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spicy chicken sandwich...McDonald's quit teasing!

I used to love McDonald's Spicy Chicken Sanwiches more then air. I went vegan last year and now the *#$@&^%! brought it back! Okay so I've been dreaming of a big spicy fried (Iknow, I know it's unhealthy) but, a replacement for this. I love really spicy food and can't seem to fingure out how much or what seasonings to use to mimmick the batter, hopefully I posted in the right place and someone can help.

Boca makes a vegan spicy chicken patty. I haven't had the McD's kind but you might try it..

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I love spicey food also, but since I haven't tried McD's food in
years, I can't help you out. There are several different kinds
of hot/spice flavor. Can you think of something similar so that
I could make a guess at what type of spice to use.

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The Boca spicy chkn patties are really good!  We have them w/ soy cheese and add a sauce of melted Earth Balance and tabasco. Its vegan junk food to the hilt if you pair it w/ fries and a Chocolate soy-milk shake!!!  ;)

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i just saw a commercial for some kind of fast food spicy chicken sandwich that claims to use "cayenne, chili, and a spice blend." So, you could probably make a really good vegan version by freezing and thawing tofu to get the right texture, then making up a batter with perhaps chili, cayenne, paprika, garlic powder, etc. and then frying it up. put it on a bun with some vegenaise and lettuce, and i bet it would be pretty similar!

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I guess the McDonald's ingredients list the sandwich says it contains ALL THIS: Spicy Crispy Chicken Breast Filet:
Spicy breaded boneless skinless chicken breast filet with rib meat extenders added, smoke flavors added. Contains up to 28.5% of a solution of water, seasoning (salt, modified potato starch, spices, maltodextrin, carrageenan, sugar, garlic powder, rice starch, modified corn starch, onion powder, yeast extract, natural (vegetable and animal source) and artificial flavor, chicken broth, natural smoke flavor, extractives of paprika, polysorbate 80, flavor (animal source), dextrin, chicken fat, sesame oil, soy lecithin, carrot concentrate, egg yolk), sodium phosphates. Battered and breaded with: bleached wheat flour, water, salt, modified food starch, enriched wheat flour (enriched with niacin, reduced iron, thiamine mononitrate, riboflavin, folic acid), sodium diacetate, spices, wheat gluten, egg whites, citric acid, garlic powder, yeast extract, sugar, maltodextrin, yellow corn flour, onion powder, natural flavors (vegetable source), yeast, leavening (sodium acid pyrophosphate, sodium bicarbonate, monocalcium phosphate), extractive of paprika and turmeric, FD&C yellow 6, FD&C red 40 lake, soy lecithin. Breading set in vegetable oil. Cooked in partially hydrogenated vegetable oils, (may contain partially hydrogenated soybean oil and/or partially hydrogenated corn oil and/or partially hydrogenated canola oil and/or cottonseed oil and/or sunflower oil and/or corn oil). Contains wheat, soybean, and egg ingredients.

Okay so if your still with me I'm a little scared. I think I have officially lost interest. I will definentely try to get my hands on some spicy boca patties. I checked and the site says they are newly vegan now SO that works out perfectly then. Thanks all for your help, and I may try the tofu idea too curiale if I do I'll throw in another post about the results. ;D

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I thought Boca spicy chicken has egg white in it? Maybe I should check again. They are pretty yummy.

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Let's see if we can retro-engineer this sucker.  I went Internet trollin' to see what I could find.  It won't be EXACTLY the same, but I bet we can come up with a masterpiece.

They say "honey wheat roll, mayo, crisp lettuce, ripe tomato" for the fix'ns...  Have this kind of goodness on hand.

Either freeze, thaw, and squeeze some firm/extra firm NON-SILKEN tofu so that it gets a kind of "rib meat extenders added" tenderness vibe going on, or consider using poached tempeh for your "chicken breast" patty.  I suggest a quickish dip in smoky-flavored, adequately juicy-and-salty tasting liquid: perhaps vegan bouillion (mix hot and let cool, as it won't combine otherwise), a pinch of nutritional yeast, and a dash of liquid smoke or other smoke flavor.

