Jenna Ewing

Super Chef & Mom

I’m Jenna, a busy mom who finds joy in the kitchen and loves sharing simple, family-friendly recipes made for real life. My goal is to make everyday meals feel approachable, enjoyable, and stress-free.

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Crispy Fried Chicken with Creamy Garlic Sauce

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Fried Chicken That Actually Fits the Way You Eat

Fried chicken has a reputation as the thing you eat when you are not paying attention to what you are eating. The breading, the oil, the carb load from the flour coating. Most low-carb versions try to fix this by baking instead of frying and using almond flour, and they end up with something that is fine but does not scratch the actual fried chicken itch.

This version does it differently. The breading is pork rind crumbs, which fry in avocado oil and get genuinely crispy in a way that baked almond flour coating does not. The result is a chicken cutlet with a crunchy exterior that has real texture and holds up when you cut into it. Five grams of carbs per serving. Fifty-five grams of protein.

The creamy garlic sauce that goes on top is made in a blender from cottage cheese, bone broth, garlic, and aromatics. It is smooth and rich and deeply savory and it transforms a piece of fried chicken into something that tastes like a restaurant dish. Spooned over the top while the chicken is still hot, it seeps into the crust slightly and makes every bite better than the last.

Twenty-five minutes. One pan for the chicken. One blender for the sauce. This is a weeknight recipe that punches well above its weight.

Pork Rinds as Breading — Why It Actually Works

Pork rind crumbs have become one of the more reliable low-carb pantry staples for good reason. Ground into fine crumbs, they behave very similarly to breadcrumbs in a coating application. They adhere to an egg-washed cutlet, they fry to a golden brown color, and they get genuinely crispy rather than just coating the outside of the chicken.

The key difference from regular breadcrumbs is that pork rind crumbs have zero carbs. They are essentially just fried pork skin ground into crumbs. The fat content in the crumbs also means they brown well in the pan without needing as much oil as a flour-based coating. They are also neutral enough in flavor that the seasoning on the chicken and the sauce on top are what you taste, not the coating itself.

Pounding the chicken thin before breading is not optional. An even thickness means the chicken cooks through at the same rate as the outside browns. Thick spots in an uneven cutlet will still be underdone when the outside is golden and crispy. Pound to about a half-inch thickness using a meat mallet, the bottom of a heavy pan, or a rolling pin. This also speeds up the cook time significantly.

The creamy garlic sauce is built from the same blended cottage cheese base that appears throughout this blog. Cottage cheese, bone broth, roasted garlic, garlic powder, onion powder, and yellow onion all go into the blender and come out as a smooth, creamy sauce with a deep savory flavor. It heats quickly on the stovetop and stays silky and pourable. Spooned generously over the hot crispy chicken, it is the finishing element that makes this dish feel complete and substantial.

Let’s Talk Ingredients

2 to 3 chicken breasts, pounded thin

Pounded to an even thickness of about half an inch. This is the step that most people skip and then wonder why the chicken is not cooked through evenly. Place each breast between two sheets of plastic wrap or in a zip-lock bag and pound from the center outward. The breast will spread significantly. Cut in half after pounding if the pieces are very large. Thin cutlets cook faster, more evenly, and produce a better ratio of crispy exterior to juicy interior.

2 eggs, for egg wash

Whisked together and used to coat the chicken before the pork rind crumbs go on. The egg wash creates a sticky surface that the crumbs adhere to. Make sure the entire surface of each cutlet is coated in egg before pressing into the crumbs. Gaps in the egg wash create gaps in the breading and spots that do not crisp up properly.

1 to 1 1/2 cups pork rind crumbs

The low-carb breading. You can buy pre-ground pork rind crumbs or grind whole pork rinds in a food processor or blender. Either works. The crumbs should be fine enough to coat the chicken evenly rather than chunky pieces that fall off. Press the crumbs firmly onto each egg-washed cutlet so they adhere. The coating that sticks best is the one that gets pressed in rather than just scattered on top.

Salt and pepper, to taste

Season the chicken before the egg wash. The coating adds very little seasoning on its own and the chicken needs salt at the base level before anything else goes on. A good pinch of salt and several cracks of black pepper on each cutlet before dipping in egg is the right approach.

Avocado oil, for frying

A neutral oil with a high smoke point that is well suited for pan frying. Use enough to come about a quarter inch up the side of the cutlets so they fry rather than saute. Medium heat is right. Too high and the outside burns before the inside is done. Too low and the coating absorbs oil and gets greasy rather than crisping. The oil is ready when a pinch of crumbs dropped in sizzles immediately.

