If you don’t know what you’re doing, you really don’t want to mess around with deep-frying a whole turkey.
“A lot of folks think it’s fun and games and look it up on YouTube,” says Phillip Mitchell, who runs Kim’s Louisiana Fried Turkey & Stuff in Richmond along with his wife, Kim Knox. “You drop a cold turkey in hot oil and it overflows, you could burn your house down.”
In other words, he says, “You can ruin your holiday real quick with just a few missteps.”
Mitchell, a veteran Bay Area restaurant manager, is happy to share the tricks of the trade with anyone who asks. (Firstly, you need to dip that big bird into the oil gradually, nice and slow.) Luckily, fried turkey lovers in the Richmond area have a much simpler holiday option: They can just buy their turkey from Kim’s.
Like so many other niche food businesses in the Bay Area, Kim’s Louisiana Fried Turkey began with a craving: Six years ago, Mitchell was looking for a place where he could buy a deep-fried turkey for Thanksgiving. That style of turkey has been a holiday tradition for Cajun folks in Louisiana going back nearly 100 years, and starting in the 1980s, it became something of a nationwide trend, especially in large swaths of the American South. A 1984 Times-Picayune article about the dish helped set off a “national cooking craze” — and may have indirectly caused two houses in the New Orleans metropolitan area to burn down that very night.