Ready for that quarantine body? Make sure to include fried chicken on that diet!

Pour the milk in a deep bowl for marinating. Add the vinegar, stir lightly. Let sit for 10 minutes.
Add the chicken. Let it marinade for at least two hours. The purpose of the buttermilk marinade is for flavor and to make the meat tender. I’ve also made it without marinading so it’s not super crucial, but it does make enough of a difference to try it out.
Combine the flour with all of the ingredients and the spices. The purpose of the baking soda is to cancel out the acidity of the buttermilk.
Put the flour in a small bowl. Add water as needed, mix until the flour is fully incorporated. You are looking for a consistency that is pretty light but not super watery, but not thick like a pancake batter, more like a crepe batter. Add the eggs and mix together.
Remove the chicken from the marinade. Let it drip, then put them on the flour batter.
Dredge them lightly in the flour batter, then put it on the egg wash.
Coat thoroughly on the egg wash then put it on the flour batter again.
Make sure that the flour batter really sticks on. I like to really press down on the chicken, this is where you get that flaky texture.
Heat the oil. If you have an oil thermometer great, you are looking for 350 F. If not, I just throw some flour. If it sizzles and rises up, it is ready for frying! How long you cook each chicken depends on the size of the cuts. Smaller ones will cook faster and the bigger ones will cook slower. Make sure to really control the temperature. If it's too hot, the outside will burn but the inside will be raw; too low and your chicken will be there too long and it will be drenched in oil. Avoid overcrowding the pan. Each time you throw a chicken, the temperature of the oil is affected.
As each chicken finishes, place them on a cookie drying rack if available. The purpose for that is when the chicken cools, the moisture circulates better, preventing it from becoming soggy. If a drying rack is not available, it is not too big of a deal.
Sprinkle the chicken with a spice mixture (garlic powder, black pepper, salt, ginger) when done. You want to do this soon as you pull the chicken out, because if it is sprinkled when the chicken has cooled, it will just sit there, the goal is for it to really incorporate on the meat.
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