2 cups cottage cheese

The base of the garlic sauce. Full-fat for the richest, creamiest result. Goes straight into the blender with everything else for the sauce. The cottage cheese blends completely smooth and creates a thick, creamy sauce base that picks up the garlic and onion flavors intensely. The sauce should be smooth enough that there is no trace of curd texture after blending.

1/2 cup bone broth

Thins the cottage cheese to a pourable, spoonable sauce consistency. Chicken bone broth is the most neutral and works best here. It also adds depth and a small protein boost to the sauce. If the sauce is too thick after blending, add a splash more broth and blend again. It should be thick enough to coat the chicken but thin enough to spoon easily.

2 cloves garlic

Fresh garlic goes into the blender raw with the cottage cheese. It gets blended completely smooth so there are no chunks, but the raw garlic flavor is more intense than roasted. Two cloves gives you a clear, present garlic flavor without being aggressive. If you prefer a milder, sweeter garlic flavor, roast the cloves in the oven at 400 degrees for 20 minutes before blending.

2 tbsp garlic powder

Works alongside the fresh garlic to build a deeper, more layered garlic flavor in the sauce. Garlic powder has a different quality than fresh garlic. It is softer and more background. Together they create a sauce that has both immediate garlic flavor and lingering depth. Two tablespoons sounds like a lot but spread across the whole sauce it balances out.

2 tbsp onion powder

Adds a savory sweetness to the sauce that rounds out the garlic and prevents it from being one-dimensional. Onion powder in a blended sauce distributes evenly and contributes a background depth that fresh onion also adds but in a different way. Both are in this recipe for that layered effect.

1/4 cup yellow onion

Fresh yellow onion goes into the blender with everything else. It blends completely smooth and adds a fresh, slightly sharp onion flavor that the powder alone does not have. Yellow onion is milder and sweeter than white or red when raw, which keeps the sauce from being too sharp.

Fresh parsley, chopped

Scattered over the top of the finished dish. Adds color and a fresh, herby brightness that cuts through the richness of the garlic sauce and the fried chicken. A small handful is enough. It also makes the dish look finished and intentional on the plate.

Getting the Fry Right

Pan frying chicken cutlets is a technique that rewards attention. The biggest mistakes are oil that is not hot enough, overcrowding the pan, and flipping too early.

The oil needs to be properly hot before the chicken goes in. A pinch of pork rind crumbs dropped into the oil should sizzle immediately and actively. If the oil is not hot enough, the coating absorbs it rather than crisping against it and you end up with greasy, soft breading instead of a crispy crust. Let the pan heat for a couple of minutes over medium heat before adding the oil, and then let the oil heat for another minute before the chicken goes in.

Do not overcrowd the pan. Two or three cutlets at most depending on the size of your pan. Overcrowded cutlets trap steam between them and the coating softens rather than crisps. If you are making a full batch, fry in batches and keep finished cutlets warm in a 200 degree oven on a wire rack while the rest cook.

Let the chicken cook undisturbed for four to seven minutes on the first side before flipping. Flipping too early tears the breading before it has had a chance to set and form a crust. The chicken will release from the pan naturally when the crust is ready. If it is sticking, it is not done on that side yet.

Rest the chicken for a couple of minutes after cooking before spooning the sauce on top. This lets the juices redistribute and keeps the interior moist when you cut into it. The sauce goes on at serving time, not in the pan.

Crispy Fried Chicken with Creamy Garlic Sauce

Prep Time

10

Cooking Time

15

Servings

3-4

Nutrition

Calories: 420 | Protein: 55g | Fat: 18g | Carbs: 5g

Values are approximate per serving based on 3 to 4 servings. They will vary depending on the size of the chicken breasts and how much oil the coating absorbs during frying. The protein count is primarily from the chicken and cottage cheese in the sauce. At 5 grams of carbs this is one of the lowest-carb high-protein recipes on the blog.

Equipment

  • Large skillet or frying pan
  • Blender or food processor
  • Meat mallet or heavy pan (for pounding chicken)
  • Shallow bowls (for egg wash and crumbs)
  • Tongs
  • Paper towel-lined plate
  • Small saucepan

Ingridients

Chicken:

  • 2 to 3 chicken breasts, pounded thin
  • 2 eggs, whisked
  • 1 to 1 1/2 cups pork rind crumbs
  • Salt and pepper, to taste
  • Avocado oil, for frying

Creamy Garlic Sauce:

  • 2 cups cottage cheese
  • 1/2 cup bone broth
  • 2 cloves garlic
  • 2 tbsp garlic powder
  • 2 tbsp onion powder
  • 1/4 cup yellow onion
  • Salt and pepper, to taste

Topping:

  • Fresh parsley, chopped

Steps

Step 1: Add cottage cheese, bone broth, garlic cloves, garlic powder, onion powder, and yellow onion to a blender. Blend until completely smooth.

