@@ThePanEthiopian I'm a dual citizen of NZ and Aussie.. they only get sent back for doing illegal crap, like Villawood, next to where I lived in Sydney for 35 years is full of those being sent back where they come from for serious crimes and overstaying visa's.. I also trained at Ryde to level 4 to be a chef.. I still reckon the Aussie flavour will win hands down, just change the sauce a fraction..
Despite being in my 60s from the U.K. my first experience of this dish was at the National Hotel in Fremantle. It was absolutely superb! Big shout out to that establishment! (I did have it with chips though)
Hi Andy! I'm from Maryland and wasn't aware that the Chicken Parm was started in my home state. Thank you for the education! I do the american version most of the time, but I use panko. I use a little bit of Oregano with a bit more Basil. I guess I I'm half and half. 😂 I'll try the ham next time. Cheers! Love your channel!
When I was in SA a few years back my Parmie was served with a side of creamy garlic sauce. I was very confused at first because I didn’t ask for it. But now I will never eat one without it again. That combined with the marinara is an unexpected perfect combination. People look at me like I’m crazy when I tell them until they order it for themselves and try the combination. Highly recommend haha
This is a great video idea making a couple of different versions from around the world. Would love to see a part 2. Really enjoy your videos Andy appreciate you.
Thanks for so many good vids. I’ve been binging your videos and shorts; making your recipes and trying the techniques that you present so clearly and friendly without any fluff. It’s been really fun learning from you.
I'm originally from Adelaide and there was a place in the western suburbs called "Schnitz and Wings" and they did plate hanger sized loaded schnitzels and parmis... examples were an entire meatlovers pizza worth of toppings on top; the "American" with american cheese, bacon and curly fries... and all sorts of other options. Absolutely incredible. 1 parmi could feed 2 people (came with an industrial amount of chips).
If you're ever in Echuca, give the Shamrock a go, it deals in Parmas specifically, it has like 30+ to choose from, I've had the carbonara one (was really good) and the Aussie one (like Andy did here, also really good). It has been a while, so I'm not sure if the quality is the same, but it was great when I went last.
As someone born in Alaska I grew up with the American version but now I’m intrigued with chips and a salad. Thanks chef for opening up a world of opportunity 😂
Many pub meals in Australia will give you an option of having your meal with either chips and a garden salad or mashed potatoes and vegetables (usually grilled).
As an aussie I implore everyone to try the aussie parmi/parma on a bed of spaghetti. It's the most carb loaded delicious thing you could imagine. You won't miss the chips and salad, you'll recognise it as it's own dish. Bloody amazing. 10/10
What a legend you are Andy! Love your technic, your choice of dishes and recipes and mostly your well researched content. You're such an inspiring character for us fellow chefs from around the world ! Greetings from France 🇫🇷
As a guy from New York, I’m going to say 🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺. Had it 1st time at the Pinsent hotel in Wangaratta, now its the only way I prepare it. If i could get Beechworth Pale in the states I be the happiest man on earth
Greetings from BC, Canada. A fun Australian cook who actually streams in 4K. Episodes that I can stream into the living room onto the big TV for my family to enjoy... New Subscriber!
I really like the freshness of the pub salad. So long as it's a good one. I remember my 6'5" salad avoiding mate getting a stern talking to from the 6'4" and built like a Brick Shizenhausen German Chef at the Sentimental Bloke Hotel in Bulleen back in the day for not eating his salad. I think the chef was new, or was just bored and not getting appreciation for his craft as he'd cut little rose flowers out of the radishes. (We were there drinking and playing pool from 11am or so and it was pretty quiet). This chef had forearms bigger than my thighs and came out of the kitchen redder than the beetroot in the salad and angry as hell. Suffice to say my mate ate the salad.
Did your mate like the salad? I like a well-made salad with the usually somewhat greasy pub food. I used to go to a dive bar for lunch. It was across the street from a bunch of corporate offices so a lot of people in suits & dresses would come in for lunch. They had the absolute best conch fritters I've ever tasted. They served them with crunchy thick french fries & a fabulous, freshly made salad. Yummy. I even asked the waitperson to ask the chef how he made the conch fritters because no other restaurant came close to his. He would fry them until they were golden brown, & then put them in the oven on a low heat to cook them in the middle. Tremendous!
