Louisiana Cajun Fried Chicken
Laissez les bons temps rouler! This fiery Cajun fried chicken brings the heat of Louisiana's bayou country to your table. Coated in a bold blend of cayenne, paprika, garlic, and the Cajun holy trinity flavors, this is fried chicken with serious attitude.
Equipment Needed
Instructions
Make the Cajun brine: Whisk buttermilk, hot sauce, and Cajun seasoning in a large bowl. Add chicken, ensuring all pieces are submerged. Cover and refrigerate 4-8 hours, or overnight.
Mix the Cajun breading: Combine flour, paprika, cayenne, garlic powder, onion powder, thyme, oregano, black pepper, white pepper, and salt. Mix thoroughly - the coating should be visibly red from the spices.
Bring to room temperature: Remove chicken from brine 30 minutes before frying. The buttermilk should cling to the chicken - don't shake off too much.
Heat the oil: Pour peanut oil into a Dutch oven to 3 inches depth. Heat to 350°F (175°C). Peanut oil has a high smoke point, perfect for the longer frying Cajun chicken needs.
Coat generously: Dredge chicken in the Cajun flour, pressing firmly. The coating should be thick and well-adhered. Let rest on a rack for 5-10 minutes.
Fry Cajun style: Carefully lower chicken into hot oil. Don't crowd the pot. Fry 15-18 minutes, turning occasionally, until deep reddish-brown and internal temp reaches 165°F.
Drain properly: Transfer to a wire rack. Let rest for 5 minutes. The crust should be fiery red-brown and intensely aromatic.
Serve Louisiana style: Arrange on a platter with extra hot sauce on the side. Serve with dirty rice, red beans, coleslaw, and plenty of cold beverages to cool the heat. Geaux Tigers!
💡 Pro Tips & Variations
- Heat level is personal: Adjust cayenne to your preference. Start with 1 tablespoon and add more if you can handle it.
- Trinity flavors: The onion, celery (in Cajun blend), and garlic powder represent the Cajun "holy trinity" in dry form.
- Popeyes inspiration: Louisiana's famous Popeyes chain inspired this style. Their spicy chicken is the benchmark.
- Buttermilk is key: The acid tenderizes and helps the spicy coating penetrate the meat.
- Cold beer pairing: This chicken demands a cold Abita or Dixie beer. The spice needs cooling.
- Make it hotter: For Nashville Hot style, add more cayenne and brush finished chicken with spiced butter.