Today, I think that I cracked the code for the Pollo Campero Fried Chicken recipe.
The secret is that it is a dry mix of wheat flour and bread crumbs, very finely ground such that if you tasted a bit, it would dissolve in your mouth. I had been theorizing that it might be based on a non-wheat flour such as potato flour, corn flour, tapioca flour or such. But I've come to decide it is just wheat flour and bread crumbs.
To this are added such additional seasonings as garlic powder, onion powder, MSG, paprika, maybe some black or white pepper and salt for sure. All ground into a fairly fine powder to stick to and coat the raw pieces of chicken as they are turned in the proprietary Pollo Campero tumbler.
I tried it by processing some home-made bread that I had made into small bread crumbs which I then dried out in the oven at 215 F for an hour. I added spices without really measuring and I left out the MSG. I also under salted. Fried the chicken at 325F and confirmed the crust to match up. Noting a slightly different flavor, I made a note to myself that the type of bread used and the amount of toasting before turning it into a powder will affect the final flavor unless you've dumped enough garlic powder, onion powder, salt and MSG into it to mask the taste.
Here is the actual ingredients list for Pollo Campero chicken. As you can see, the Bon Appetit recipe called "in the spirit of Pollo Campero" really doesn't have anything in common with the actual recipe. It may be good, but it isn't Pollo Campero.
Bon Appetit Pollo Campero "Recipe"
And while we're on major chains, here is a spectacular article on reverse engineering the Chik Fil'A recipe from Serious Eats:
http://www.seriouseats.com/2012/07/the-food-lab-how-to-make-a-chick-fil-a-sandwich-at-home.html
Here is a copy/paste of the article, but by all means go to the link as the comments section is great reading:
To this are added such additional seasonings as garlic powder, onion powder, MSG, paprika, maybe some black or white pepper and salt for sure. All ground into a fairly fine powder to stick to and coat the raw pieces of chicken as they are turned in the proprietary Pollo Campero tumbler.
I tried it by processing some home-made bread that I had made into small bread crumbs which I then dried out in the oven at 215 F for an hour. I added spices without really measuring and I left out the MSG. I also under salted. Fried the chicken at 325F and confirmed the crust to match up. Noting a slightly different flavor, I made a note to myself that the type of bread used and the amount of toasting before turning it into a powder will affect the final flavor unless you've dumped enough garlic powder, onion powder, salt and MSG into it to mask the taste.
Here is the actual ingredients list for Pollo Campero chicken. As you can see, the Bon Appetit recipe called "in the spirit of Pollo Campero" really doesn't have anything in common with the actual recipe. It may be good, but it isn't Pollo Campero.
Bon Appetit Pollo Campero "Recipe"
And while we're on major chains, here is a spectacular article on reverse engineering the Chik Fil'A recipe from Serious Eats:
http://www.seriouseats.com/2012/07/the-food-lab-how-to-make-a-chick-fil-a-sandwich-at-home.html
Here is a copy/paste of the article, but by all means go to the link as the comments section is great reading:
The Food Lab: How to Make a Chick-Fil-A Sandwich at Home
[Photographs: J. Kenji Lopez-Alt]
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Sandwiches
Tips and tricks for making the best sandwiches at home.
We've been hearing an awful lot about Chick-Fil-A—the Atlanta-based fried chicken sandwich fast food chain—in the news recently, and it's notbeen about how awesome their chicken sandwiches are, which is somewhat unfortunate, because those sandwiches areawesome. But we'll get back to that in a moment.
Chick-Fil-A's got quite a bit in common with California burger chain In-N-Out burger. Both serve reasonably priced tasty food of a markedly better quality than your typical fast food establishment. Both harbor a cult-like following of zealots. Both hire and retain extremely upbeat and friendly staff—you can't help but feel just a little more gay after stepping into a Chick-Fil-A. And of course, both restaurants were started by families with extremely conservative Christian principles.
The difference is that while In-N-Out limits its proselytizing to inconspicuous bible verses referenced on the bottom of its cups, the higher-ups at Chick-Fil-A are a little more outspoken in their stance, actively speaking against equal marriage rights for homosexuals and donating millions of Chick-Fil-A dollars to organizations with strong anti-gay, anti-feminist, and anti-abortion histories.
I don't normally like to mix my food with my politics, but the thought of where my chicken sandwich dollars might be going is enough to leave a bad taste in my mouth, no matter how crispety-crunchety, spicy-sweet and salty that juicy chicken sandwich may be.
