Breadcrumbs

Ginger Pierce's Chicken Milanese

October 13, 2009
0
0 Ratings
  • Serves 6
Author Notes

Ginger Pierce, chef de cuisine at Five Points in Manhattan, shares her recipe for Chicken Milanese. She prefers making it with clarified butter, as it has a very high smoking point, but olive oil also works. —Family Meal

What You'll Need
Ingredients
  • 2 whole boneless, skinless chicken breasts
  • salt & pepper
  • 2 tablespoons freshly picked thyme leaves
  • 2 cups dried breadcrumbs (fresh if you can!)
  • 2 eggs
  • 1 cup grated parmesan
  • clarified butter or olive oil
Directions
  1. Cut the chicken breasts in thirds, trimming away excess fat or cartilage. With a meat mallet, or rolling pin, pound the breasts between plastic wrap to about ¼ inch thickness. Season the chicken breasts liberally with salt & pepper.
  2. Coarsely chop the thyme and toss with the breadcrumbs and a little salt & pepper, and put in a wide container. Beat the eggs in a small bowl, and put in another wide container. Put the parmesan in a third wide container.
  3. Place the seasoned chicken breast in the cheese, really pressing it into the meat. (The key is to get it really well coated.) Then dip the breast in the egg letting any excess fall back into the container. Finally coat the chicken on both sides with the herbed breadcrumbs. Repeat this process with each piece of chicken.
  4. Heat a skillet to medium high heat & add the clarified butter or olive oil ¼ inch deep. (Make sure you give the pan time to heat back up after you add the fat.) As you add the cutlet to the oil, you should hear a light sizzle. If you don’t hear it your pan is too cold. If it is really loud & starts smoking, your pan is too hot. (Even temperature is really important!) Gently brown the cutlet on the one side, about a minute and a half, then flip with tongs & brown the other side. When brown, remove from the pan & place on a baking sheet lined with paper towels to dry. Serve immediately.

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1 Review

Renee B. August 14, 2015
Is the chicken breast count accurate? Two breasts seems low for six servings. BTW, I love that the cheese is first and not mixed with breadcrumbs as it often is in other recipes. The leftover breadcrumb/cheese mix means wasted delicious cheese.