The 3 station breading makes sense for doing mass preparation like for a big dinner party of something (or at a restaurant) but for making the odd one or two things it's ridiculous lol
Looks good, doesn't work. At least forna family with 2 grown kids;-). I mean...make 10 of these instead of 2. Doubt, if this works out. But good thing for most people.
This recipe is almost exactly the recipe that is in my mother's first cookbook that was published in 1966. Instead of the wine you used we used a white Marsala and finished the sauce with a bit of cream. Always one of my favorite recipes.
@@SamCanuck1 Indeed! I was very lucky to be exposed to fine cuisine at a tender age. And my mother still is Virginia Plainfield. I just got back from a visit with my parents. They live 2 minutes away.
@@FTDrake We published a 30th anniversary copy of my mother's second book some years back. It is still available. I am working on a new and expanded book.
I am Milanese and I approve of this recipe preemptively because Chef John can do what he jolly well pleases with Italian food, as can anyone else. Buon appetito!
Again "bravo". Your open-minded Italian generosity is a refreshing change from those tradition-bound protesters. They can get tradition from a cook book. C. J. gives a labour-saving original slant on known dishes with delicious results. Cook and eat, I say, cook and eat.
Genius! I can’t tell you how many times I have given myself club hand with the old three plate station method! “I don’t trust seasoned flour.” Just became my new motto! Lol Beautiful recipe! Thanks Chef!
I JUST made your chicken marsala from like 14 years ago last night for my recovering vegetarian fiancé (he's never had it before). And what are the odds you put this version out the very next day?!
"I can't prove it, but I think it does. When cooking, always follow your intuition" That's so true and relatable. I think everyone has those tricks when cooking, doing things based on feeling and intuition, and it's so human and beautiful. Among the things I like the most about cooking is that it invites you to not only taste, but also touch and smell and feel the food in the process. It makes everything you cook have your own personal touch, based on your unique intuitions :)
The reason that second flip makes the chicken crispier is because unlike deep frying, when you flipped it the first time, that top side had time to air dry and crisp up already, so that second flip and fry was equivalent to a twice fried method hence giving maximum crispiness.
My teenage kids asked me what I wanted for my birthday dinner. I picked this recipe. IT WAS AMAZING IN SO MANY WAYS! Using the milanese approach really kicked it up!
To Chef John. Thank you so much for all the amazing dishes you have presented to us. During these times with Rona-19 and severe inflation, making fine fine dishes at home is alive and thriving again to people like you. Thank you so much.
Well I never hit the like button, don’t click it, if I click it on accident then I’ll click it to again to not the like the video, I hate it when people on TH-cam say this brainless thing”please hit the like button and hit subscribe”.
The first watch, I fell in love, the second watch, I memorized technique & measurements, the third watch, i made it and now my family is asking for seconds!!
I was surprised you didn't finish the Marsala sauce with butter to make the sauce more "luxurious." But hey, you are after all the Bob Ross of your Marsala sauce.
Finishing with butter makes sense when the base is just from fond. But since he fried the mushrooms in butter to begin with it doesn't really need more butter to get that flavor and texture. Fresh butter at the end would probably still add some silkiness, but the effect wouldn't be as dramatic as in a steak pan sauce.
Chef John, you will always be my very favorite chef. I lost count, on how many times I've made your Mushroom Ragout on Garlic Toast, or your chili, Sloppy Joes, or your original Chicken Marsala recipe. You are the best of the best !!!
Chef John...I made this after watching your video for some friends. Based on their responses, I am going to open up a restaurant and only serve this dish! After dinner, I had my choice of any of the single women (there were none) at the dinner party!
This recipe is OUTstanding! I made it exactly as described (except for those 2 garlic cloves that somehow got diced and accidentally dropped in for the last 30 seconds of browning the mushrooms) and we loved it. The sauce was wonderful. I had enough for the two of us to toss some pasta in it after I sauced the chicken breast. This is truly delicious food and not at all difficult to make. In addition, that chicken breast technique is super all by itself. The addition of the Parmigiano Reg is amazing! I suspect those babies will occasionally show up without sauce!
