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re: New Popeyes/Copeland Cookbook: Secrets of a Tastemaker
Posted on 8/18/22 at 3:03 pm to Powerman
Posted on 8/18/22 at 3:03 pm to Powerman
quote:
rarely go there but to me it tastes the same as it always has. The service just depends on how ghetto your city is.
I agree on the service comment but the quality isn’t near what it once was. The chicken is close to the same but the sides are not and don’t get me started about those fricking biscuits.
Posted on 8/18/22 at 4:20 pm to BigPerm30
I miss the original onion rings, bigly.
Posted on 8/18/22 at 7:27 pm to Saskwatch
quote:The chicken tacos could have supported a chain on their own. Or at least a snowball stand.
That old menu in the G&G article looks awesome. Stuffed flounder, fried gizzards, and fried livers
Buttermilk Biscuits, the Popeyes Founder’s Way
Al Copeland’s take on the Southern staple
Recipe by AL COPELAND
August 17, 2022
It is imperative that all of the ingredients, including the dry mix, are well chilled. The result is a tight dough and a loftier finished biscuit. The goal is for the cold ingredients to hit the super hot oven resulting in a rapid billow of the dough, which then remains stable as the biscuits brown. When the vast disparity between the temperature of the dough and the hot oven is not present, the billow either does not happen or it is not stable. The result is flat biscuits. Who wants that? —Excerpted from Secrets of a Tastemaker, a compilation of recipes from Popeyes founder Al Copeland.
YIELD: 10 LARGE BISCUITS
2 ½ cups Swans Down Cake Flour
2 tsp. granulated sugar
1 ½ tsp. baking powder
1 tsp. salt
¼ tsp. baking soda
½ cup vegetable shortening, frozen
1 ½ cups chilled buttermilk
4 tbsp. salted butter (2 tbsp. softened and 2 tablespoons melted)
Preheat oven to 425°F.
For best results, chill all ingredients except butter prior to mixing.
Sift together the flour, sugar, baking powder, salt, and baking soda into a bowl. Using a box grater, coarsely grate the frozen shortening directly into the flour and gently fold it in with a spoon.
Make a well in the center of this mixture and pour in the buttermilk. Gently stir the buttermilk into the flour just until the dough comes together. It will still be a little wet and sticky. Cover the bowl and refrigerate it for at least 30 minutes, but for no longer than 3 hours.
Brush a large rimmed baking sheet with some of the melted butter, then refrigerate the pan to firm the butter.
Using a large spoon, scoop the dough into 10 mounds on the baking sheet, spacing the mounds at least 1 inch apart. Lightly dollop the softened butter on top of each mound.
Bake the biscuits until golden, 10 to 15 minutes. Remove the pan from the oven and brush the tops of the biscuits with the remaining melted butter.
Place the biscuits in a basket and cover with a tea towel to keep warm until serving.
It’s also easy to take a delicious shortcut using the authentic Copeland’s Famous Homemade Biscuit Mix for your favorite variations. Biscuit mix available to purchase in select Copeland’s of New Orleans locations and online at alcopelandfoundation.org.
Reprinted from Secrets of a Tastemaker: Al Copeland: The Cookbook, copyright © 2022 by Chris Rose and Kit Wohl with the Copeland Family. Photographs copyright © 2022 by Sam Hanna. Published by the Cookbook Studio.
This post was edited on 8/18/22 at 7:44 pm
Posted on 8/18/22 at 7:29 pm to SixthAndBarone
Circa late 90s He and his wife apparently had a live-in girlfriend.
Posted on 8/18/22 at 10:06 pm to BigPerm30
quote:
and don’t get me started about those fricking biscuits.
Not the ones you used to be able to watch them make?
Posted on 8/18/22 at 11:45 pm to SportsGuyNOLA
quote:
Al could see how awful the food and service has become at Popeyes,
If you ever visit Texas, the Popeyes service is as fast as McDonalds.
Posted on 8/19/22 at 3:18 am to SportsGuyNOLA
As long as he was cashing those checks at diversified foods he didn't give a.f.
Posted on 8/19/22 at 4:24 am to Midget Death Squad
True
Him and his sons did coke together, uncontrollably. When one of his sons was in rehab struggling with addiction, he would still do coke around him. All of that coke meant he had some serious rage moments that he would randomly unleash on employees.
He slept with many Copeland hostesses on his boats. Young - too young.
He pulled a gun on one of his area directors in a meeting for making fun of his alligator skin shoes.
He was part of quite a few public fights at bars and the big one that happened at Morton’s Steakhouse against the Guidry family.
He was caught bribing a judge in one of his divorces.
The guy was a narcissist, did steroids, went through 4 wives with over the top weddings, and had more plastic surgery than a Kardashin. Bicep implants, cheeks, the whole 9.
He had f you money, and loved to show it. I can’t quite remember the story, but he didn’t get approved for a license or something in Virginia, so he bought a brand new Lamborghini, drove it to the middle of licensing offices lawn, and left it there, just to show that he could.
All that being said, he gave a lot back to the community, had some of the greatest parties New Orleans has ever seen, built a business that employed thousands and set examples for other local entrepreneurs - many of whom worked for him at one point or another.
Him and his sons did coke together, uncontrollably. When one of his sons was in rehab struggling with addiction, he would still do coke around him. All of that coke meant he had some serious rage moments that he would randomly unleash on employees.
He slept with many Copeland hostesses on his boats. Young - too young.
He pulled a gun on one of his area directors in a meeting for making fun of his alligator skin shoes.
He was part of quite a few public fights at bars and the big one that happened at Morton’s Steakhouse against the Guidry family.
He was caught bribing a judge in one of his divorces.
The guy was a narcissist, did steroids, went through 4 wives with over the top weddings, and had more plastic surgery than a Kardashin. Bicep implants, cheeks, the whole 9.
He had f you money, and loved to show it. I can’t quite remember the story, but he didn’t get approved for a license or something in Virginia, so he bought a brand new Lamborghini, drove it to the middle of licensing offices lawn, and left it there, just to show that he could.
All that being said, he gave a lot back to the community, had some of the greatest parties New Orleans has ever seen, built a business that employed thousands and set examples for other local entrepreneurs - many of whom worked for him at one point or another.
This post was edited on 8/19/22 at 4:38 am
Posted on 8/19/22 at 10:44 am to ABucks11
quote:
If you ever visit Texas, the Popeyes service is as fast as McDonalds.
2 out of the 3 in the Sugar Land area are fantastic service wise. Extremely polite and attentive. The one that’s not is part of a gas station where the owner legit was trying to price gouge for water during the freeze when everyone was out of power.
The food, though, the drum sticks and thighs have shrunk to the size you’d think you’re eating pigeons. Still tasty AF, but tiny.
Posted on 8/19/22 at 2:40 pm to Willie Stroker
quote:
Did you know he was being investigated by the DEA for drug trafficking?
damn bruh, you a DEA agent?
This post was edited on 8/19/22 at 2:43 pm
Posted on 8/19/22 at 2:41 pm to BigPerm30
quote:
don’t get me started about those fricking biscuits.
preach
Posted on 8/19/22 at 4:42 pm to DomincDecoco
The ultimate Popeyes biscuit was in the early 1980’s and that was the “Blueberry Biscuit” with a sugar glaze on top.
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