@@dee_dee_place He hates salad but the salad itself was actually really good as far as pub salads go. Used cut wedges of tomato not cherry tomato. Of course, this is something like 3 decades ago and that huge hotel, once an icon of the 70's and 80's Aussie pub rock scene is now long gone, to be "club" (not nightclub, think more posh hotel motel). The Waltzing Matilda, The Sentimental Bloke, all those big suburban pubs with big live music venues are pretty much dead. Dunno how the Hallam Hotel is going these days, it used to be another of those big venues. I'm in Brisbane now, and we've lost a lot of those big pubs here too. Places like the Alex Hills Hotel and the Calamvale were once massive. Now they're mostly convention centres instead. The only one I can think of really still doing that sort of stuff is the Eaton's Hill Hotel. It's sad but these days with drink driving laws, noise restrictions and local councils redirecting everything to billion dollar white elephant stadiums that they have to find a use for, the days of big suburban venues are dead.
It's called The Manningham Hotel Club and Convention Centre these days. I drive past it a lot, but I haven't been in there. $41 for a porterhouse steak is a bit steep for me.
@@professornuke7562 yeah I know. My parents live nearby still, but these days I wouldn't even use it for the bottle shop. Sad waste of a once Iconic place.
Today I made the American version, replicating your recipe. Well, as much as my student conditions allowed me. It turned out absolutely amazing. This video is truly a perfect guide, thanks a lot for it!
Years ago in Scarborough, Western Australia, My housemates and I had a sacred and long upheld tradition every Thursday night after Indoor Beach Volleyball, One of the team of four would stop at the Bottlo on the way home and grab a carton, and one of the other 3 would buy Spag Bog Chicken Parmis delivered from Tony's Spaghetti bar in Doubleview ( we took turns with the beers and food each week ) ..... The last Ali tray size before a family spog bog serving size was used to house these amazing creations, these things were massive, half filled with Spaghetti Bog, and a thick assed Chicken parmi on top, ( only with sandwich ham, but for $13 each, I was never complaining ) When they put the lid on at the shop and crimped the edges on the lid, sauce tended to push through it was that full. I swear they were half a kilo each delivered. Devoured with 3 or 4 beers, they were by far the best mid week meal and energy recharge with mates ever!!!! ( Widely known fact on those nights was whomever delivered it from the shop that night was " Tony " regardless of ethnicity, age or gender, and would be greeted as Tony at the door, and when saying goodbye :))
The Aussie Variant is basicly a "Hänchenschnitzel mit Pommes und Käse überbacken" . Breaded meats(in germany Schnitzel) in many variants you will find all around europe. We have restaurants similar to what you said that just do 20 Variants of Schnitzel, which then differ in the type of sauße, side dishes and meat used for the dish.
I agree, particularly where it originally hails from in Australia, with it's large german ancestry and we have schnitzels up the wazoo here with a multitude of sauces and styles.
They both look delicious! I’ve started putting the cheese on without sauce into the oven and serve the pasta and sauce on the side so it doesn’t get soggy
The great thing about making food is that you can mix & match. Next time make the parma & serve it with pasta. That way you get the best of both worlds. Very Diplomatic, My Friend. Thanks for this wonderful video, Andy.
Andy, you've changed my life with the wet-hand dry-hand method! Just last night I was lamenting the fact that my fingers ended up crumbed better than the last of the four schnitties that I'd made. Thanks mate!
I grew up in a multi-ethnic anthracite coal town in the 1950s with plenty of WWII war brides from Germany, Poland, France, Japan, the PI, and Italy (Neapolitans to Sicilians), etc., to share their ethnic recipes. Each Roman Catholic Church took a weekend in summer to host a block party. One of my friend's mother came from Sicily and she gave me tips in cooking Italian/Sicilian food. Another friend's mama taught me to make Polish pierogi. My own family had French, Dutch, English, and Lithuanian recipes to share. It was great food with wonderful friends and their families.
I have to say, I’ll be ordering a parma at most pubs around Australia, but I have also fell in love with the “Irish Parma” with chip shop curry sauce on it. Life changing.
