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These crispy fried green tomatoes deliver everything I want from the soul food classic. Tart slices of green tomato are wrapped in a deeply textured crust loaded with cornmeal, panko, benne seeds, and crushed pepitas that fry up shatteringly crisp while keeping the center tender and juicy. The flavor is rich but the texture is the star of the show.
For a twist on this classic try these smoked green tomatoes that receive the fried treatment.

Old fashioned fried green tomatoes have long been a staple across Southern tables, transforming unripe tomatoes into something worthy of center stage. My version leans heavily into crunch, borrowing texture building techniques I've refined making everything from fried chicken to fried pork chops, creating a crust with layers of crackle, nuttiness, and flavor in every bite.
Why You'll Love This Recipe
- The crust is outrageously crunchy thanks to a blend of flour, cornmeal, potato starch, panko, benne seeds, and pepitas.
- The tart flavor of green tomatoes balances the richness of the fried coating.
- The recipe applies lessons I've learned from years of chasing texture in dishes like buttermilk fried chicken and Southern crispy pan-fried okra.
- Every step is designed to prevent sogginess and maintain crispness.
- The nutty flavors from the benne seeds and pepitas add depth that most fried green tomato recipes miss.
- They work as an appetizer, side dish, sandwich filling, or barbecue companion.
Key Texture Ingredient Notes (Extra Crispy Coating)
Flour creates the foundation of the breading and helps every ingredient adhere to the tomato slices. All purpose flour works best, but rice flour can be substituted for an even lighter coating.
Cornmeal provides the classic Southern flavor and signature crunch that fried green tomatoes are known for. Medium grind cornmeal delivers the best texture without becoming overly coarse.
Potato starch is one of my favorite ingredients for creating crisp crusts. It fries up lighter than flour and helps create the delicate crackling texture that keeps people reaching for another piece.
Panko breadcrumbs adds large crunchy flakes that stay crisp longer than traditional bread crumbs. This ingredient was one of the biggest upgrades I made during recipe testing.
Benne seeds contribute toasted nutty flavor and tiny bursts of crunch throughout the coating. Sesame seeds make a suitable substitute if benne seeds are unavailable.
Crushed pepitas add richness, texture, and visual appeal. Lightly crushing them allows them to integrate into the coating while still delivering crunch.
Aleppo pepper is a mildly spicy deep red chili pepper that's ground into coarse flakes with a distinctive fruity, earthy flavor. Its less about heat and more about complexity. Most fried green tomato recipes use cayenne, but I sub in aleppo for more nuance and complexity. But if you don't have easy access to Aleppo, a combo of cayenne/red pepper flakes and smoked paprika works.
What Are Benne Seeds
Benne seeds are an heirloom variety of sesame seed that arrived in the American South through West Africa during the transatlantic slave trade. They have deep roots in the food traditions of the Carolinas, Georgia, and the broader African diaspora, making them an important ingredient in Southern food history.
Unlike many modern sesame seeds, benne seeds are prized for their stronger nutty flavor, richer aroma, and slight sweetness. When toasted, they develop a deeper, more complex taste that many cooks describe as earthier and more buttery than standard sesame seeds.
How To Fry Green Tomatoes Step by Step
Start by slicing firm green tomatoes into even rounds.
Mix together the flour, cornmeal, potato starch, panko bread crumbs, benne seeds, crushed pepitas, and seasonings.
Dip tomatoes in buttermilk and coat them fully.
Dredge each tomato slice thoroughly in the flour mixture and press the coating firmly onto the surface. I learned through testing that a loose coating tends to separate during frying.
Fry in hot oil until golden brown and deeply crisp. Avoid overcrowding the pan which lowers oil temperature and creates greasy results.
Transfer finished tomatoes to a wire rack instead of paper towels. Air circulation helps preserve the crunchy exterior.

Serving Suggestions
Serve these crispy fried green tomatoes with remoulade sauce, comeback sauce, or roasted red pepper sauce.
They pair beautifully with summer cookout favs like black-eyed pea salad, BBQ Beans, creamy coleslaw, spicy blackened redfish, or tender smoked chicken thighs. Pair with some Southern sweet tea and you're golden.
Crunchy Fried Green Tomotoes Test Kitchen Secrets
- One thing I've learned after years of cooking is that texture deserves as much attention as flavor. During recipe testing, my earliest batches tasted great but lost their crunch far too quickly.
- The breakthrough came from using potato starch in the breading dramatically improved the final texture.
- Adding panko was another game changer. The coating became lighter and crispier while staying crunchy longer after frying. The benne seeds and pepitas were the final layer, creating the same kind of textural complexity I often chase when building crusts for fried chicken.
- Another mistake to avoid is draining fried tomatoes on paper towels. A wire rack preserves airflow and protects the crust from steaming itself soft.
Beats and Eats (music to pair with fried green tomatoes)
I paired this classic Southern comfort food with Tupac's "Hold Ya Head." The song carries resilience, soul, and optimism in the face of challenges. That same spirit shows up in this dish where humble ingredients become something memorable through technique, patience, and care.
What makes this pairing special is the shared spirit. Hold Ya Head is ultimately about finding beauty, strength, and dignity in difficult circumstances. Fried green tomatoes tell a similar Southern story. Generations of cooks looked at unripe tomatoes that might otherwise go unused and created a beloved dish through skill, resourcefulness, and technique. Both the song and the recipe are reminders that greatness often comes from making the most of what is already in front of you.
Closing Statement
Great homemade fried green tomatoes should crunch loudly enough to turn heads across the room. This recipe delivers that kind of texture while honoring a beloved Southern tradition, proving that with the right technique, a humble green tomato can become something unforgettable.
Crispy Fried Green Tomatoes
Ingredients
- 3 large Green Tomatoes sliced
- 2 cups buttermilk
- 1 cup All-purpose Flour
- ½ cup Cornmeal
- ¼ cup Potato Starch
- ¼ cup Panko Bread Crumbs
- 2 tablespoon Benne Seeds
- 1 tablespoon Pepitas Pumpkin Seeds
- 1 teaspoon Aleppo Pepper Sub other red pepper flakes but be mindful of heat level and use less
- 1 teaspoon Kosher Salt
- 1 teaspoon Black Pepper
- 1 teaspoon Smoked Paprika
- 1 teaspoon Garlic Powder
Method
- Slice green tomatoes into even rounds. Set Aside
- Mix together the flour, cornmeal, potato starch, and panko bread crumbs
- Crush the pepitas using a spice grinder or place them in plastic bag and pound with flat side of a pan.
- Mix crushed pepitas with benne seeds, Aleppo pepper, and seasonings. Add to flour mixture and Mex well.
- Dip tomatoes in buttermilk and coat them fully.
- Dredge each tomato slice thoroughly in the flour mixture and press the coating firmly onto the surface.
- Preheat oil to 350 degrees. Fry until golden brown and deeply crisp. Tomatoes will float when ready.
- Transfer finished tomatoes to a wire rack instead of paper towels.



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