Home Featured Fried Chicken Takes Flight With Caviar & Champagne At These Upscale Eateries

Fried Chicken Takes Flight With Caviar & Champagne At These Upscale Eateries

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Fried Chicken Takes Flight With Caviar & Champagne At These Upscale Eateries


The Bucket List/Coqodaq

The pairing of Champagne and caviar with fried chicken is a hot trend. Many fine dining establishments offer this fusion. This time-honored upsell lately has diners clucking about Coqodaq, a buzzy new Manhattan eatery that aims to be “the Cathedral of Fried Chicken” with refined takes on crispy Korean-style chicken and banchan supplemented by tins of Petrossian and Imperial Daurenki caviar served with buttery milk toast, crème fraîche and chives. 

Coqodaq notably claims to have “America’s largest restaurant Champagne list” consisting of 400-plus bottles of bubbly to enjoy with high-end poultry and rarefied fish eggs.

(Coqodaq/Jason Varney, Rockwell Group)

The moodily-lit eatery—designed by The Rockwell Group—features glass-and-bronze arches illuminating the dining room, forest-green banquettes, a glossy black soapstone and tambour wood bar, and an opulent hand washing station with glowing amber mirrors near the reception desk. 

(Jason Varney/Coqodaq for Rockwell Group).

The Bucket List signature special includes fried chicken nuggets and parts in ceramic buckets, with a choice of dipping sauces. The bird comes with a cup of warm chicken consommé infused with Korean Red Ginseng, pickled vegetables, cold Soy Sauce Noodles with nori and celery, and soft-serve frozen yogurt for dessert.

(Evan Sung/COQODAQ)

And if you’re craving a bite-sized chicken and caviar pairing, Coqodaq’s Golden Nugget is a ritzy riff on a Chicken McNugget, topped with a dollop of luxe Petrossian Golden Daurenki caviar and crème fraîche.

Simon Kim—the founder of Gracious Hospitality Management, the restaurant group behind Coqodaq and the Michelin-starred COTE Korean Steakhouse—crows that his air-chilled chicken is an upgrade from typical fried fowl. 

“Our batter is completely gluten-free and made with a proprietary rice flour blend, which retains far less fat than oils traditionally used for fried chicken,” he says. “We also use Zero Acre oil, which is made from fermented sugarcane in Brazil and contains more monounsaturated fat than olive oil. It has a clean taste while being less oily, so diners get the best of both worlds.”

Kim suggests pairing Champagnes with light sparkling wines to cut the fat of fried poultry. “When it comes to our by-the-glass Champagnes, I really enjoy the Pierre Moncuit Blanc de Blancs,” Kim says. “It’s clean and refreshing. For a celebratory moment, I reach for the Dom Pérignon P2. And when I want to feel like James Bond, Bollinger is my Champagne of choice.”

(Andrew Bezek: Momofoku Noodle Bar)

Coqodaq may currently sit atop the pecking order of fancy chicken spots, but it’s hardly New York City’s first high-profile purveyor of fried chicken and caviar. Celebrity chef David Chang started the trend in 2014 by serving a fried-chicken and caviar plate at Momofuku Noodle Bar. He then served cold-fried chicken with caviar, at his more expensive Momofuku Ko restaurant, which closed last year.

(Andrew Bezek: Momofoku Noodle Bar)

Noodle Bar’s current fried chicken and caviar feast (meant for two to four people) costs $600 and features two whole fried chickens—a Southern-style bird fried with buttermilk and spices, and a Korean-inspired chicken that’s triple-fried and dressed with a light spicy glaze—served with with Platinum Osetra Caviar, chive crepes, crème fraîche, white barbecue sauce and potato chips.

“We’ve been serving this fried chicken and caviar set since 2014,” confirms Momofuku Noodle Bar East Village Chef Pablo Vidal Saioro. “It’s one of Dave’s favorite combos and is inspired by Chef Wylie Dufresne’s cold fried chicken nuggets with caviar.”

“It’s a celebratory large format meal that emphasizes Momo’s high/low ethos—an unlikely union of comforting fried chicken with the delicacy of caviar. At Momofuku Las Vegas, our team offers a fried chicken and caviar bun that includes truffle cream and chives loaded in a warm steamed bun.”

In a 2016 Instagram post, Chang said he added the now-iconic pairing after tasting “little nuggets of cold fried chicken with caviar” at legendary chef Wylie Dufresne’s now-defunct Lower East Side eatery, WD50. “I thought it was both perfection & perverse,” Chang wrote. “I loved it. The briny funk of the caviar paired so well with blander notes of fried chicken.” 

Chang is the host Dinner Time Live You can also find out more about the following: Ugly Delicious on Netflix, also revealed his favorite way to enjoy the combo: “The best way has been to peel the fried chicken skin, put a dollop of caviar and crème fraîche, and eat it like a little taco.”

(Rustic Winery of Francis Ford Coppola)

Coqodaq’s fried-chicken and caviar combo has been embraced by a number of restaurants, regardless of whether it is served with champagne or caviar.

New York’s Sip and Guzzle—a recent off-shoot of famed Tokyo cocktail den The SG Club—dishes out Tea-Smoked Golden Osetra caviar with Puffed Chicken Skin and Koji Butter for $165. Bunny’s Buckets & Bubbles, a diner-style spot in Baltimore, serves its fried chicken buckets with glasses of Champagne, Cava, Prosecco and other approachable bubblies. 

(NoMad London)

Rustic, the restaurant at Francis Ford Coppola’s California winery, is offering a special fried chicken and caviar dish paired with Coppola Diamond Prosecco for the Healdsburg Wine & Food Experience in May. And the restaurant at London’s NoMad Hotel just launched a late-night special pairing chicken wings seasoned with Aleppo pepper, chili and lime with Franck Pascal Fluence Champagne.

Tim Bodell of Rustic says that his family loves the fried caviar chicken so much it is now a staple for their picnic lunches.

“Topping your fried chicken with a dollop of caviar or other fish roe adds a pop of salty, umami-laden intensity,” Bodell says. “Personally, I love to bring caviar or trout roe as a topping for cold fried chicken. I like to bring it along on summer picnics with my whole family at the local Sonoma Beaches. It makes our lunches there feel like a special occasion.”

And even if you don’t feel like splurging on Petrossian or Beluga just to spice up some leftover fried chicken, more inexpensive fish roe options work equally well.

“Trout roe is ideal,” Bodell adds. “It’s milder and not as fishy-tasting as salmon roe, so it won’t dominate the mild flavor of the chicken meat. It has a delicate sweet-salty taste that is enhanced by its large pearls. Plus, the roe’s brilliant orange pearls make a stunning presentation.”



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