So in the interest of keeping my Chick-Fil-A consumption at a reasonable level, I did the only logical thing: figured out how to make them at home. Here's how it's done. And yes, you can even make 'em on a Sunday.
Tips and tricks for making the best sandwiches at home.
The Archetype
The classic Chick-Fil-A sandwich is a thing of simple beauty. A juicy, salty, crisply fried chicken breast. A soft, sweet, buttered and toasted bun. Two dill pickle chips. That's all there is to it.
What makes it great is the perfection of each of the elements. That crisp golden brown crust spiced just right with a perfect sweet-salty-savory-hot balance. The way it coats that breast underneath; a chicken breast that defies all we know about chicken. This is no dry, stringy, bland chicken bosom, this is a breast of unparalleled juiciness, with a dense, meaty texture and deeply seasoned flavor.
Bring all of the elements together, and you've got a sandwich that is nearly impossible to improve upon.
I began my quest for chicken sandwich perfection with the easiest elements: the bun and the pickles.
Bun and Pickles
With some of these reverse engineering project, getting the condiments and sauces just right are as much of a challenge as working on the main ingredient (see my In-N-Out clone recipe, for example). Not so with a Chick-Fil-A.
The bun is your typical hamburger-style bun. Soft and slightly sweet, with a fluffy, Wonderbread-like texture. It measures up at around 4 1/2-inches in diameter, which puts it right in the range of Arnold Hamburger Rolls. Toasted in a skillet in just a bit of melted butter, they're a perfect taste-alike to the real Chick-Fil-A buns.
As for the pickles, I tried out a few different brands of dill crinkle-cut chips. Heinz had the right flavor, the but chips were too small—I could've added a few extras, I suppose, but I feel like the two-pickle-per-Chick-Fil-A-sandwich rule is an unbreakable law. Instead, I turned to Vlasic Ovals Hamburger Dill Chips, which have a larger surface area and the same salty-vinegary-garlicky flavor.
Now, on to the hard part: the chicken.
Don't Forget Your Coat!
So what exactly goes into that uniquely flavorful Chick-Fil-A coating? It's obviously a standard breading procedure of some form or another—chicken dipped into a thick liquid followed by a dredging in seasoned flour before being deep-fried.
My normal course of action in a situation like this would be to pull off some high-level espionage, playing both sides of the game, perhaps wooing a particularly woo-able employee into a romantic tryst in an attempt to get her (or him!) talking about breading while we're bedding.
But alas, the higher-ups at Chick-Fil-A have obviously foreseen this potentially scandalous scenario and nipped it in the bud by listing their ingredients on their website, making the whole process far less titillating, but far far simpler.
Here's what we've got:
Chicken:
100% natural whole breast filet
seasoning [salt, monosodium glutamate, sugar, spices, paprika]
seasoned coater [enriched bleached flour, sugar, salt, monosodium glutamate, nonfat milk, leavening, spice, soybean oil, color]
milk wash [water, whole powdered egg and nonfat milk solids]
peanut oil [fully refined peanut oil with TBHQ and citric acid added to preserve freshness and dimethylpolysiloxane an anti-foaming agent added])
The ingredients confirm it: they start with a chicken breast, season it, dip it into a milk and egg-based wash, dredge it in a flour-based "seasoned coater," then fry it all in peanut oil
The salt, MSG*, sugar, and paprika in the basic seasoning and seasoned coater are easy. The problem is with that catchall term "spices." We all know that the Coloneluses a secret blend of 11 different herbs and spices, but Chick-Fil-A makes no such claim.
I pulled out my spice drawers and got to concocting.
*MSG—monosodium glutamae—gets a bad rap. This is simple fear of the unknown. It's a purified chemical product originally harvested from giant sea kelp and has many analogues that occur naturally in foods we eat. When used in reasonable quantities, it is about as dangerous for you as regular old table salt. It's the chemical that triggers the sense of savoriness (or umami) on our tongues, and as such, is a great flavor enhancer in any sort of meaty dish. I keep a jar of it right next to my salt cellar.
Clearly black pepper forms the bulk of the backbone, and I'm fairly certain there's a touch of cayenne in there as well. Paprika is listed, so in it goes.
Did I detect some garlic in there as well? I wasn't positive, but a quick look at the FDA's labeling rules answered the question for me. According to the FDA, "Poppy seeds, sesame seeds, dried or dehydrated onions and garlic are not considered to be spices. When used as an ingredient in foods they should be declared on the label by common or usual names."
