Saturday, May 03, 2008

Chicken Parmigiano

How Did I Miss It?

Chicken Parmigiano

Wednesday night I taught a class on cooking fish. The class was packed — 22 students — and as usual, great fun. I began with sautéed jerked shrimp, moved on to broiled tilapia with arugula pesto, did salmon in parchment, grilled tuna and topped it with Romesco sauce, and ended with poached tilapia with a lemon/cream sauce. The only significant technique I didn't cover was frying fish and there was simply no way to fry at that venue for that many people. All together I cooked served 16 pounds of fish.

I was standing behind the counter after serving the last dish, trying a bite of it and listening to the "hmms" running around the room and couldn't resist saying, "You know, I get to eat like this all the time." And you know, I do and that's the point.

I was surprised a week ago to realize I'd never made Chicken Parmesan — in fact, somehow I'd never even eaten this Italian restaurant staple.

The underlying theme that links all of my classes, the articles I write, and even the food I prepare for my personal chef clients is simplicity. Like Rachel Ray and Sandra Lee I'm sensitive to the demands of schedules, the lack of good kitchen training, and the desire for bold flavors. Unlike them, I think you can cook such meals without taking shortcuts. At the Pasta and Herbs class I did a couple of weeks ago the students kept noting how easy the dishes were and yet full of flavor: "I could come home from work and make this."

So I was surprised a week ago to realize I'd never made Chicken Parmesan — in fact, somehow I'd never even eaten this Italian restaurant staple. I did some research and came up with this recipe, which is largely based on a recipe from **Cooks Illustrated. The egg dip enables lots of cheese to adhere to the chicken and produces a wonderfully crisp crust.

Chicken Parmigiano
Serves 4.

4 chicken breasts — pounded to 1/2" thick
1 Tbsp. olive oil
Salt and pepper to taste
2 eggs — whisked
1/4 cup plus 2 Tbsp all-purpose flour
1/2 cup grated parmigiano
1 tsp. dried thyme
Marinara sauce

Heat oven to 225F. Heat oil in a large skillet over medium-high heat.

Place 1/4 cup flour in a pie pan. Put egg in a pie pan. Combine 2 tablespoons flour, Parmigiano, and thyme in a pie pan.

Season breasts with salt and pepper. Coat 2 breasts in flour and shake off excess. Dip in egg and coat thoroughly. Dip in Parmigiano and coat thoroughly. Cook two breasts for about 4 minutes per side until lightly browned. Transfer to an oven proof-plate and keep warm in the oven. Repeat for other breasts.

Serve, topped with warm marinara sauce.
This version is boldly but simply flavored. Each element from chicken to cheese to sauce works in harmony. An Oregon Pinot Grigio would be a perfect wine.

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8 Comments:

OpenID winestainedcloth said...

Chicken Parmigiana has been a favorite in our house for decades. Hard to believe that someone like you would have missed such a Kitchen Classic. I have at least 3 different recipes that I switch around. Great dish for a crowd too.

5/04/2008 02:48:00 PM  
Blogger Kevin said...

Donna,
It is sort of mind-boggling.

5/04/2008 03:03:00 PM  
Blogger lydia said...

I haven't made chicken parm in years, but when I was a young and inexperienced cook, this was one of the few dishes in my repertoire. Time to try it again, I think.

5/05/2008 05:19:00 AM  
Blogger Kevin said...

Lydia,
I can't believe I'd never had it before, seriously good eats.

5/05/2008 09:39:00 AM  
Blogger FloridaSteve said...

I'm a chicken parm bloodhound. I drive my wife crazy because I order it half the time we eat Italian. There are 3 that reign almost equally supreme for me and 2 of them are local.

My mothers (of course) is out of this world mostly because of her sauce which only my wife can really duplicate.

We have a local run pizza joint that is ancient but makes the best restaurant Chicken Parm on the East coast (or at least Northeast Florida :)

And third when I make it myself using a recipe I found from...

brace yourself...

Giada De Laurentiis of food channel Kitchen babe fame. Believe it or not, if you take away all the "shmultz" from the TV production the girl can really cook.


Regards!
I don't have the link but I think it the first recipe that pops up if you search their site for it.

5/05/2008 10:26:00 PM  
Blogger Kevin said...

Steve,
I think Giada has some of the best recipes on Food TV, and yes, she can really cook.

5/05/2008 11:29:00 PM  
Blogger Sharona May said...

What a great photo of Chicken Parmesan ~ MMM. It is a favorite of mine.

Sharona May

5/06/2008 09:08:00 PM  
Blogger Kevin said...

Sharona,
Mine too now that I've (finally) eaten it. I'm still a bit baffled that I could have missed eating something that is so "me." On the other hand, having looked at a lot of recipes, most look pretty poor.

5/06/2008 09:52:00 PM  

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