The things I do for my kids, I tell you. The simple things, I should say. This past weekend was not only a great one, but it was the start of football season, Packers season if you will. My boys, who are not in their first time fantasy league, were stoked to say the least, and as my wife (and I for that matter) gets really excited for football Sunday, they all get excited for the food that I make. That always makes me happy when they get excited. With that said, one of my boys was really excited that I had brought home some seasoning from our local wingery, and one of his favorites. As soon as he saw it, he asked me if I could make chicken wings for him on Sunday. Of course I would, but the night before I decided to take a bunch of chicken thighs and dump them into my slow cooker along with a ton of vegetables, and before doing that, I removed the skin from each thigh, reserving them for this slow baked and crispy chicken skin. Lord were these great.
I had no idea what I was going to expect, but the goal with this idea was to basically come up with a crispy chicken skin, much like a chip, and all I have to say is ‘whoa’. These things were dynamite and everything you love in fried chicken, just without the chicken.
Let’s get started.
Ingredients:
- Chicken skin, removed from breasts or thighs
- Your favorite seasoning, optional
- Few dashes of Maggi, optional
- Parchment paper, or wire rack set onto baking sheet
That’s it. Chicken skin. Seasoning. Time.
Heat your oven to 300 degrees. I like to slow cook my chicken wings in the oven, slowly getting them nice and crispy. I’m not a fan of rubbery wings. You know the ones. Not a fan at all. All this requires is time, and a few removals of excess chicken fat.
Once the oven is heated, lay the chicken skin on a baking sheet lined with parchment paper. Make sure the chicken skin is lays flat for even cooking. Sprinkle on some of your favorite seasoning (in my case it was chipotle seasoned salt) and a few dashes of maggi seasoning onto the skins and place into the oven, cooking slowly until crisp, roughly 2-3 hours.
Keep an eye on them, and carefully drain any excess fat along the way. I did this twice. Once the skins are crisp, remove from the oven and dig in.
I’m not kidding you when I say how awesome these things were. Super crisp, and everything I love about fried chicken, just in snack form. My kids were kind of giddy when I presented these. The problem is they were gone in a matter of seconds, and so next time I’m going to make a heck of a lot more. Have you tried these before, and if so did you love them as much as we did?