeebus; 04-17-2023, 08:09 PM.

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      • #4
        I've used baking powder. It works well.

        I'll have to look into the soda thing
        Craig
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        • #5
          I did 10 thighs yesterday evening in the oven, in the morning I trimmed all the fat and extra skin off them, patted dry with paper towel laid them on paper towel rested on a baking sheet. sprinkled with baking soda like I was putting a rub on them (way to much I think) they rested in the ice bx from 6 to 5. put them on a wire rack on a baking sheet. sprinkled both sides with two types of rub ( a layering) when they were close to room temp. the oven preheated to 400 degrees put them on the rack in the center. set timer for 35 minutes. probed them at 30 min. they needed about ten more mins. they came out and were very crispy. sweet..and looked pretty dang good. we had made a cucumber salad,scalloped potatoes, mac and cheese, and stewed tomatoes. and warmed a loaf of bake heat and eat jew bread. The thighs tasted like crap. edible but a salty over powering taste. I think the drying made them so dry the rubs did not melt with the wet and enter into the meat and skin. I did think I used way to much of the soda powder. I will not give up. will try again... but i will follow directions (what ever the hell that is) and see what happens. I am thinking since I did not use any mad hunky It may have been a cursed cook. Almost time for outside cooking here. which we love to do. every thing on one of the grills/smokers. I love crispy wings and can get it done on the grills get that day but very dry the next. hope others chime in.. cheers..
          sigpicWal-Mart shopping cart undergoing heavy mods.
          nano second fast camo titanium splash proof thermo pen


          need a larger spatula for early morning road kill removal.

          As the venomous south American hissing skunk rat is growing fast and needs larger portions.

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          • #6
            then there is this.



            Baking Powder: The Secret Weapon for Crispy Chicken Skin


            The powder that acts like a salt.

            By Danielle LapierrePublished Sept. 6, 2021







            For chicken with lots of crunch, we here in the test kitchen like to add a secret ingredient to our recipes: baking powder.




            For fried chicken recipes such as Extra-Crunchy Fried Chicken, Fried Chicken Sandwiches, and The Ultimate Crispy Fried Chicken, we add it to the flour mixture the chicken is coated in before it goes into the fryer.




            The Ultimate Crispy Fried Chicken
            We then typically combine this flour mixture with a wet ingredient. This could be egg, buttermilk, or water, depending on the recipe. The moisture helps create a craggy coating that, when fried, yields lots of crunchy morsels to bite into.
            But the baking powder is key, because it acts like a salt. It helps draw moisture to the surface, where it can evaporate. Since they have similar reactions, we typically combine baking powder and table salt to amplify this effect, resulting in extra-crispiness.




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            But baking powder doesn’t only make fried chicken crunchier—it also magically gives nonfried chicken extra-crispy skin.
            An example of this is our Oven-Fried Chicken Wings, which aren’t fried at all. But when you bite into one, you would think it was. In order to get crispy wings without frying, you need to dry out the skin. That’s where a coating of baking powder and salt comes in. The baking powder and salt help break down the proteins in the skin, draw moisture to the surface, and also aid in browning. We take a very similar approach in our recipe for Crisp Roast Chicken.




            Oven-Fried Chicken Wings coming out of the oven.
            So next time you are making fried chicken, or even cooking it in the oven, make sure that you have some baking powder on hand to add extra crunch.



            sigpicWal-Mart shopping cart undergoing heavy mods.
            nano second fast camo titanium splash proof thermo pen


            need a larger spatula for early morning road kill removal.

            As the venomous south American hissing skunk rat is growing fast and needs larger portions.

            Comment


            • #7
              I've tossed wings in baking powder and corn starch then placed on a wire rack in the fridge for a bit to let refrigeration do it's evaporative thing. Onto the Weber using a vortex. Came out spectacular.


              Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

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              • #8
                Well, sodium carbonate is a potent desiccant. IE: dries the skin and surface of the hunk. Therefore- contributing to a crispy hunk. Moisture is crispy’s enemy.
                In God I trust- All others pay cash...
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                • #9
                  Maybe I'll do it different next time. I've used baking soda for velveting, rinse off and pat dry. Now Cornstarch I use mostly for a nice quick crisp coasting for some pan fried shrimp....as per the Asian woman at the Chinese buffet resto.

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                  • #10
                    I've been talking about this for over 10 years, people call me crazy and call me bad names finally someone gets it.
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                    KCBS CBJ

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