Batter and Breading Basics for Frying | The Food Lab (2024)

Have you ever dropped a naked, skinless chicken breast into the deep fryer? I strongly advise against it. The moment it enters a vat full of 400°F (200°C) oil, a couple of things start happening. First, the water content will rapidly convert to steam, bubbling out like a geyser, and the chicken's outer tissues become drier and drier. At the same time, the soft network of folded proteins in its musculature will begin to denature and tighten, firming its flesh and squeezing out juices. Pull it out a minute or two later, and you'll discover that it's become quite stiff, with a layer of desiccated meat a good quarter inch thick surrounding it. This is when you'll quite rightfully say to yourself, "Ah, I wish I had battered that first."

Batters are made by combining some sort of flour—usually wheat flour, though cornstarch and rice flour are not uncommon—with a liquid and optional leavening or binding ingredients, like eggs and baking powder. They coat foods in a thick, goopy layer. Breadings consist of multiple layers. Generally, a single layer of flour is applied directly to the food to ensure that its surface is dry and rough, so that the second layer—the liquid binder—will adhere properly. That layer generally consists of beaten eggs or a dairy product of some kind. The last layer gives the food texture. It can consist of a plain ground grain (like the flour or cornmeal in a traditional fried chicken breading), ground nuts, or any number of dry ground bread or bread-like products, such as bread crumbs, crackers, or breakfast cereals.

No matter how your breading or batter is constructed, it serves the same function: Adding a layer of "stuff" around the item being fried means the oil has a tough time coming in direct contact with it, and thus has a hard time transferring energy to it. All the energy being transferred to the food has to go through the medium of a thick, air-pocket-filled coating. Just as the air-filled insulation in your house helps mitigate the effects of harsh external conditions on the air temperature inside, so do batters and breadings help the food underneath cook more gently and evenly, rather than burning or becoming desiccated by the fiercely energetic oil.

Of course, while the food inside is gently cooking, the precise opposite is happening to the batter or breading: It's drying out, and its structure is getting firmer and firmer. Frying is essentially a drying process. Batters and breadings are formulated to dry out in a particularly graceful way. Rather than burning or turning leathery, a nice airy batter forms a delicately crisp, air-filled web of teeny-tiny bubbles—a solid foam that provides substance and crunch.

Breadings work similarly, though, rather than foamy in structure, they're craggy. The nooks and crannies in a good bread-crumb coating vastly increase the surface area of the food being fried, giving you more crunch in each bite. In the ideal world, a batter or breading becomes perfectly crisp just as the food inside—say, a slice of onion or a delicate piece of fish—approaches the ideal level of doneness. Achieving this balance is the mark of a good fry cook.

The Pros and Cons of 5 Common Breadings and Batters

Flour-Dredge Breading

Batter and Breading Basics for Frying | The Food Lab (1)

  • How It's Done: Brined or soaked (often in buttermilk) pieces of food are tossed in seasoned flour and fried.
  • Pros: When done well, produces plenty of crunchy, dark brown crust.
  • Cons: A little messy (you often end up breading your hands). Causes extremely rapid breakdown of oil.
  • Classic Uses: Southern-style fried chicken (pictured above), chicken-fried steak.
  • Crispness Level (1 to 10, low to high): 8.

Standard Bread-Crumb Breading

Batter and Breading Basics for Frying | The Food Lab (2)

  • How It's Done: Food is dredged in flour, followed by beaten eggs, followed by dried bread crumbs.
  • Pros: Very easy, though it requires a few pans for dredging. Achieves a very crisp, solid, airtight crust that absorbs sauces well.
  • Cons: Bread crumbs can sometimes be too flavorful, obscuring the food they coat. Standard bread crumbs can get soft fairly rapidly. Causes fairly rapid breakdown of oil.
  • Classic Uses: Chicken parmesan (pictured above), schnitzel.
  • Crispness Level (1 to 10, low to high): 5.

