RECIPE: Rec: Chicken Francese w/ Lemon and Pecorino, posted by Charlie on Gail's...

RECIPE:

michael-in-phoenix

Well-known member
...and enjoyed often by my family. Thought it was definitely worth re-posting here.

Thanks Charlie!

Chicken Francese w/ Lemon and Pecorino

David Rosengarten

****Serves 2****

1/2 pound chicken breasts, boned and skinned

2 tablespoons Romano cheese, finely grated

4 tablespoons parsley, finely chopped

1 egg, beaten well

Flour for dredging

1/4 cup olive oil

1/4 cup dry white wine

1 cup chicken stock

6 thin round slices of lemon, seeds removed

2 tablespoons butter

Cut the chicken breasts into 6 pieces of roughly equal size. Place the pieces between sheets of waxed paper, and pound with a mallet until they're thin. Season with salt and pepper. Place cheese and parsley in a wide, shallow bowl. Slowly add the beaten egg, whisking until it's smoothly incorporated. Place the flour on a wide plate. Dip the pounded chicken in the egg mixture. Remove, letting excess egg drip off. Place each cutlet in the flour, and coat lightly. Remove from flour and hold them in a single layer. Add the olive oil to a saute pan large enough to hold the 6 cutlets in a single layer. Place over medium-high heat. When the oil is hot, add the cutlets. Saute, turning once, until the cutlets are golden on the outside, just cooked on the inside (about 2 minutes per side). Remove the cutlets, and hold them in a single layer. Spill the oil out of the saute pan. Return the pan to high heat. Add the white wine, and reduce it to 2 tablespoons. Add the chicken stock and the lemon slices. Boil for 5 minutes, then remove the lemon slices. Keep boiling the sauce until it's reduced to 1/2 cup. Turn heat to very low. Swirl in the butter until the sauce is thickened. Add the reserved chicken, turning them until they are coated in sauce. Divide cutlets among 2 plates, pour remaining sauce over them, sprinkle with remaining 2 tablespoons of parsley, and serve immediately.

 
This is my all time favorite meal - tastes good freshly made, sitting around for a while, leftover -

whatever. Great for entertaining, quick for weeknights. Have never used the pecorino, can't wait. Thanks Michael.

 
Glad you like it Michael--I remember catching hell from a cooking instructor on Gail's when...

I first posted this David Rosengarten recipe because usually the flour egg coating is reversed. It's classically flour, then egg--but it works for me-us.

 
I always dip whatever I am frying in the egg first, then flour. Isn't this how most of us do it?

Then again, maybe not... I am always learning, here.

 
Actually no ~ I learned the opposite through classes and books...

that the flour should come FIRST, then the egg, then any dry coating you want again (flour, crumbs whatever). I thought as you did that egg came first, but have since learned that the coating will adhere MUCH better through the frying process with flour first. This lesson comes from respected chefs and authors. And I found first-hand that they are correct and it does, indeed, work better.

 
Am going to buy dry white wine today.. What kind do you suggest?

Can't wait to make this for DH!

Thanks again!

Blessings from cool and sunny Missouri!

 
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