My theory re: why your flip method works, which is something I think about with pan-seared steaks too: When you're searing the first side, some of the water kinda gets trapped in there because it can't quite bubble its way all the way out as vapor before recondensing back on the meat. But when you flip it over, the hot surface has some time to evaporate the very hot water off a bit (now that it's all exposed), so when you fry on attempt #2 it's no longer having to boil as much water, resulting in more crisp.
That's what stop me from doing these kind of recipes, so much mess and so much waste but this fixes allllll the problems. You are a revolutionary, Chef John.
Looks amazing. This mushroom sauce, made with any red wine, and sometimes water instead of stock, is my go to sauce for any occasion. Simply amazing! And I'm pretty sure I learned about it in another Chef John video.
I made this tonight without the sauce (none of your business why!) and it was really good. I need to be a little more aggressive with the seasoning next time but other that that it turned out really well. Super crispy on the outside, very moist and tender inside.
I’ve made chicken marsala many times for my family. Due to health reasons, my memory isn’t what it was and I skip steps when I make my own recipes. I like to have them on video to guide me so I looked up Chef John’s recipe and saved this in my favs long ago and brought it up last week. Finally got time this evening to make it. Craving satisfied. It’s very similar to mine and So Good! Think I’ll leave the lemon off next time. Made it a bit too tangy for me
Gotta love Chef John. Every time I try one of his recipes my wife showers me with praise for how "great" of a cook I am. I am not a professional chef/cook. Like, at all. 😄 But here I have just one really minor nitpick, since I know the origin of the word "pan-ko": パン粉 (Japanese for: bread crumbs) already means "bread crumbs". So when you say "pan-ko breadcrumbs" that is like saying "ATM machine". 😄😄😄
I just made this recipe tonight and it was delicious! The Marsala sauce was incredible and I’ll be making it again for all sorts of things. An excellent, pretty easy meal that all my guests raved about.
I made these with boneless thighs and the flavor was out of this world, whole family enjoyed + even people who don´t like chicken that much said it was delicius. So many thanks chef.
so glad to see you finally update the chicken marsala video! still love the old vids, but this recipe is a classic that everyone should see. I associate marsala wine with foodwishes more than any other single ingredient tbh! (now I'm just trying to provoke the cayenne fans lol)
When I saw the title I said to myself: "He's gone TOO FAR. TOO FAR I TELLS YUH!" But then I was like: 'Chef know what he doin'." And I settled down. This is actually brilliant. Tastes good. I haven't made it, but I have an uncanny ability to taste recipes in my head. Not joking. As long as I've tasted the ingredients. Also having tasted something similar helps. obvs made both.
SUBSCRIBED!! I had some leftover mushrooms and my hubby (who is subscribed) showed me this video yesterday. I just finished making it and OMG the best!!! Hubby wants me to add it to my "fun" staple dishes. I used regular Italian style bread crumbs and didn't add the lemon (did not have any). Taste was BETTER than restaurant quality! I served it with sauteed yellow and orange bell peppers (also leftovers) and a small mixed greens salad. So good, and easy to make. Thank you and keep up the good work!
I'm going to give this a try. My kids and grandkids look forward to my attempts at Chef John's recipes. Their favorite is Chicken Paprikash. It'll be interesting to see if this bumps it. You're the chef, so I'll make the salad, but it looks like it would be real good with some pommes frites.
Sir, I have been learning from you for a while, the family could not be happier. I honestly don’t like chicken accept when others make it, or I make either of the dishes you combined. I thank you for your ingenuity and creativity because this just blew my mind and made the menu for tomorrow night.
"when you're cookin, always follow your intuition" is fantastic advice. especially when you're a very experienced professional chef lol. no shade chef john, but i reckon most of our intuitions are gonna be not quite as good as yours mate (which to be fair, is exactly why i watch these videos)
How incredible Chef John, thanks for elevating my dinners and enjoyment of food, making great dishes like this accessible and easy to follow - wonderful!