Panko Bread-Crumb Breading

  • How It's Done: As with standard bread crumbs, food is dredged in flour, followed by beaten eggs, followed by panko.
  • Pros: Panko crumbs have tons of surface area, leading to exceptionally crisp coatings.
  • Cons: Panko can occasionally be hard to find. A very thick coating means that the food underneath must be quite robust.
  • Classic Uses: Traditionally, Japanese-style tonkatsu (pictured above).
  • Crispness Level (1 to 10, low to high): 9.

Beer Batter

Batter and Breading Basics for Frying | The Food Lab (4)

  • How It's Done: Seasoned (sometimes leavened) flour is mixed with beer (and sometimes eggs) to create a thick, pancake-like batter. The beer promotes browning, while its bubbles help keep the batter light. Beer-battered items can be re-dredged in flour for increased crispness.
  • Pros: Great flavor. It's thick, and thus good at protecting delicate foods like fish. Easy to make and relatively stable after mixing. Very slow oil breakdown if plain (no second flour dredge).
  • Cons: Doesn't achieve the same crispness as some other batters. Quite a few ingredients are required. The batter must be used quickly after it's made. The coating can turn soft fairly rapidly if plain (no second flour dredge). Rapid oil breakdown if second flour dredge is applied.
  • Classic Uses: Fried fish, onion rings (pictured above).
  • Crispness Level (1 to 10, low to high): 5.

Cornstarch/Thin, Tempura-Style Batter

Batter and Breading Basics for Frying | The Food Lab (5)

  • How It's Done: High-starch/low-protein flour (such as a wheat flour/cornstarch mix) is combined with ice-cold water (sometimes soda water), or sometimes egg, and rapidly mixed, leaving the batter still lumpy. Foods are immediately dipped and fried briefly.
  • Pros: Extremely crisp. High surface area means lots of crunchy bits. Low-protein batter means less browning, allowing flavor of delicate foods, like vegetables or shrimp, to come through. Moderately slow oil breakdown.
  • Cons: Difficult to mix batter correctly (it's very easy to over- or under-mix). Batter must be used immediately.
  • Classic Uses: Vegetable and shrimp tempura, Korean-style fried chicken (pictured above).
  • Crispness Level (1 to 10, low to high): 8.

This article is adapted from J. Kenji López-Alt's book, The Food Lab: Better Home Cooking Through Science.

September 2017

Batter and Breading Basics for Frying | The Food Lab (2024)

FAQs

Batter and Breading Basics for Frying | The Food Lab? ›

Generally, a single layer of flour is applied directly to the food to ensure that its surface is dry and rough, so that the second layer—the liquid binder—will adhere properly. That layer generally consists of beaten eggs or a dairy product of some kind. The last layer gives the food texture.

What are the steps for breading and batter? ›

While this method is typically used for foods that will be fried, breaded items can be baked as well. The standard breading technique includes three steps: dredging in flour, moistening in egg wash (beaten egg plus a tablespoon or two of water or milk), then coating in crispy breadcrumbs like Panko.

What are the main differences between batter frying and breaded frying? ›

Other than pancakes and some lighter cakes, batters are great for protecting softer, more delicate foods in the deep fryer or for preventing overcooking. Breading on the other hand, often clumps up when placed in the deep fryer, which can create problems for the presentation and taste of the end product and your fryer.

How to batter food for frying? ›

A combination of all-purpose flour, cornstarch, and baking powder yields a batter that's thick enough to coat whatever you dip it in but that fries into a light crisp.

What are five rules for frying? ›

The Rules of Deep Fat Frying
  • If you don't have a deep fat fryer, use a deep, double-handed pan (not non-stick).
  • Only fill the pan one third full. ...
  • Make sure you have a close-fitting lid in case the oil catches fire.
  • Never leave a pan of hot oil unattended.
  • Never move a pan with hot oil in it.

