A Pacific Northwest tribute to the fried chicken sandwich: buttermilk-brined thighs fried until shatteringly crisp, draped with melting Tillamook cheddar, crowned with tangy pickled jalapeños, and finished with a housemade spicy mayo that ties the whole beautiful mess together.
Sandwiches & Wraps
American
Weeknight
Game Day
45 min
Active Time
25 min cook•1 hr 10 min total
Yield4 sandwiches
Portland has never been content to leave well enough alone. This city takes the familiar and makes it better, stranger, more intensely itself. The chicken sandwich is no exception. Walk into any of the city's better establishments and you'll find some version of this: crispy fried chicken, local cheese, something pickled, something spicy, all of it assembled with the care usually reserved for fine dining.
The secret starts with the brine. Buttermilk tenderizes the meat while its acidity seasons it through to the bone. Twenty-four hours is not excessive. It's necessary. The chicken emerges silky and flavorful before it ever meets the fryer. Then comes the coating: seasoned flour, nothing more, pressed firmly into every crevice. No breadcrumbs, no panko. This is about texture that shatters.
Tillamook cheddar is non-negotiable. The Tillamook County Creamery has been making honest cheese since 1909, and their sharp cheddar has a bite that stands up to the richness of fried chicken. Anything less gets lost. The pickled jalapeños provide acid and heat. The spicy mayo brings it all together with creamy, assertive fire. This is a sandwich that respects its ingredients and demands you pay attention.
The technique, the tradition, and the story behind every dish.
In a large bowl or zip-top bag, whisk together the buttermilk, salt, black pepper, one teaspoon smoked paprika, cayenne, and garlic powder. Submerge the chicken thighs completely. Refrigerate for at least four hours, preferably overnight or up to twenty-four hours. The buttermilk's lactic acid tenderizes the meat while the seasonings penetrate deep into the flesh.
Thighs are essential here. Breast meat dries out during frying. Thighs stay juicy and have the fat content to stand up to all the toppings without disappearing.
2
Make the spicy mayo
Stir together the mayonnaise, hot sauce, one teaspoon smoked paprika, and grated garlic in a small bowl. Taste it. The heat should be present but not punishing. Adjust with more hot sauce if you want fire, more mayo if you've gone too far. Cover and refrigerate until needed. The flavors improve as they sit.
3
Set up the dredge
Whisk together the flour, cornstarch, and baking powder in a shallow dish or pie plate. The cornstarch promotes extra crispness. The baking powder creates tiny bubbles that lighten the crust and help it shatter. Remove chicken from buttermilk, letting excess drip off but keeping the thighs wet. Press each piece firmly into the flour mixture, turning to coat all sides. Let them rest on a wire rack for ten minutes. This brief rest helps the coating adhere.
For extra-craggy texture, drizzle a few tablespoons of buttermilk into the flour and work it in with your fingers to create shaggy bits. These fry up into the crunchiest parts.
4
Heat the oil
Pour oil into a large cast iron skillet or Dutch oven to a depth of one inch. Heat over medium-high until a deep-fry thermometer reads 350°F. This is crucial. Too cool and the chicken absorbs oil and turns greasy. Too hot and the crust burns before the meat cooks through. The oil should shimmer and a pinch of flour should sizzle immediately on contact.
5
Fry until golden
Carefully lower two chicken thighs into the hot oil, working in batches to avoid crowding. The temperature will drop. Adjust your heat to maintain 325°F to 340°F. Fry for five to six minutes per side until the crust is deeply golden and an instant-read thermometer inserted into the thickest part reads 165°F. The chicken should sound hollow when you tap the crust with tongs.
Listen to the frying. A steady, aggressive sizzle means the temperature is right. Quiet bubbling means it's too cool. Smoking means pull the pan off the heat immediately.
6
Rest and add cheese
Transfer fried chicken to a wire rack set over a sheet pan. Season immediately with a light sprinkle of salt while the surface is still glistening with oil. Drape a slice of Tillamook cheddar over each piece. The residual heat will soften the cheese without a second trip to heat. Let rest two minutes while you toast the buns.
7
Toast the buns
Spread the cut sides of each brioche bun with softened butter. Toast in a dry skillet over medium heat until golden and fragrant, about ninety seconds. The butter creates a barrier against the mayo and any juices from the chicken, preventing soggy bread. This is not optional. A proper sandwich starts with a toasted bun.
Brioche is the right bread here because its enriched crumb holds up to the substantial filling without compressing into nothing. A standard hamburger bun will fall apart by the third bite.
8
Assemble the sandwich
Spread a generous tablespoon of spicy mayo on both cut sides of each toasted bun. Place a lettuce leaf on the bottom bun. It acts as a moisture barrier and adds freshness against all that richness. Set the cheese-topped chicken on the lettuce. Crown with pickled jalapeños, distributing them evenly so every bite gets that acidic punch. Close with the top bun. Press down gently. Serve immediately.
Chef Tips
•The ratio of filling to bread matters enormously. Your chicken should be roughly the same diameter as your bun. If the thighs are too thick, pound them gently to an even three-quarter inch before brining.
•Tillamook sharp cheddar is specified for a reason. Its firm texture and tangy bite cut through the fried richness. Mild cheddar disappears. Aged cheddar crumbles awkwardly. Sharp is the balance point.
•For game day transport, keep components separate until serving. Pack fried chicken in a paper bag to prevent steaming. Toasted buns in foil. Assemble at destination. A sandwich assembled thirty minutes ago is a different, inferior thing.
•Leftover spicy mayo keeps refrigerated for two weeks. It improves burgers, brightens fish tacos, and rescues leftover roasted vegetables.
•If you can find Mama Lil's pickled peppers, a Portland institution, use them instead of jalapeños. They're sweeter, less aggressive, and deeply local.
Advance Preparation
•Chicken can brine in buttermilk for up to 24 hours. Longer develops more flavor and tenderness.
•Spicy mayo can be made up to one week ahead and refrigerated. The flavors deepen over time.
•For same-day ahead preparation, fry chicken up to 2 hours before serving and hold on a wire rack at room temperature. Reheat briefly in a 400°F oven for 5 minutes to re-crisp.
•Dredged but unfried chicken can rest on a wire rack at room temperature for up to 30 minutes. Any longer and the coating becomes gummy.
Frequently Asked Questions
Nutrition Information
1 serving (about 365g)
Calories
1,405 calories
Total Fat
115 g
Saturated Fat
35 g
Trans Fat
2 g
Unsaturated Fat
75 g
Cholesterol
180 mg
Sodium
1,250 mg
Total Carbohydrates
32 g
Dietary Fiber
1 g
Sugars
3 g
Protein
77 g
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