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frango igual do KFC 🤤  ingredientes  mais ou menos 400g de frango  te...
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frango igual do KFC 🤤 ingredientes mais ou menos 400g de frango te...

450.4k views·May 21, 2026
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Transcript

0:00Today's recipe is chicken equal to k f c,
0:03Water cutting the chicken
0:04because I wanted little pieces
0:06and then I went to season it with pap,
0:08salt,
0:08mustard powder,
0:09oregano and garlic.
0:10The next step is to make the dough to bread,
0:13I added the egg,
0:14wheat flour,
0:16seasoning and water,
0:17you add it little by little until it gets like this.
0:19Now just pass all the chicken through this dough,
0:22mix and leave for a few minutes.
0:24Now in a jar that
0:25my lid adds wheat flour,
0:27temper,
0:28add the chicken and cover the jar and keep stirring
0:31for him to bread
0:32and it will look like this.
0:33Now just take it to fry in oil
0:36not too hot
0:37and when it starts to brown
0:38you can now take it out and let it slide
0:41well the oil.
0:41And to accompany this chicken
0:43I made a sauce that will mayonnaise which is
0:45ketchup,
0:46Mustard and a little parmesan cheese and you're ready!
0:49I made a montage on the plate to look cute
0:52and this chicken is super crunchy!
0:55Now comment if you liked the video
0:57and leaves here ideas for the next video.

Mind Map

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Viral Breakdown

Hook (first 3 seconds)

  • Verbatim opening line: "Today's recipe is chicken equal to KFC."
  • Hook pattern: Bold claim (comparing homemade recipe to a globally recognized fast-food brand)
  • Why it stops scrolling: Instantly triggers curiosity and skepticism — viewers think, "No way this is as good as KFC," and they have to watch to see if the claim holds up.

Emotional Rhythm

  • Beat 1 — Curiosity: "Today's recipe is chicken equal to KFC" — sets high expectations.
  • Beat 2 — Process tension: Step-by-step breading and frying creates micro-suspense ("Will it actually turn out crispy?")
  • Beat 3 — Visual payoff: "It will look like this" (close-up of breaded chicken) — delivers a satisfying visual confirmation.
  • Beat 4 — Relief & reward: "This chicken is super crunchy!" — verbal and visual climax, fulfilling the initial bold claim.
  • Beat 5 — Engagement nudge: "Now comment if you liked the video" — closes with a call to action that leverages the emotional high.

Climax moment: The shot of the golden, crunchy chicken on the plate — the visual proof that the KFC claim was real.

Keyword Density

  • chicken (drives searchability — core recipe topic)
  • KFC (high-algorithmic reach — brand comparison triggers discovery)
  • super crunchy (emotional pull — sensory promise)
  • seasoning / season (algorithmic — recipe keywords)
  • bread / breading (instructional — how-to search)
  • oil / fry (algorithmic — cooking method)
  • sauce (emotional pull — completion of the meal fantasy)
  • jar (unique visual hook — algorithmic curiosity trigger)

Algorithmic drivers: KFC, chicken, recipe, seasoning, fry
Emotional pull: super crunchy, equal to KFC, cute montage

Why It Spreads

  1. Bold brand comparison — "Chicken equal to KFC" is a clickable, shareable claim. Viewers tag friends who love KFC, creating organic social proof.
  2. Simple, replicable process — The recipe uses common ingredients (paprika, salt, mustard powder, oregano, garlic, wheat flour, eggs). Viewers feel "I can do this at home" — low barrier to try.
  3. Visual payoff after each step — "It will look like this" after breading, then the final "super crunchy" shot. This builds trust and reward, making viewers want to show the result to others.
  4. Engagement loop — Ends with a direct ask: "Comment if you liked the video and leave ideas." This drives comments, which boosts algorithm ranking.
  5. Relatable "cute" aesthetic — "I made a montage on the plate to look cute" — the humble, homemade vibe makes it feel authentic and shareable, not overly produced.

What You Can Steal

  1. Lead with a bold, verifiable claim — Open with a comparison to a famous brand or a promise that's easy to prove visually (e.g., "This tastes just like Starbucks" or "Crispier than restaurant fries").
  2. Show the process step-by-step with visual checkpoints — After each key step, show a close-up of what it should look like. This builds trust and reduces viewer anxiety about messing up.
  3. Close with a specific, low-effort engagement ask — Don't just say "like and subscribe." Ask a question or request ideas ("Comment if you liked it and leave ideas for the next video"). This sparks conversation and algorithmic lift.
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