What is the 3 step fry batter? ›

Technique: Three-Step Breading
  1. Place plain flour or other starch (as specified by the recipe) on a plate or in a shallow bowl.
  2. Swish together egg and water to create an egg wash. ...
  3. Fill a third plate or shallow bowl with breadcrumbs, panko, cracker meal, or other coating as specified by the recipe.

Do you put egg or flour first? ›

Remember – flour first, then egg, then crumbs

The flour creates a dry surface on the wet or moist food and it's this dry surface that the egg will hold on to in the next step. If you didn't coat a chicken breast in flour, for instance, the egg would just slide right off the slippery chicken.

What makes batter more crispy? ›

Rice flour and cornstarch work particularly well because they fry up crispier than wheat flour. They also absorb less moisture and fat during the frying process, making the products less greasy. This is why rice flour is often used when making tempura because it produces a very thin and crispy, dry crust.

Do you put an egg in batter? ›

Batters are made by combining some sort of flour—usually wheat flour, though cornstarch and rice flour are not uncommon—with a liquid and optional leavening or binding ingredients, like eggs and baking powder.

What are 3 types of frying? ›

The ultimate guide to your next fry-up
  • Shallow Frying. ...
  • Deep Frying. ...
  • Triple Cook Frying. ...
  • Stir-Frying. ...
  • Sautéing.

Why add baking soda to fry batter? ›

Is baking soda or powder best for frying? A pinch of baking soda can help produce crispy fried foods. It reacts with the acid in the batter to create carbon dioxide bubbles. These lead to an airy batter and a crisper, fluffier result.

What flour is best for fry batter? ›

Use Cornstarch or Rice Flour

Michael says that cornstarch or rice flour in combo with flour will give you the crunchiest batter. Even cake four will cook up crunchier than all-purpose flour because it doesn't have a high gluten level.

What is the best oil for frying batter? ›

Best Oil for Frying (Ranked by Types of Oils)
  1. Corn Oil. Pros: Most affordable and accessible oil on the market, high smoke point. ...
  2. Blended Oil (aka Vegetable Oil) ...
  3. Plant Oils (Canola, Sunflower, Cottonseed, Safflower) ...
  4. Peanut Oil. ...
  5. Avocado Oil. ...
  6. Coconut Oil.
Jun 30, 2022

What not to do when frying? ›

DON'T
  1. Overfill the fryer (or basket) with food. ...
  2. Fry at too high a temperature as the food won't cook, the barrier will burn instead, leaving the food inside still raw.
  3. Do not fry continuously at maximum temperature.
  4. Leave the fryer on when not needed as this wastes valuable energy and oil.

What is the basic principle of frying? ›

During frying process heat and mass transfer takes place simultaneously that modifies the food surface, formation of crust takes place that preserves flavor and retains juiciness. Cooking takes place during frying make chewing and digestion easier.

How to fry for beginners? ›

Review: Tips for Successful Deep-Frying
  1. Remove excess moisture from your food before frying. ...
  2. Bring the food to room temperature before breading and frying, unless the recipe states otherwise.
  3. Use enough oil to ensure the food is completely submerged to promote even cooking.
  4. Maintain a consistent oil temperature.
Feb 13, 2024

What is the correct sequence of stages in the breading procedure? ›

A 3-stage breading process for pan-frying or deep-frying, begins by dredging the item in wheat flour, dipping in an egg mixture (known as an eggwash), and coating it with bread crumbs. Rice flour or refined starches like cornstarch can be used instead of wheat flour.

What are the stages of batter? ›

The three stages of mixing dough or batter are mixing, where ingredients are combined; proofing, where the dough rises; and shaping, where the dough is formed before baking.

What is the process of batter? ›

Methods. Many batters are made by combining dry flour with liquids such as water, milk, or eggs. Batters can also be made by soaking grains in water and grinding them wet.

What is the order of breading meat? ›

Begin by coating the meat with flour, shaking to get rid of the excess. Next, dip into egg wash, allowing extra to run off to avoid clumping. Lastly, cover completely with breadcrumbs, pressing gently with fingers to ensure even coating.

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