Step 2: Pour the sauce into a small saucepan and heat over low to medium heat until warm and creamy, stirring occasionally. Season with salt and pepper to taste. Set aside.

Step 3: Pound the chicken breasts to an even thickness of about half an inch. Season both sides with salt and pepper.

Step 4: Set up a breading station. Whisk eggs in one shallow bowl and spread pork rind crumbs in another. Dip each chicken piece in the egg wash, let the excess drip off, then press firmly into the pork rind crumbs to coat evenly.

Step 5: Heat avocado oil in a large skillet over medium heat until hot. Fry the chicken for 4 to 7 minutes per side until golden brown and cooked through to 165°F internal temperature.

Step 6: Transfer to a paper towel-lined plate and rest for a couple of minutes.

Step 7: Plate the chicken and spoon the warm creamy garlic sauce generously over the top. Finish with fresh parsley and serve immediately.

Frequently Asked Questions

Where do I find pork rind crumbs?

Most grocery stores carry whole pork rinds in the snack aisle. You can pulse them in a food processor or blender until fine. Pre-ground pork rind crumbs are also sold under brands like Pork King Good and are available online and in some specialty stores. Either works. The pre-ground version saves a step.

Can I bake the chicken instead of frying?

You can but the result will be different. Baked pork rind-crusted chicken does not get as crispy as pan-fried. If you want to bake, use a wire rack on a baking sheet and bake at 425 degrees for 18 to 22 minutes, flipping halfway. Spray the coated chicken with a light coat of avocado oil spray before baking to help it brown. The sauce goes on after baking the same way.

Can I use chicken thighs instead of breasts?

Yes. Boneless skinless thighs pounded thin work well and stay juicier than breast meat. They may take a minute or two longer per side since they are slightly thicker. Check for an internal temperature of 165 degrees before pulling from the pan.

Can I make the sauce ahead of time?

Yes. The creamy garlic sauce keeps in the fridge for up to four days in an airtight container. Reheat gently in a saucepan over low heat with a splash of broth to loosen if it has thickened. Stir continuously as it warms so it does not stick to the pan. Do not boil it or the texture can become grainy.

How do I know when the chicken is cooked through?

The safest method is an instant-read thermometer. The internal temperature should reach 165 degrees at the thickest point. Visually, the crust should be deep golden brown and the chicken should feel firm when pressed. If the crust is golden but the inside is still pink when you cut in, the cutlet was too thick. Pound thinner next time.

Can I use a different oil for frying?

Yes. Any oil with a high smoke point works. Avocado oil is the recommendation because it is neutral in flavor and handles high heat well. Light olive oil, grapeseed oil, and refined coconut oil are all good alternatives. Do not use extra virgin olive oil for frying since its smoke point is too low and it will burn.

Can I make the sauce dairy-free?

The cottage cheese is the only dairy ingredient in the sauce. A dairy-free cottage cheese alternative or blended silken tofu can be used as a substitute. The texture and flavor will be slightly different but the concept works. Check that your bone broth is also dairy-free, which it typically is.

Can I add this sauce to other dishes?

Yes. The creamy garlic sauce works over pasta, roasted vegetables, grilled steak, or spooned over baked potatoes. It is a versatile sauce that pairs with almost any protein or vegetable that benefits from a creamy, garlicky finish. Make a larger batch and use it through the week.

Why does the recipe use both fresh garlic and garlic powder?

Fresh garlic and garlic powder have different flavor qualities that complement each other. Fresh garlic is sharp and bright. Garlic powder is softer and more background. Using both creates a sauce with immediate garlic presence from the fresh cloves and a lingering depth from the powder. If you only have one or the other, use what you have and adjust the quantity slightly to taste.

Can I air fry the chicken instead of pan frying?

Yes. Coat the chicken as directed, spray lightly with avocado oil spray, and air fry at 400 degrees for 10 to 14 minutes, flipping halfway, until golden and cooked through. The air fryer gives you very good crispness without the oil needed for pan frying. The result is slightly different from pan fried but excellent in its own right.

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