I'm betting it will taste something like right if you use a good pinch of vegan ranch dressing powder, a spoonfull of pureed chipotle chiles in adobo sauce (or a big pinch of powdered chipotles), lots of fresh ground black pepper, and some minced garlic in a flour batter (just thin it with water til it's clingworthy).  To make the batter stick, first toss the protein "chicken" in some seasoned flour (salt & pepper, cayenne if you want it).  Then into the batter.  And then, right back into seasoned flour and sesame seeds (trust me-- they will contribute that special something) to make a thickish clingy layer.

Shallow fry this in about an inch of oil in a nice hot skillet.  Turn it when the bottom is golden and crispy, and fry the other side.  Drain, blot on paper towels, and park on your prepared bun with the fix'ns. 

It won't be the same-- nothing will-- but it might scratch the itch.

Here's a copycat recipe I found (Warning! Non-vegan!) for the Wendy's version, which is supposed to be hotter but not as flavorful (as it should be, using cayenne instead of chipotles).  It might help if you're fretting about ratios.

Quote:
Wendy's Spicy Chicken Fillet Sandwich recipe

There once was a time when Wendy's offered this sandwich for a
"limited time only." Apparently the tasty zing from this breaded chicken sandwich won it many loyal customers and a permanent place on the fast food chain's menu. Now you can re-create the spicy kick of the original with a secret blend of spices in the chicken's crispy coating. Follow the same stacking order as the original, and you've just made 4 sandwich clones at a fraction of the cost of the real thing.

6 to 8 cups vegetable oil
1/3 cup Frank's Original Red Hot Pepper Sauce
2/3 cup water
1 cup all-purpose flour
2 1/2 teaspoons salt
4 teaspoons cayenne pepper
1 teaspoon coarse ground black pepper
1 teaspoon onion powder
1/2 teaspoon paprika
1/8 teaspoon garlic powder
4 chicken breast fillets (but why not use an alternative protein)
4 plain hamburger buns
8 teaspoons mayonnaise (again, sub this for a vegan type)
4 lettuce leaves
4 tomato slices

1. Preheat 6 to 8 cups of oil in a deep fryer to 350 degrees.

2. Combine the pepper sauce and water in a small bowl.

3. Combine the flour, salt, cayenne pepper, black pepper, onion
powder, paprika and garlic powder in another shallow bowl.

4. Pound each of the chicken pieces with a mallet until about
3/8-inch thick. Trim each breast fillet if necessary to help it
fit on the bun.

5. Working with one fillet at a time, coat each piece with the flour,
then dredge it in the diluted pepper sauce. Coat the chicken once
again in the flour mixture and set it aside until the rest of the
chicken is coated.

6. Fry the chicken fillets for 8 to 12 minutes or until they are light
brown and crispy. Remove the chicken to a rack or to paper towels to
drain.

7. As chicken is frying, prepare each sandwich by grilling the face of
the hamburger buns on a hot skillet over medium heat. Spread about 2
teaspoons of mayonnaise on the face of each of the inverted top buns.

8. Place a tomato slice onto the mayonnaise, then stack a leaf of
lettuce on top of the tomato.

9. On each of the bottom buns, stack one piece of chicken.

10. Flip the top half of each sandwich onto the bottom half and
serve hot.

Makes 4 sandwiches.

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But Ducky, that's no fun! The best part of Micky D's is that you can really taste the polysorbate 80, just like momma used to synthesize. And as far I'm concerned, oil just isn't oil unless it's partially hydrogenated. I'm lovin' it!

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Hahaha-- eew!  :P

I realized after I wrote that that what I am describing is the OPPOSITE of fast food... as frying things at home so often is.  The cleanup will be a bear!  But I love shallow-frying savories and making sandwiches from them, love it!

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Try the recipe for "Buffalo Tofu" on this site. I make it a little differently by breading it with Panko, frying it, then baking it with the hot sauce in the oven. It is SOOOO GOOOOOD....I had it the next day on a bun with lettuce and veganaise. It blows any McD's food away....even my husband thinks so!

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Boca makes a vegan spicy chicken patty. I haven't had the McD's kind but you might try it..

Ooooh these are wonderful. I used to eat them even BEFORE I became vegetarian because they are just so yummy!

