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Quote from: pianoman9701 on July 12, 2017, 04:33:28 PMChicken's a tough one. Most of the instructions I read have you cook chicken at 145 or 146 degrees. The breasts come out nice and juicy; no problem. Legs are another story. The meat is unattractive and it feels like you're eating raw chicken. It's tender and everything, but the appearance and texture say raw. I cooked some Buffalo wings two nights ago - same result. So next time I cook legs or thighs, I think I'm going hotter, like at least 155-160. Anyone else have feedback on this?I haven't done chicken, but that's the age old problem with them damn birds. Cook white meat correctly, and dark meat is rare, and vice versa. Someone needs to engineer an all dark meat chicken (and turkey) and put a stop to this nonsense!
Chicken's a tough one. Most of the instructions I read have you cook chicken at 145 or 146 degrees. The breasts come out nice and juicy; no problem. Legs are another story. The meat is unattractive and it feels like you're eating raw chicken. It's tender and everything, but the appearance and texture say raw. I cooked some Buffalo wings two nights ago - same result. So next time I cook legs or thighs, I think I'm going hotter, like at least 155-160. Anyone else have feedback on this?
Messing around the other day and tried something that was pretty good. May play around with it a bit.Buttermilk fried chickenSous Vide chicken thighs and legs in buttermilk at 145 for 2 hrs. drain and dredge in seasoned flour, pan fried in oil until brown and crispy, just a few minutes per side. Could be deep fried and would be even easier i'd imagine.I thought it turned out pretty danged good. PS. Chicken looks terrible after the sous vide cooking but once fried you would not know the difference. Meat is cooked through even with short frying time.