Monday, August 16, 2010

Lemon Chicken


(adapted from my father, SPQR)

We should probably find another name for this dish that more adequately captures how unbelievably delicious it is. Chicken Scallopini with Lemon? With Lemon-Butter Sauce? Getting closer. Anyway, growing up it was lemon chicken, so lemon chicken it shall remain.

This was one of my most frequent requests for birthday meals at home. And it very nicely fits our current meal requirement: low-budget. Got flour? Lemon? Butter? Done. Plus, check it out - I actually made a balanced meal, with sides and veggies and everything! It's not just pasta!

So, here's what you need for two people:
2 decently sized/thick chicken breasts (or 3 smaller ones, or 3 if you're just really hungry), thawed
Flour
Salt
Pepper
2 tbsp butter, divided
Olive oil
1 large lemon

(Sides: I made the rice and asparagus first so I could focus on the chicken. If you're better at timing things than I am, you could of course do them all at once. I blanched the asparagus, drizzled it in olive oil, and sprinkled it with a little salt.)

The first step is to turn the chicken into scallopini. The key is really to have a good, sharp knife. Place a chicken breast on a cutting board, put your hand on top of it, and slice it sideways to make very thin filets. You'll end up with some small pieces, some long, some large - this is fine. Just make sure they're thin.

When that's done, put some flour on a plate and dust each filet with flour individually on both sides. You want it coated, but not thick - just a thin layer of flour around each filet. Set those aside.

Take a large frying pan, nonstick preferred, and drizzle a couple/a few tbsp of olive oil into it along with 1 tbsp of butter. Turn the heat to medium-high and let the pan get hot. Add a little salt and black pepper.

When the pan is good and hot, use tongs to cook batches of the filets/scallopini. They will cook FAST. Flip them so they cook on both sides. Remove the cooked filets from the pan and set them aside on a plate (in the winter, to keep them warm, you can put them on a plate in the oven).

Once all the chicken is cooked, squeeze the juice of one lemon into the pan you just used - keep the heat the same. Also add another 1 tbsp of butter. Stir around to combine and melt, then add all the chicken back to the pan and stir around to coat the chicken on both sides. Transfer to a serving plate, add more salt if you want, pour the sauce from the pan over it, and garnish with parsley.

2 comments:

  1. Additional tips from a pro:

    I dust the individual pieces in flour as I'm putting them in the pan. This apparently keeps the flour from getting soggy, which CAN HAPPEN! if you dust them and put them aside.

    Also, I turn the heat down when I add the lemon and extra butter to deglaze the pan, so as to avoid burning the butter and/or DRYING OUT!!! the lemon juice.

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  2. Julia,

    I made this for dinner tonight - delicious! Everyone liked it, even my picky eater. I will definitely make this again. Thanks for the recipe.

    Stephanie

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