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holy crap! I hadn't checked this in awhile and I'm shocked so many others are responding. So thanks! I would like to say though that I have tried making homemade Seitan with the instant gluten flour in the little boxes and follwed instructions just right on a couple of occasions from diffrent cookbooks with little success. It always puffs up and floats right to the top and comes out tough as my shoes, so maybe someone has a good suggestion for getting seitan to behave itself while its being boiled. And also I've never been able to cut it into any shapes as they tell me to becasue it wont roll out or keep any shape long enough. I wish I could master this art of "seiting"  ;D Anyways, I'll have to try a couple of the recipies you guys mentioned and see if they hit my spice tooth, seeing as alot of the food I've tryed making so far that is spcy (aside from spicy peanut sauce) hasn't had enough zip. Thanks for everyones ideas thusfar!

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About seitan: I simmer mine in a big crock pot, which is big enough to accomodate one big roast-sized lump and gets really pretty hot (simmers like crazy!)  And when it seems to be doing nicely, I come and flip it over, since (as you pointed out, Thunderkitty) it floats like a balloon.  To make it less tough than my shoes, I add about 1/4-1/2 cup of flour (I've used any combo of wheat flour, white flour, garbanzo flour, nutritional yeast, wheat germ, and oat bran) per 2-2 1/2 cups of vital wheat gluten before adding seasonings and liquid to the dry mix.

Check out some of the wild gluten recipes on this site: I am always embarrassed by my plain-Jane vital-wheat-gluten, flour, spices, and water version when I see that other people are adding pureed lentils, beans, and veggies as the liquid.  I haven't tried these techniques yet, but ooh, I've gotta!

When I serve the stuff I slice it thinly off the big ol' "roast" thing... thin slices don't seem so tough.  I hardly ever break it into smaller bits before poaching.  I baked it once and it was outstanding-- baypuppy's definitely onto something.

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Hey! Thought I'd add my two cents to the discussion.

I so understand the craving for the salty, fatty, fried-ness. Mmm, red 40 & chicken fat... ::)

Anyway, what I found satisfies my craving is a modified Boca Chick'n pattie. Dig out a salad bowl and add some of your favorite spices. I use a bunch - cayenne, hot pepper flakes, garlic powder, a LOT of onion powder, Mrs. Dash , ground black pepper, paprika... just about everything spicy in the cabinet. ;D Heat up your bake oven ~350F, splash some Worcestershire sauce on top, sprinkle some of your creation, and stick the whole thing in there for about 12 minutes. Or, to get really fancy, 6 minutes, flip, and repeat. Eat on a hamburger bun with some veginase & whatever you want to top it with - I like romaine, personally. ^.^

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I have not made this, but it has 5 stars & tons of comments & somone who use to post here raved about it. Looks easy to modify.

http://vegweb.com/index.php?topic=7534.0

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little2ant   hope you see this...
when you bread your tofu with panko do you just press the panko into the tofu? or do you use an egg replacer to dip the tufo in first and make it batter like and stick? I really want to try the bufalo tofu recipe but i want to do it the way you do cuz it sounds soo yummy!... mmm panko...

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Thanks Baypuppy and DuckaLucky not only do your names rymn  :D BUT you both gave cool suggestions which I will undoubtedly try! Lezly the one you mentioned sounds good too! I think I'm going to be busy with all these ideas for awhile!  ;D

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little2ant   hope you see this...
when you bread your tofu with panko do you just press the panko into the tofu? or do you use an egg replacer to dip the tufo in first and make it batter like and stick? I really want to try the bufalo tofu recipe but i want to do it the way you do cuz it sounds soo yummy!... mmm panko...

Hey JH
What I do is dip the tofu in soymilk or any nut milk first. you can also flavor the milk with garlic powder or any spices first. or, dip in plain milk, then sprinkle on the garlic powder. then roll in panko, fry, put on baking sheet, cover with sauce from recipe and bake for 25 min. you will just die when you smell it and try it. it is so freaking good. my husband and I just drool thinking of it, seriously. i give my son the tofu to eat before i put the sauce on because its too hot for him. he likes to dip them in ketchup! 

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