Booze Battered Onion Rings & Fried Pickles
This paleo recipe is a perfect addition to any game-day watch party spread. Obviously, you can just make the onion rings or the fried pickles, but I assure you that you will want *both*. Game on!
Ingredients:
Battered onion
rings/pickles:
· 1 sweet onion, such as Vidalia
· 1 pickle
· 2 egg whites
· 1 cup chickpea flour, plus 1/2 cup for
dredging (chickplea flour is both grain free and gluten free)
· Safflower, sunflower, peanut, or
grapeseed oil
· Optional: 2 cups buttermilk
· 1 tsp salt
· 1/4 tsp smoked paprika
Buttermilk
dipping sauce:
· 1 cup mayonnaise (I strongly recommend homemade mayo—recipe is
below)
· 1/2 cup low-fat buttermilk (Trader
Joes carries this)
· 1 tbsp Dijon, yellow, or whole grain
mustard, or a mix of each
· 1 tsp smoked paprika
· 1 tsp sea salt
1 scallion
1 scallion
· 1 garlic clove
· If using store-bought mayonnaise, the
juice and zest of 1 lemon
Homemade
mayonnaise ingredients (optional, but strongly recommended):
· 1 egg yolk (use a fresh egg for this)
· 1/4 tsp sea salt
· 1 lemon (I prefer meyer lemons, which
are a touch sweeter)
· 1/4 cup safflower or grapeseed oil
· 1/4 cup olive oil
· 1 tbsp whole grain or Dijon mustard
Directions:
The
buttermilk dipping sauce can be made the day before (or a few days before).
Regardless, prepare this first. To make the dipping sauce, preheat the oven to
400 degrees F. Place the garlic clove in tinfoil and drizzle olive oil all
around it. Roast for 15-20 minutes, until golden brown and soft. Remove the
garlic from the packet. If you are making the onion rings right away, lower the
oven to 200 degrees.
Skip this step if using store-bought
mayonnaise. If using
homemade mayonnaise for the dipping sauce, combine the egg yolk, mustard, and sea salt in a standing mixer with a whisk attachment. Beat
the ingredients over medium speed, and then begin adding the oil, a few drops
at a time. Now increase the speed to high and continue adding the oil very slowly, just a few drops at a time.
You should watch the mixture thicken before your eyes (i.e. emulsify). When the
mixture begins to thicken, you can begin adding the remaining oil in a thin trickle.
Do not just pour it all in at once or the mixture can split and you won’t have
mayonnaise but instead something gross and unusable. : ( Once you have
incorporated all of the oil into the mixture, it should be very thick and set.
At this point, lower the speed to low and incorporate the zest and juice of 1
lemon.
Note: you will not need to use the entire amount of homemade mayonnaise for this recipe. The leftover mayonnaise can be used in any recipe that calls for mayo.
To prepare
the buttermilk dipping sauce, chop the scallion finely. Combine 1 cup of mayonnaise, 1/2 cup of
buttermilk, 1 tablespoon of mustard, 1 teaspoon of smoked paprika, 1 teaspoon
of sea salt, the chopped scallion, and the roasted garlic clove. Also add the juice and zest of 1
lemon if using store-bought mayonnaise.
Store in the fridge until ready to use.
To prepare
the onion rings, remove the outer dry skin of the onion and cut it into
separate rings. Optional: soak the rings in 2 cups buttermilk for 1 hour.
Slice the
pickles into round slices. If cooking immediately, dry the pickle slices with a
paper towel. If not cooking immediately, return to the jar with the pickle
juice until ready to cook.
Meanwhile, prepare the boozy batter. In the bowl of a standing
mixer set with the whisk attachment, beat the egg whites at medium speed until peaks
are just stiff. Remove the bowl from the mixer.
In a separate bowl, combine 1 cup of chickpea flour with the salt
and paprika and whisk in the cider. Then gently fold one third of the egg
whites into the flour mixture, taking care not to deflate the fluffy egg
whites. Then, in thirds, continue gently folding the rest of the egg whites
into the batter. The goal is to keep it as fluffy as possible.
Next, set up a three-part dredging
system. Place the bowl of batter closest to the stovetop. Next to it, place the
bowl of chickpea flour. Finally, next to that place a large empty bowl. Remove
the onions from the buttermilk and place the onions and pickles in this final
bowl.
When
ready to fry, pour 1/4
inch of your chosen vegetable oil into a heavy, wide pan (or
enough oil to cover the batter-coated onions and pickles) and heat over medium heat for
at least 5 minutes. Test the heat by placing
a drop of batter
into the oil: it will bubble actively around the batter when it is hot enough.
Place
a baking sheet nearby to place the fried onions and pickles.
When the oil is hot, dredge the onions and pickles, one by one, in the
chickpea flour on both sides, shake off excess, then dip in the boozy batter on
both sides.
Then place the onions
and pickles, one by one, into the hot oil.
(As hot oil can burn, this is not an activity for children to
assist with.) Add as many as you can to
the pan while giving each item space. Fry each onion/pickle for about 2-3 minutes per
side, until crisp and lightly golden
brown.
When done, remove your booze battered treats with a metal
slotted spatula and
place them on the paper towel-covered rack or your baking sheet.
Now, crack open a hard cider (or beer) and enjoy!