Thank you, this was amazing! Your breading method is perfect and the sauce is excellent. We didn’t have Marsala wine so we used a very dry red and it was still so good!
Oh goodness,dear chef, thank you for your videos.i have enjoyed the information you share so, so much. You always present in a way that builds my confidence to try your recipes.
“I don’t trust seasoned flour. I never have and I never will.” Preach. Seriously, that two plate method for breading is much better than the dip method, I think. I’ll definitely make this recipe.
Thanks Chef John I learned something, now I wont be wasting breading using the plate method and less food contamination as well using the tongs as well, Oh John here's one for you using disposable gloves when patting down the panko and parmesan helps with the food contamination but you already knew that.
Was skeptical of the Parmesan added on top like that, but I see it turns out beautifully. It really holds the breadcrumbs in place and browns nicely! Can make the stock from the chicken carcass so this is a great meal using a whole chicken, and the extra sauce could be used for a Chicken Chasseur using the legs. Great video, chef John
I generally avoid recipes that require setting up a breading station. Those are words to fear in a tiny kitchen. It's an issue with little counter space, it's cumbersome, wasteful and I hate having thick, club fingers afterward. And then there's the cleanup before proceeding. But your technique has removed all those obstacles. I can do this, and many more easily now. Thanks for a life changing method!
I hear you. My Parisien kitchen is tiny. I'm now thinking of leaving a big ziplock bag uncut, putting flour in it then pounding the chicken in it, still leaving the first filet in the bag while I pound others.
@@lindainparis7349 Linda, please don't. Pounding the chicken in flour would result in a terrible regret. This would defeat the purpose of the breading, which is to be a light and gentle coat, like one to wear on a cool fall mornng. .Just use one bag to pound an unadorned chicken, pull it out and season. You can't go wrong, with Chef John.🙋🗼
Thank You Sir for using Dry Marsala Wine. It’s a must!! Sweet Marsala is an after dinner drink or used for desserts. Thank You for educating the Masses.
Thanks chef John, this is one of my favorite ways to eat chicken and for some reason never thought to look for a recipe, its actually simple and coming from you i know is good
I don't think I have never made anything that I see on TH-cam. But I really enjoy watching it and thinking about doing it. I kind of want to try this one.
I didn't know where else to turn but to your most recent video to get your attention, but I have a CRISIS!!! I have tasted the most amazing, the most awesome ingredient that I have ever put in my mouth, and you have never once used it in any of your recipes! I am ashamed to admit, but I get 90 percent of my culinary inspiration straight from you and now I feel adrift. I have this wonderful thing that I have some ideas of what potentially to do with it, but no direction. The ingredient? The caramelized milk solids and sugars left over after making Ghee! Take the best brick roux that you have ever made, and separate out the dark flour flavor and just leave the nutty, sharp, nearly acidic butter flavor with a sweetness from the caramelization. WHAT DO?
People, make this dish! It is delicious and the breading technique is great! Serve it with an arugula salad like he says, and if you want a side, mashed potatoes pair well.
My supermarket had buy one get one free for very thin pork cutlets. They were probably only the quarter inch that chef John made the chicken cutlets from. I was looking for a way to make them without having them dry out and be tough. I came across chef John’s chicken marsala Milanese. I decided to try it with my pork cutlets. I was extremely happy with the result! They were tender juicy and full of flavor! They actually did not need to cook as long as the chicken. Maybe two minutes per side. I also had a buy one get one free of mushrooms and just decided to put them all in the sauce. I loved them! Lots of mushrooms bursting with flavor! I will definitely be making this again and looking forward to making the recipe with chicken! Lol P.S. Chef, you really need to try this! 😘
I have always been annoyed by dishes that involve making something crispy, only to make it soggy before serving it. Thanks, Chef John for validating my pet peeve. :)
Genius move getting rid of the 3 plate breading station mess. This is why I watch. Top notch sir.
He used this same method for a jalapeno pork cutlet recipe that was absolutely out of this world delicious. I highly recommend it as well.
The 3 station breading makes sense for doing mass preparation like for a big dinner party of something (or at a restaurant) but for making the odd one or two things it's ridiculous lol
Looks good, doesn't work. At least forna family with 2 grown kids;-). I mean...make 10 of these instead of 2. Doubt, if this works out. But good thing for most people.
Simplicity is always a plus.
@@aliante12si Still works fine for large batches, just use platters of some sort instead of a plates. :) That's what I do and it works phenomenally.
This recipe is almost exactly the recipe that is in my mother's first cookbook that was published in 1966. Instead of the wine you used we used a white Marsala and finished the sauce with a bit of cream. Always one of my favorite recipes.
Brilliant suggestions. Your mother was Virginia Plainfield? Your friends must've followed you home for after-school snacks!
@@SamCanuck1 Indeed! I was very lucky to be exposed to fine cuisine at a tender age. And my mother still is Virginia Plainfield. I just got back from a visit with my parents. They live 2 minutes away.
You should republish the book in digital form.
@@FTDrake We published a 30th anniversary copy of my mother's second book some years back. It is still available. I am working on a new and expanded book.
That sounds heavenly i must try! 😋
I am Milanese and I approve of this recipe preemptively because Chef John can do what he jolly well pleases with Italian food, as can anyone else. Buon appetito!
Bravo !
I really appreciate you saying that, because I always get in so much trouble for breaking the spaghetti for my pasta carbonara with snow peas. 😏
Again "bravo". Your open-minded Italian generosity is a refreshing change from those tradition-bound protesters. They can get tradition from a cook book. C. J. gives a labour-saving original slant on known dishes with delicious results. Cook and eat, I say, cook and eat.
Cheers!
@@notahotshot always use snow peas with carbonara
Genius! I can’t tell you how many times I have given myself club hand with the old three plate station method! “I don’t trust seasoned flour.” Just became my new motto! Lol Beautiful recipe! Thanks Chef!
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
I JUST made your chicken marsala from like 14 years ago last night for my recovering vegetarian fiancé (he's never had it before). And what are the odds you put this version out the very next day?!
😂 Recovering Vegetarian! 💕
Sounds cool 😎, hope you’re having a great and blessed day
Love the concept of a 'recovering vegetarian'! 😂😂
People laugh. But it's no joke. Veganism/vegetarianism is a cult.
@@thereccher8746 Not vegan nor vegetarian, but it’s not that serious lol.
Just your breading method is enough to qualify this video as epic. Thank you!
It really is a great method. Definitely will use it next time for chicken or pork fried cutlets.
This is a game changer
th-cam.com/video/Xm4kVnynufI/w-d-xo.html
The man is a treasure. The world needs more people like chef John
I know, right? It took me a few times to not make a huge mess but now it's so much cleaner and way less wasteful.
The other thing I love about the breading method: keeping your hands relatively clean!
I read that as 'breeding', and was very confused 😕
@@Valkyriee686 breeding can get messy 😂
@@neely8607 you're not wrong 😄
Holy crap, the sifting of the flour is the smartest thing I have ever seen. What the heck!
yea i thought the same lol i feel like a dumba... 😂 doing it wrong for 15 years.
I've wasted so much flour.
I might even try keeping the plastic bag uncut, putting flour into it before inserting and pounding the fillets.
@@lindainparis7349 Try it. Let us know what a disaster that turned out to be.
@@maydaygarden i will !
Chef John, who you said about seasoning and flouring is the best idea no waste, perfect love the show
You took the words right out of my mouth! All other methods waste so much flour and bread crumbs!
It makes up for that wasted zip top bag.😉
th-cam.com/video/Xm4kVnynufI/w-d-xo.html
"I can't prove it, but I think it does. When cooking, always follow your intuition" That's so true and relatable. I think everyone has those tricks when cooking, doing things based on feeling and intuition, and it's so human and beautiful. Among the things I like the most about cooking is that it invites you to not only taste, but also touch and smell and feel the food in the process. It makes everything you cook have your own personal touch, based on your unique intuitions :)
Your flour/egg/breading technique is game-changer, especially for those of us who only cook for one or two. Thank you Chef John!
I love it when chef John says “for those keeping score at home” because yes, John, I am keeping score in bed in my pjs thank you.
The reason that second flip makes the chicken crispier is because unlike deep frying, when you flipped it the first time, that top side had time to air dry and crisp up already, so that second flip and fry was equivalent to a twice fried method hence giving maximum crispiness.
oh.
A lot of Chinese dishes double fry stuff. The double fry is what makes northeastern sweet and sour pork so fantastically crispy.
You just proved chef John’s theory…… which he couldn’t articulate (and neither could I ). Someone has brains !
Thank you very much for the "sifting flour" tip.
Can't believe that never occurred to me.
Add to that the pouring of the egg directly onto the meat. Yet another dish not needing washing.
My teenage kids asked me what I wanted for my birthday dinner. I picked this recipe. IT WAS AMAZING IN SO MANY WAYS! Using the milanese approach really kicked it up!
Your breading method is pure genius!! Love the idea of not having to throw away unused material. As always, Chef John vids are time well spent.
To Chef John. Thank you so much for all the amazing dishes you have presented to us. During these times with Rona-19 and severe inflation, making fine fine dishes at home is alive and thriving again to people like you.
Thank you so much.
I might not like mushrooms, but I am here either way to once again give the like button the ol' tappa tappa.
Well I never hit the like button, don’t click it, if I click it on accident then I’ll click it to again to not the like the video, I hate it when people on TH-cam say this brainless thing”please hit the like button and hit subscribe”.
MORGAN
Never did C. J. say that.
Click like if you like, not if you don't.
You are the boss
Of if you give a toss
@@lindainparis7349 I likes it love videos by hand and I never hit the like button, I grew up by not hitting it since April 2010.
I would like mushrooms--the taste is nice--but I can't get behind their texture. Rubbery and slimy. Yuck!
@@AliciaNyblade I taste even better hehe
Chef John, your definitely a classically trained 70's/80's Chef. I can tell. You can't beat the oldies! 😉
The first watch, I fell in love, the second watch, I memorized technique & measurements, the third watch, i made it and now my family is asking for seconds!!
I was surprised you didn't finish the Marsala sauce with butter to make the sauce more "luxurious." But hey, you are after all the Bob Ross of your Marsala sauce.
Finishing with butter makes sense when the base is just from fond. But since he fried the mushrooms in butter to begin with it doesn't really need more butter to get that flavor and texture. Fresh butter at the end would probably still add some silkiness, but the effect wouldn't be as dramatic as in a steak pan sauce.
Some cream would work well. But it's totally optional.
th-cam.com/video/Xm4kVnynufI/w-d-xo.html
It doesn't need butter. It finishes smooth and silky and rich. This particular sauce doesn't need a thing (well.... maybe a little garlic 😉
That's exactly what I was thinking.
Chef John, you will always be my very favorite chef. I lost count, on how many times I've made your Mushroom Ragout on Garlic Toast, or your chili, Sloppy Joes, or your original Chicken Marsala recipe. You are the best of the best !!!
Chef John...I made this after watching your video for some friends. Based on their responses, I am going to open up a restaurant and only serve this dish! After dinner, I had my choice of any of the single women (there were none) at the dinner party!
This recipe is OUTstanding! I made it exactly as described (except for those 2 garlic cloves that somehow got diced and accidentally dropped in for the last 30 seconds of browning the mushrooms) and we loved it. The sauce was wonderful. I had enough for the two of us to toss some pasta in it after I sauced the chicken breast. This is truly delicious food and not at all difficult to make. In addition, that chicken breast technique is super all by itself. The addition of the Parmigiano Reg is amazing! I suspect those babies will occasionally show up without sauce!
My theory re: why your flip method works, which is something I think about with pan-seared steaks too: When you're searing the first side, some of the water kinda gets trapped in there because it can't quite bubble its way all the way out as vapor before recondensing back on the meat. But when you flip it over, the hot surface has some time to evaporate the very hot water off a bit (now that it's all exposed), so when you fry on attempt #2 it's no longer having to boil as much water, resulting in more crisp.
That's what stop me from doing these kind of recipes, so much mess and so much waste but this fixes allllll the problems. You are a revolutionary, Chef John.
Looks amazing. This mushroom sauce, made with any red wine, and sometimes water instead of stock, is my go to sauce for any occasion. Simply amazing! And I'm pretty sure I learned about it in another Chef John video.
Mind Blown. So less messy. This is a game changer.
I made this tonight without the sauce (none of your business why!) and it was really good. I need to be a little more aggressive with the seasoning next time but other that that it turned out really well. Super crispy on the outside, very moist and tender inside.
I’ve made chicken marsala many times for my family. Due to health reasons, my memory isn’t what it was and I skip steps when I make my own recipes. I like to have them on video to guide me so I looked up Chef John’s recipe and saved this in my favs long ago and brought it up last week. Finally got time this evening to make it. Craving satisfied. It’s very similar to mine and So Good! Think I’ll leave the lemon off next time. Made it a bit too tangy for me
Gotta love Chef John. Every time I try one of his recipes my wife showers me with praise for how "great" of a cook I am.
I am not a professional chef/cook. Like, at all. 😄
But here I have just one really minor nitpick, since I know the origin of the word "pan-ko": パン粉 (Japanese for: bread crumbs) already means "bread crumbs". So when you say "pan-ko breadcrumbs" that is like saying "ATM machine". 😄😄😄
Or RV vehicle
Or ABS brakes
This looks amazing! Been looking for a date night dinner idea. I believe I just found it.
Good luck 🤞😉
I'm sure you'll get lots of.... Compliments
I just made this recipe tonight and it was delicious! The Marsala sauce was incredible and I’ll be making it again for all sorts of things. An excellent, pretty easy meal that all my guests raved about.
I made these with boneless thighs and the flavor was out of this world, whole family enjoyed + even people who don´t like chicken that much said it was delicius. So many thanks chef.
so glad to see you finally update the chicken marsala video! still love the old vids, but this recipe is a classic that everyone should see. I associate marsala wine with foodwishes more than any other single ingredient tbh! (now I'm just trying to provoke the cayenne fans lol)
When I saw the title I said to myself: "He's gone TOO FAR. TOO FAR I TELLS YUH!" But then I was like: 'Chef know what he doin'." And I settled down. This is actually brilliant. Tastes good. I haven't made it, but I have an uncanny ability to taste recipes in my head. Not joking. As long as I've tasted the ingredients. Also having tasted something similar helps. obvs made both.
Everything about this recipe is perfection. Can’t wait to make it.
Made this dish for my husband's birthday and he was VERY happy, so much so, well, we'll just leave it at that!!!
I made the sauce last night and just warmed some grilled chicken breast in it, then spooned it over. So delicious!!
Just made this tonight and it was so good! First time cooking with wine. Was not disappointed at all. Thanks, John!
SUBSCRIBED!! I had some leftover mushrooms and my hubby (who is subscribed) showed me this video yesterday. I just finished making it and OMG the best!!! Hubby wants me to add it to my "fun" staple dishes. I used regular Italian style bread crumbs and didn't add the lemon (did not have any). Taste was BETTER than restaurant quality! I served it with sauteed yellow and orange bell peppers (also leftovers) and a small mixed greens salad. So good, and easy to make. Thank you and keep up the good work!
I'm going to give this a try. My kids and grandkids look forward to my attempts at Chef John's recipes. Their favorite is Chicken Paprikash. It'll be interesting to see if this bumps it. You're the chef, so I'll make the salad, but it looks like it would be real good with some pommes frites.
I'm sure Chef John is okay with you choosing your own side dishes, as long as the kids and grandkids get enough greens. :)
@@SomePotato "That's you cooking!"
Chef John giving the finger to the culinary world w this breading method.
Thank you!!
Made this last night. The results were indeed incredible!! Thanks Chef John!
Sir, I have been learning from you for a while, the family could not be happier. I honestly don’t like chicken accept when others make it, or I make either of the dishes you combined. I thank you for your ingenuity and creativity because this just blew my mind and made the menu for tomorrow night.
"when you're cookin, always follow your intuition" is fantastic advice. especially when you're a very experienced professional chef lol. no shade chef john, but i reckon most of our intuitions are gonna be not quite as good as yours mate (which to be fair, is exactly why i watch these videos)
th-cam.com/video/Xm4kVnynufI/w-d-xo.html
Definitely my favorite! Beautiful video, thank you.
Sifting the flour on - MIND BLOWN!! How has no one thought of this before?
How incredible Chef John, thanks for elevating my dinners and enjoyment of food, making great dishes like this accessible and easy to follow - wonderful!
That wine looks awfully wet for something that was supposed to be dry.
Lol dad
._.
Groan.
Sighs then groans.
🥁
Going to try this real soon.....love the juxtaposition of the crispy cutlet and the marsala sauce!
Mind blown over the flour trick, that sir, is brilliant!!
You did again. Thank you chef. Be safe and happy.
Two of my absolute favorite dishes of all time combined!
Thank you, this was amazing! Your breading method is perfect and the sauce is excellent. We didn’t have Marsala wine so we used a very dry red and it was still so good!
Oh goodness,dear chef, thank you for your videos.i have enjoyed the information you share so, so much. You always present in a way that builds my confidence to try your recipes.
Of all the variations on the standard three-step method for breading, this might be the best.
“I don’t trust seasoned flour. I never have and I never will.”
Preach.
Seriously, that two plate method for breading is much better than the dip method, I think.
I’ll definitely make this recipe.
Hello hope you’re having a good and blessed day
Great Idea! Thank you John.I like the idea of shaking the flour on. Love your recipes!
Perfection in crunch rich sauce. My mouth is watering .
Great tips no wasted flour and extra plates. Good work old boy!🇬🇧
Just made it, the family totally enjoyed it! Thank you Chef John!
Thanks Chef John I learned something, now I wont be wasting breading using the plate method and less food contamination as well using the tongs as well, Oh John here's one for you using disposable gloves when patting down the panko and parmesan helps with the food contamination but you already knew that.
“I don’t trust it, I never have and I never will.”
Words of a wise man
th-cam.com/video/Xm4kVnynufI/w-d-xo.html
I made it - the sauce flavored with Marsala wine is amazing!
Was skeptical of the Parmesan added on top like that, but I see it turns out beautifully. It really holds the breadcrumbs in place and browns nicely! Can make the stock from the chicken carcass so this is a great meal using a whole chicken, and the extra sauce could be used for a Chicken Chasseur using the legs. Great video, chef John
You're an artist
I generally avoid recipes that require setting up a breading station. Those are words to fear in a tiny kitchen. It's an issue with little counter space, it's cumbersome, wasteful and I hate having thick, club fingers afterward. And then there's the cleanup before proceeding. But your technique has removed all those obstacles. I can do this, and many more easily now. Thanks for a life changing method!
I hear you. My Parisien kitchen is tiny. I'm now thinking of leaving a big ziplock bag uncut, putting flour in it then pounding the chicken in it, still leaving the first filet in the bag while I pound others.
@@lindainparis7349 Linda, please don't. Pounding the chicken in flour would result in a terrible regret. This would defeat the purpose of the breading, which is to be a light and gentle coat, like one to wear on a cool fall mornng. .Just use one bag to pound an unadorned chicken, pull it out and season. You can't go wrong, with Chef John.🙋🗼
@@maydaygarden I know, I know, that's why I like his channel. And I can imagine the resulting paste if I pound it together.
Made it.....what a show stopper!!!! Thanks Chef!
I always learn so much from you! Appreciate you talking about even the routine steps like seasoning in beading!
The breading method is PERFECT for doing one or two items; so much less waste!
Sounds good, You must be a good chef! Hope you’re doing great?
Chef John at his best!!!!!!
Yes, chef John! You did it again!
it's 2:30 in the morning, and now I'm hungry
I fixed this today and my wife proclaimed that it was Company Worthy!!!!! Thanks for the recipe!
The Italian place down the street from my old apartment did their marsala like this. *Chef's kiss 😘*
Thank You Sir for using Dry Marsala Wine. It’s a must!! Sweet Marsala is an after dinner drink or used for desserts. Thank You for educating the Masses.
I fixed this for dinner today and it was outstanding! Thanks Chef John!
I don’t think I’ve ever been this early, but I’m glad I was.
Looks fantastic!
Amazing chef John. These two together are so delicious. But that mushroom sauce, we have to double it up because it’s so good.
So nice! Love the idea to sift the flour on
And as always....enjoy.
I never get tired of that
Thanks chef John, this is one of my favorite ways to eat chicken and for some reason never thought to look for a recipe, its actually simple and coming from you i know is good
This man has taken short-cuts to a literal art form.
I think this would taste amazing with rice and that salad
I am definitely going to use your method for breading fish and chicken. So much cleaner and far less waste.
Oooh I'm using this breading meathod on my next batch of chicken parmesan.
The sauce looks so delicious! 😍😍😍
Nothing less than sensational from the Master himself, Chef John! Swietnie!!!
“ The John “
Always fabulous !
Always well done !
You’ve taught me so much !!
Thank you 🙏🏻
I can't wait to try this. You always make the best stuff!
I don't think I have never made anything that I see on TH-cam. But I really enjoy watching it and thinking about doing it. I kind of want to try this one.
Yum! I just made this but I added a little fresh chopped rosemary to the egg wash. Delicious!!
I didn't know where else to turn but to your most recent video to get your attention, but I have a CRISIS!!! I have tasted the most amazing, the most awesome ingredient that I have ever put in my mouth, and you have never once used it in any of your recipes! I am ashamed to admit, but I get 90 percent of my culinary inspiration straight from you and now I feel adrift. I have this wonderful thing that I have some ideas of what potentially to do with it, but no direction.
The ingredient? The caramelized milk solids and sugars left over after making Ghee! Take the best brick roux that you have ever made, and separate out the dark flour flavor and just leave the nutty, sharp, nearly acidic butter flavor with a sweetness from the caramelization. WHAT DO?
The recipe looks so delicious.
People, make this dish! It is delicious and the breading technique is great! Serve it with an arugula salad like he says, and if you want a side, mashed potatoes pair well.
I'm such a big fan of these dish reducing techniques! Thank you chef john
My supermarket had buy one get one free for very thin pork cutlets. They were probably only the quarter inch that chef John made the chicken cutlets from. I was looking for a way to make them without having them dry out and be tough. I came across chef John’s chicken marsala Milanese. I decided to try it with my pork cutlets. I was extremely happy with the result! They were tender juicy and full of flavor! They actually did not need to cook as long as the chicken. Maybe two minutes per side. I also had a buy one get one free of mushrooms and just decided to put them all in the sauce. I loved them! Lots of mushrooms bursting with flavor! I will definitely be making this again and looking forward to making the recipe with chicken! Lol P.S. Chef, you really need to try this! 😘
Thank you chef John. This is a much cleaner method than the traditional.
I have always been annoyed by dishes that involve making something crispy, only to make it soggy before serving it. Thanks, Chef John for validating my pet peeve. :)