No garlic listed on the label? No garlic in the food.
I tried various combinations of celery seed, dried oregano and basil, mustard powder, even coriander and cumin. In the end, I found the simplest mix was actually closest in flavor to the real deal. Salt, sugar, MSG, black pepper, cayenne, and paprika it is.
I've heard it on good authority that each Chick-Fil-A sandwich uses an entire chicken breast half. I don't know where the heck they're getting those tiny chickens from, but in order to get my massive 8-ounce supermarket chicken breast halves down to the right size, I had to split them in half horizontally. (Perhaps next time I'll go with a Cornish hen breast).
With my spice mix assembled, I fried off my first batch of chicken: I seasoned a chicken breast cutlet with my spice mix, dipped it into a whisked mixture of milk and eggs, dropped it into a bowl of flour to which I'd added some nonfat milk powder, baking powder (the leavening), and a couple tablespoons of my spice mixture, pressed on the breading until it adhered, then carefully lowered it into a wok-ful of hot peanut oil and fried it until it was golden brown and crisp, about 4 minutes total.
What emerged was distinctly... meh.
There were two major problems.
First, the coating lacked major crispness. Thanks to my carefully concocted blend of spices, the flavor was all there, but take a look at a Chick-Fil-A chicken cutlet, and its got big, crisp nuggets of breading with tons of surface area for extra flavor and extra crunch. Mine, on the other hand, had a smoother texture and a sandier look.
The second problem? Welcome to dry-city, population 1: chicken.
100% natural whole breast filet
seasoning [salt, monosodium glutamate, sugar, spices, paprika]
seasoned coater [enriched bleached flour, sugar, salt, monosodium glutamate, nonfat milk, leavening, spice, soybean oil, color]
milk wash [water, whole powdered egg and nonfat milk solids]
peanut oil [fully refined peanut oil with TBHQ and citric acid added to preserve freshness and dimethylpolysiloxane an anti-foaming agent added])
seasoning [salt, monosodium glutamate, sugar, spices, paprika]
seasoned coater [enriched bleached flour, sugar, salt, monosodium glutamate, nonfat milk, leavening, spice, soybean oil, color]
milk wash [water, whole powdered egg and nonfat milk solids]
peanut oil [fully refined peanut oil with TBHQ and citric acid added to preserve freshness and dimethylpolysiloxane an anti-foaming agent added])
The brine is actually pickle juice
ReplyDeleteThe brine is actually pickle juice
ReplyDeleteWhere I work, we share a common back hallway with a CFA. The chicken does not come in frozen at all. It comes sealed in giant plastic bags arranged on big plastic trays a couple feet across. The chicken is clearly raw and thawed well before it goes into the store. It's actually kind of gross when the have a lot of this meat sitting out there. But it never stays for long.
ReplyDeleteThe buns are supplied by a bakery that services many of the fast food places. Some of them have their own recipe baked under contract. Others just use an off the shelf hamburger bun. It's nothing special.
Other notable things about CFA: they use the Sunday closed day to clean the place top to bottom, pressure scrubbing, degreasing, you name it. And they often have crews inside at night doing the same thing. Nobody else in the industry pays as much attention to their facilities as CFA does. And when the place is not clean enough, they WILL close during a business day until it's right. They don't play.
Fun fact: some of their Dwarf House and Truett's Grill stores do sell beef like hamburgers and steakburgers and the burgers are actually pretty good. It's too bad they don't promote it but it doesn't fit with their marketing.
I believe that one of the secret spices in Pollo Campero is fennel seed. You can taste it.
ReplyDeleteWhen will you crack the code of "Pioneer Chicken"? They were huge in the 80's and I have wonderful memories of them. After Popeye's bought them, only a handful remained in my hometown (L.A.). Slowly over the years, they disappeared one by one and now, only a single location remains (to my understanding, the only one left in the country if not the world). To me, they are yummy, orange, crunchy little time capsules. Nearly every copycat recipe I've seen doesn't even come close, some you can tell it's a dud just by reading the recipe alone, even people who claimed to be former Pioneer employees haven't gotten it right. Can you help? Thank you!
ReplyDeleteI wish that I could help you. I've never tasted Pioneer Chicken, though. Without knowing what it tastes like, it would be a challenge. Maybe someone who reads this will be able to assist?
Delete