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Pietro’s Chicken Parmesan

4.3

(9)

Image may contain Cutlery Fork Food Dish and Meal
Danny Kim

At Pietro’s, the cooks deep fry the chicken cutlets in a large, wide skillet, which allows the oil to come up to temperature very quickly and stay there once the cutlet is added. Smart, but potentially messy (it’s a lot of oil!). If you have a Dutch oven with high sides, that will minimize splatter—we’d feel rotten if you got burned.

Recipe information

  • Yield

    4 Servings

Ingredients

Marinara Sauce

cup olive oil

1

medium white onion, finely chopped

½

cup dry white wine

2

32-ounce cans whole peeled tomatoes, preferably San Marzano

Kosher salt, freshly ground pepper

Chicken and Assembly

2

8-ounce skinless, boneless chicken breasts

3

large eggs

3

cups plain fine dry breadcrumbs

1

cup all-purpose flour

3

cups vegetable oil

4

ounces Parmesan, grated, preferably on the large star-shaped holes of a box grater (about ½ cup)

Preparation

  1. Marinara Sauce

    Step 1

    Heat oil in a large Dutch oven or other heavy pot over medium. Cook onion, stirring often to avoid browning, until very soft and translucent, 12–15 minutes. Add wine, bring to a boil, and cook until almost completely evaporated, 6–8 minutes. Add tomatoes and their liquid. Bring to a boil, reduce heat, and simmer, stirring and scraping bottom of pan occasionally, until tomatoes are tender and liquid is very concentrated, 1½–2 hours. Season with salt and pepper.

    Step 2

    Pass sauce through food mill fitted with medium-holed disk into a large saucepan; keep warm. (Alternatively, you can use an immersion or regular blender; just be careful to not overwork.)

    Step 3

    Do Ahead: Sauce can be made 5 days ahead. Let cool; cover and chill.

  2. Chicken

    Step 4

    Place a chicken breast on a cutting board, skin side up. Holding knife parallel to board, cut through breast along a long side, stopping about ½" before you get all the way through. Open breast up like a book, with the connected side acting as the spine. Place butterflied breast between 2 pieces of plastic wrap and gently pound until as thin as possible without tearing meat, ideally to about ¼" thick and about 10" in diameter. Repeat with remaining chicken breast.

    Step 5

    Place eggs, breadcrumbs, and flour in separate shallow bowls (cake pans or pie plates work great). Season each generously with salt and pepper. Working with 1 cutlet at a time, season lightly with salt and pepper and dredge in flour, shaking off excess. Dip in eggs, letting excess drip back into bowl, then coat in breadcrumbs, shaking off excess. Place on a rimmed baking sheet.

    Step 6

    Heat oil in a large skillet over medium-high until very hot (an instant-read thermometer should read 450°–475° and oil should be just beginning to smoke). Working with 1 cutlet at a time, very carefully lower along the side of skillet closest to you and let slide into oil so it lies flat. Swirl oil in skillet carefully and cook just until cutlet is browned underneath, about 1 minute. Using tongs, carefully turn cutlet and cook until golden brown on other side, about 1 minute (it does not need to be fully cooked through as it will cook more under broiler). Transfer to a wire rack set inside a foil-lined rimmed baking sheet.

    Step 7

    Heat broiler. Top each cutlet with ½ cup warm marinara sauce, spreading to edges. Evenly scatter ¼ cup Parmesan over. Broil until cheese is aggressively bubbling, about 2 minutes.

Nutrition Per Serving

Calories (kcal) 1020 Fat (g) 45 Saturated Fat (g) 11 Cholesterol (mg) 245 Carbohydrates (g) 91 Dietary Fiber (g) 7 Total Sugars (g) 14 Protein (g) 50 Sodium (mg) 1550
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Reviews (9)

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  • If not for the lingering fry smell, we’d make this a often. It was much better than I expected, and even the picky teenager went back for seconds.

    • Anonymous

    • Northern VA

    • 6/21/2019

  • Amazing. Amazing. Amazing.

    • Anonymous

    • Austin, Texas

    • 7/22/2019

  • Um, which side of the boneless, skinless chicken breast is the "skin side" that we are to place facing up on the cutting board? Do we use skinless or skinned breasts for this?

    • Edstroh

    • Missouri

    • 11/15/2019

  • The best chicken parm recipe I have ever made. It is the closest (90%) I have ever been to the taste of my favorite red sauce place in New York (Tony DiNapoli's), there is just a small tweak somewhere I have to figure out to get the taste to match! Also, for those confused by the instructions, yes the chicken is boneless and skinless, "skin side" is referring to where the skin was before preparation.

    • Cristian

    • DC by way of New York City

    • 4/23/2020