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Chicken Piccata

Chicken Piccata

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Nothing quite screams Summer like a bright and zesty plate of chicken piccata! This is a classic dish beloved by many, and our take on it will no doubt be your favorite. You can whip this up in about 30 to 45 minutes, making it a great weeknight meal and perfect for a lazy cooking day. Serve this up with some asiago cheese bread and have a Dantastic meal!

A Brief History of Chicken Piccata

Our story begins not with a story, but with some linguistics! Piccata is an Italian word that means several different things depending on context, but for this we’ll say it translates to larded. Piccata itself happens to be a translation for the French word Pique. Pique means sharp, which in our context, means pleasantly appetizing. Outside of our translation from French to Italian to English, when we use Piccata in reference to food, we mean sliced and sauteed in a sauce containing lemon, butter, and spices. Still following? Good, now you may think that chicken piccata is a rather classic Italian dish but it’s actually believed to have come from America.

You see America’s Italian immigrant population bloomed during the 1930s, and it was on American shores that chicken piccata would first make its appearance. There’s a few reasons for this, but our first reason pertains to meat. Chicken and veal were expensive in Italy, and it was an expense most Italians couldn’t afford. But in America, that was a different story. While chicken still retained a high price in America, veal was a rather cheap cut of meat (That's the stuff of dreams). This meant veal was fairly popular with the working class and immigrants at the time. While we can’t trace the dish back to a specific immigrant but we assume it came from an Sicilian immigrant due to the use of veal, and the dish’s bright, tart, and zesty ingredients. To clarify, while lemon, white wine, capers, shallots, and garlic were common in Italian kitchens, it was the addition of veal or chicken that made this dish Italian American.

Ingredients

  • 2 chicken breasts
  • 2 cups cavatelli noodles
  • Dan-O’s Original Seasoning
  • Self Rising Flour
  • 4 tbsp butter
  • 3 tbsp olive oil
  • 1 cup White Wine
  • 1 tbsp minced garlic
  • 2 sprigs fresh oregano
  • 1 lb sliced white mushrooms
  • 1 tbsp capers
  • 2 lemons, juiced

Preparation Instructions

  1. Butterfly chicken breasts
  2. Cover with plastic and flatten with tenderizer
  3. Coat both sides liberally with salt, pepper, and Dan-O’s Original Seasoning
  4. Then sprinkle both sides with flour
  5. In a skillet melt butter together with olive oil
  6. Add chicken to skillet and cook for two minutes on both sides (internal 165) Remove chicken and set aside. In the same skillet, add white wine, a handful of capers and springs of oregano (break capers with a fork)
  7. Add in sliced mushrooms and simmer for 10 minutes
  8. To thicken the gravy, add a small amount of butter and flour or add white wine to thin
  9. Add your chicken back in let simmer over low heat
  10. Heat a pot of water and boil cavatelli noodles until al dente, strain water
  11. Remove the skillet from heat and plate cavatelli noodles
  12. Top noodles with chicken, mushrooms, lemon zest, and spring of oregano
  13. Enjoy!

Comments

One Response

  1. Hey there! Your printed recipe does not tell me when to add the garlic or lemon juice. I chose to add it with the mushrooms. That aside, my Mom and boyfriend thought it tasted like something from an Italian restaurant, like Carrabbas! We were all very impressed!! Thank you for a great recipe I will definitely make again!

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