Ah! That phrase — “If your batter doesn’t crunch like this, it’s just sad chicken” — is a popular way people describe fried chicken online. It’s basically emphasizing how important a really crispy, crunchy coating is to making fried chicken taste great.
Here’s the idea behind it:
🍗 What Makes Fried Chicken “Crunchy, Not Sad”
- Batter vs. breading:
- Some recipes just coat chicken in flour; others use a wet batter or buttermilk soak plus flour/seasoned coating.
- The wet batter (with cornstarch or flour) creates bubbles and crispiness when fried.
- Double coating:
- Dipping chicken in a wet mixture (egg, milk, or buttermilk) then flour again can make an extra-thick crunchy crust.
- Oil temperature:
- Frying at the right temperature (around 350–375°F / 175–190°C) ensures the coating crisps quickly without burning.
- Resting before frying:
- Letting the battered chicken rest 10–15 minutes before frying helps the coating stick and crisp.
💡 Quick Tip
If your fried chicken isn’t crunchy, it’s often because:
- Batter is too thin or too wet
- Flour mixture isn’t seasoned or balanced with cornstarch
- Oil is too hot or too cold
- Chicken isn’t fried long enough
The “sad chicken” meme is really just a funny way of saying: don’t settle for soggy, limp fried chicken — go for that crackly, crunchy perfection!
If you want, I can give a step-by-step recipe for ultra-crispy fried chicken that guarantees that crunch so it’s never “sad.”
Do you want me to do that?