I did a Roo Parm here in the US at the recommendation of a friend of mine from Australia, the smoked kangaroo was great, and loved the fries(chips) in place of pasta
Serve the parm on a nice big roll from an Italian bakery served with fries/chips is also incredibly popular in the northeast US at least. Both made look amazing. Thank you again for an awesome post
Keys to a good Aussie parma - Panko breadcrumbs - Triple smoked ham - Basic Aussie pub salad made with iceberg lettuce, cucumber, tomato, Spanish onion and some dressing - Good chips - Big enough plate so that the parma don't sit on the chips and they get soggy.
Order one at The London Tavern,Richmond. I tried this recipe and mine had no taste sigh. Maybe I should try a thigh chook Schnitzel next time? Or add more seasoning into my tomatoes ? Why do restaurant parmas especially The London Tavern version taste so much better? Some trickery going on. Should I season the bird also?
I'm a Canadian watching this and I've only had the American version. The Australian way is intriguing. Thanks for your honest review and the easy to replicate cooking methods.
Aussie here. I was served a Parmi in Fremantle with pasta. Bloody awesome! It's very hard to find in Perth, so this is how I make it at home. Winner, winner, chicken parmi dinner.
Actually, chicken parm was barely a thing in the US until the 1980s. Veal parm was the standard meat adaption of eggplant parm. Only when veal started becoming much more expensive than chicken breasts did that change and today almost no one other than restaurants, make veal parm. And I had one aunt who always made pork cutlets.
Hey Andy! You are a brilliant chef and your crew are awesome! I own your book and it's great I also watch your videos every day. I'm a chef in America and worked in many Italian restaurants. My question is I was always taught to call it red sauce. Reason being is because historically Marinara was always made on a ship, aka Mariners. Keep up the fantastic work all of you and greetings from America!
I’m a 2nd gen Italian American, and I love Italian American dishes like Chicken Parm, so I gave a little cheer when it “won”. 🎉 The only difference between Chef Andy’s version and my family’s recipe is that my family made the pasta sauce with dried Italian Seasoning herb mix, instead of just fresh basil, and sometimes put the same in the dredge for the chicken too (though I think that can be overpowering and I prefer the dredge plain, personally). I’m always fascinated by how recipes have been interpreted by, and evolved in, various different groups and areas based on what’s available, their own cultural backgrounds and influences, etc., so it was really cool to see a different version of this dish! I didn’t know the Australian version existed, but I’d totally be down to try it. We all win when there are even more delicious options to try!
Very nice video. My American variant uses pounded deboned chicken thights, fennel in the seasoning, panko as the breading. Order of operations is different: broil mozz directly on the fried chicken, then sauce, then grate copious parm on top. A fair amount of crushed red pepper in the sauce. The result is an improvement, I think - tastier chicken, with crunch preserved.
I made an incredible chicken parm for me and my housemate a few months back. I used chicken thighs and sous vide the chicken first, then crumb and deep fry. Seasoned the crumbs a bit like fried chicken. It was so good my chef housemate said he’d definitely be happy paying for it
@@SilentHotdog28 funny enough, my housemate actually ran a number of food trucks down in Tasmania. I believe mostly desserts. He described it as very hard work, so I think I’ll stick to programming 😂
Mate I am definitely making those! Made the classic Australian version before! Also smashed a 2.5KG PARMI challenge here in Perth! In an hour! Cheers Andy 🤙🏻
Andy of late I've been seasoning and then pounding the chicken, and have received lots of compliments , also the Italians seem to love this with some garlic inside the crumb. Thanks for your work good job mate😎👍.
Hi Andy i always love watching your videos would you create some dishes for people who have high cholesterol... And want to watch there health.. i would say there is a larger community out there who would really appreciate it.
As an American, I love our Chicken Parm. I didn't even KNOW about an Australian version. I love the addition of the ham. But, I agree, I think the pasta works better than the chips. Still, I would be happy to try the Aussie version.
The Aussie version is kind of like if chicken parmesan, cordon bleu, and poutine had a baby. I wonder if the pubs used fries since they would have already been making them anyways. It looks fantastic.
