 This recipe is a winner. It's something people will always remember you
serving, it is something your family will request again and again. This
is one of the recipes that really kicked off my passion for cooking for
family and friends. People love it and they're not afraid to tell you.
The
recipe finds its origin as one of my ex-wife's standard meals, (she had
3, I think). Hers wasn't bad at all, but when I got into it I just
wanted to um, how do you say, kick it up a notch? Pounding out the
chicken certainly helps, but the homemade marinara and the use of three
premium cheeses makes this one great. It is a favorite of my family and
friends and readily requested and seconds are never refused. It's also
better the next day, so cook it in advance or always make more than you
need for great leftovers!
Let's talk about cheese. No, allow me
to rant about cheese. When you're home cooking, don't scrimp, don't
cheap out, don't cheat yourself. In home cooking, scrimping never pays
off. If I write Parmigiano-reggiano (and I do a lot), use it. You're
not saving anything if you spend your good time to prepare a great dish
at home with inferior or substituted ingredients. Hamburger will never
be beef tenderloin, raisins will never be figs, canned or jarred
marinara will never equal homemade and store-bought grated parmesan in
a can or bottle will never, ever, ever, ever be a freshly grated
Parmigiano-reggiano. The differences are not subtle, they are profound.
One is sawdust the other is manna.
There's a reason so many
prepared foods try to distinguish themselves with superlatives like
"homemade", "home cooked" or "Just like mom's!" It's because crafty
advertisers and marketers know that they have to try and create a
superior and quality image of their food product in our minds. Don't be
fooled by them in the grocery store and never fool yourself in your own
kitchen. Quality counts and so does authenticity. The better the
ingredients, the better the finished product. You can even make your
own breadcrumbs if you like.
I also use this recipe as one of
the components of my "Chicken Parmalasagna" which is a recipe I'll be
adding at a future date. Yup, it's a lasagna made with layers of
noodles, cheeses and chicken parmesan. Say it aloud as you read:
"Chicken Parmelasagna", you read it here first!
Chicken Parmesan
3-4 lbs boneless chicken breast 1 cup of flour spread on a large plate 4 eggs 1/4 cup of milk 1-2 cups of Italian style bread crumbs spread on a large plate 1/2 cup Parmigiano-reggiano cheese (grated) 1/2 lb. mozzarella (shredded) 1/2 to 3/4 lb. Provolone cheese (sliced) Marinara sauce Salt and Pepper to taste
Preheat the oven to 350°F.
Beat the eggs and the milk together until well blended. Place the mixture in a large shallow bowl.
In
a work area near the stove, lay out the plate of flour, then the bowl
of egg mixture and finally the plate of Italian Bread crumbs.
Place
1-2 cups of olive oil in a deep sided pan (oil should be about 1/2"
deep in the pan) and preheat slowly to frying temperature while you
prepare the chicken for frying.
To prepare the chicken: Take the
chicken breasts, separate them and trim off any fat. Place them
individually in a large ziplock bag or cover with plastic wrap and beat
them with the flat end of a meat tenderizer until they are 1/2"-3/4"
thick. If you use glancing blows you can better control their shape
and thickness. Season them with salt and pepper and put aside. Repeat
with all the chicken.
Take a seasoned chicken breast and dredge
both sides of it in the flour. Shake off the excess flour then place it
in the milk and egg mixture being sure it gets well coated. Drain it a
little and then put it in the bread crumb plate and be sure it gets
well-coated with bread crumbs. Carefully add the breaded chicken breast
to the hot olive oil and brown each side well. Remove from the pan,
drain it well and place it in a medium to large baking pan. Repeat this
step for all the chicken. Be sure you do not stack the chicken. Keep it
all on one level.
Sprinkle the finished chicken with a decent
amount of the Parmigiano-reggiano cheese. Then top that with the
mozzarella and then cover with sliced provolone cheese. Try to cover
the surface of the chicken as best as possible. Then coat the chicken
with a good layer of the marinara sauce and slide the whole thing in
the oven until the cheese is good and bubbly. Usually about 10 to 15
minutes.
Remove it from the oven allow it to cool for 5-10
minutes and serve it with the balance of the sauce served over your
favorite pasta.
Again, this stuff is even better on day two or three. Don't serve this dish to people you don't want to see again.
|