
Recipe Provided By: Cook's Illustrated
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Per Serving
About: Nutrition Info ![]()
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Yield: 4 servings
These crispy cutlets have an unusually thick crust because they are coated in flour, eggs, and homemade bread crumbs.
Note
If you would rather not prepare fresh bread crumbs, use panko, or Japanese, bread crumbs, which cook up extra crisp. The chicken is cooked in batches of two because the crust is noticeably more crisp if the pan is not overcrowded. Finally, because the tenderloins - the small strips of meat on the underside of the breast - are likely to become detached during cooking, they must be removed at the outset. These cutlets can be served on their own, with lemon wedges, or used in sandwiches. Though Parmesan is the traditional cheese to use in this dish, feel free to substitute Pecorino Romano cheese if you prefer a stronger, more tangy flavor. The cheese is quite susceptible to burning, so be sure to keep a very close eye on the cutlets as they cook.
We found that this dish was too salty. I suspect that the brine soak left too much salt in the meat.
8 of 8 found this review helpful.
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Are you out of your mind? Who has time for all those steps? Buy your bread crumbs, mix the grated cheese in the bread crumbs. roll the chicken in those bread crumbs, bake it, and call it a day.
11 of 15 found this review helpful.
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While I can't muster the vitriol of some reviewers, I have to say that if you want to cook Chicken Milanese, there are a number of simpler, healthier recipes out there. This was time consuming, baffling (what's with the sugar?), and loaded with unnecessary calories.
Admittedly, recipes can be altered to taste, but a lot of folks who look up a recipe aren't comfortable making changes, and want something they can follow to the letter.
This one's not a keeper.
4 of 4 found this review helpful.
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it was easy to make and my family loved how it came out. Im going to use this recipe again.
4 of 7 found this review helpful.
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Cook's Illustrated is a phenomenally good magazine... rarely do their recipes turn out bad. This was a pretty good recipe for Chicken Milanese, although I agree that it was a *bit* too salty.
I have an interest in cooking, so I wanted to answer questions asked by some of the other people here.
1) Fat content. I simply can't see how this would have 51 grams of fat. In order to get that number, you have to assume that each chicken breast soaks up 3 tablespoons of the vegetable oil, which I don't think should happen if you cook properly.
2) Bread crumbs. The homemade breadcrumbs really gave it a nice thick crust, and it didn't make the chicken soggy. I made sure to dry the chicken according to the instructions, so your results may be different if you don't follow the directions. Also, if you don't want to make your own bread crumbs (which really isn't all that much work), it says at the bottom that you can use Japanese-style bread crumbs.
3) The sugar. It seems kind of funny, but there's a good reason. Soaking the chicken breasts in salt (aka brining them) helps keep them juicy during cooking. I'm sure most of you have had problems keeping boneless, skinless chicken breasts juicy. The purpose of the sugar is to negate the taste of the salt that the chicken picks up during brining. The chicken definitely didn't taste sugary, but I did say earlier it was a little salty. Anyway, you can probably skip this step altogether if you really want to -- you'll just have to be really careful if you want to avoid dry chicken.
1 of 1 found this review helpful.
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