Aussies make a distinction between British-style pub "chips" (thicker cut, his were definitely on the thicker side of chips), and American-style fries (sometimes called shoe-lace chips, but not often) Parmi definitely goes with thicker chips. You might get fries with a burger or hotdog, but with fish or chicken, definitely need the thicker, more fluffy chips.
Australians _love_ chips man. Literally every meal you get will have chips, or at least an option of chips. It’s definitely the most prolific food we have here.
I am a chef of 30 years. Worked all over the world. I’ve never heard of the Aussie version. I’m going to make this for family meal and see what the team thinks of it.
Ok so I’m South Australian. We invented the Parmi and so in respect to us it should be called parmi everywhere. In all seriousness lov the vid Andy. Keep it up
@@Sprinkl3s you're a bit lost. The Australian recipe for chicken parmi was invented/created in south australia. as the video above shows you, the recipes are different.
I'm from Adelaide. Our local version originated through the Germans as Wiener schnitzel (which is really an Austrian dish), not the Italian parmigiana. Parmigiana came later, as you mentioned, in the 50s, when we had a huge wave of Italian immigration. Also, for the record, in Adelaide it's 'Parmi' or 'Parmy'. Parma is what the Melbournites call it. Schnitzel is still the basis of all crumbed meat dishes and parmigiana is merely an optional topping.
Not having tasted either in the end I can't judge for real which tastes best, but as a chef myself, I very much prefer the concept of the Australian version.
Hey mate, been watching your vids since they were no frills with crappy audio, your channel's come a long way. We've recently switched from using tinned tomatoes to a good quality (mutti or similar) passata *not an ad. The difference is huge - much lower acidity in a good way, better tomato flavour with natural sweetness. You should try it and see what you think
Try buying the mutti whole tomatoes and chopping them up! I once read the best tomatoes are sold to those that can them whole (it’s why they’re slightly more expensive); chopped / crushed is second dibs. Passata is slightly different in that it’s tomatoes cooked down into sauce. Both good but different flavors / uses!
The old Miami hotel on the Gold Coast used to do the best Parmy chips and salad with a pot for $ 10 so sad it's been renovated for the hipsters was a run down old place but the pub food was amazing I love the idea of the pasta but i can't go past the chips love the honey mustard dressing idea will try that next time Cheers Andy great Vid 👏👌
As an American who’s never had the Aussie version, I like the chips part, but the addition of the ham seems a tad odd. Not bad, just odd. Reminds me more of Chicken Cordon Bleu than a chicken parm but I bet it’s still good!
What's wrong with a hybrid? Aussie Parma with pasta. Could you mix Panko for crunch and seasoned breadcrumbs for flavor? If you use ham, I don't think you'd need Parmesano Reggiano. The ham will have the salt tang you'd get from the cheese (but it's up to individual taste). This video opened up all kinds of possible combinations. Love it.
Parmigiana di Melanzane comes from the south of Italy, not Parma. Some believe that the name refers to the horizontal slats of the shutters on the windows, (to keep the sun out) shingled as you would layer the fried eggplant slices in a baking dish alongside the marinara sauce, the mozzarella and the basil.
American here. I've never even heard of the Aussie version. But it wins! Ham AND potatoes? No contest. I'd still add parm cheese though. Awesome video!
“I think it absorbs the flavours better.” I have never called Home Affairs faster to get a Kiwi deported.
Chill mate 😂
@@ThePanEthiopian I'm a dual citizen of NZ and Aussie.. they only get sent back for doing illegal crap, like Villawood, next to where I lived in Sydney for 35 years is full of those being sent back where they come from for serious crimes and overstaying visa's.. I also trained at Ryde to level 4 to be a chef.. I still reckon the Aussie flavour will win hands down, just change the sauce a fraction..
haha top banter
Right? It should be making some perfectly good chips go soggy, as is tradition.
@@Waitomo64yes but a Kiwi will NEVER say anything Australian is better eventhough there is over 600k of them living here…
Despite being in my 60s from the U.K. my first experience of this dish was at the National Hotel in Fremantle. It was absolutely superb! Big shout out to that establishment! (I did have it with chips though)
Chips are a must, maybe pasta and chips are an idea......but chips are a must. Ham on it though not necessary, does add to it.
@@SilentHotdog28 good call
Great views at the National. A good spot
My local. ