Homemade KFC Coleslaw (Creamy Copycat That Tastes Like Takeout)

🥗 The “Colonel’s Secret” Creamy Coleslaw

The most important ingredient here isn’t the cabbage; it’s time. This recipe is a chemical reaction that requires at least 4 hours (ideally overnight) to “melt” the vegetables into the dressing.

CategoryDetails
Prep Time15 minutes
Chill Time4–24 hours (Mandatory)
Total Time4+ hours
Yield8 Servings

🍴 Ingredients

The Vegetables (The “Rice-Sized” Mix):

  • 8 cups Green cabbage, finely diced (about 1 large head)
  • ¼ cup Carrot, finely shredded or diced
  • 2 tbsp Yellow onion, minced or grated (grating is better for flavor distribution)

The Tangy Dressing:

  • ½ cup Mayonnaise (Hellmann’s/Best Foods or Duke’s for authenticity)
  • 1/3 cup Granulated sugar
  • ¼ cup Whole milk
  • ¼ cup Buttermilk (The “secret” for that fast-food tang)
  • 2 ½ tbsp Lemon juice
  • 1 ½ tbsp White vinegar
  • ½ tsp Salt
  • 1/8 tsp Black pepper

👩‍🍳 Instructions

1. The “Micro-Chop”

  • Cut the cabbage into wedges and remove the core.
  • The Texture Trick: Use a food processor and pulse a few times until the cabbage is in tiny bits, roughly the size of rice. Do the same with the carrots. If you don’t have a processor, use a sharp knife to slice extremely thin, then turn and chop crosswise into “confetti.”

2. The Dressing Emulsion

  • In a large bowl, whisk together the mayonnaise, sugar, milk, buttermilk, lemon juice, vinegar, salt, and pepper.
  • Beat it until the sugar is fully dissolved and the mixture is completely smooth.

3. The Marriage

  • Add the cabbage, carrots, and grated onion to the dressing.
  • Fold it all together until every single tiny piece of vegetable is coated. It will look a bit “dry” at first—don’t worry, the salt will fix that in the fridge.

4. The Deep Chill

  • Cover the bowl tightly with plastic wrap and refrigerate for at least 4 hours, but overnight is where the magic happens.
  • As it sits, the vegetables release their juices, thinning out the dressing into that signature creamy consistency.

5. The Final Stir

  • Before serving, give the slaw a vigorous stir to redistribute the dressing that has settled at the bottom.

The “Tarragon” Theory: Some veteran KFC employees swear the original 1970s recipe used Tarragon Vinegar instead of white vinegar and lemon juice. If you want a more “vintage” herbal note, swap the white vinegar for tarragon vinegar 1-for-1.

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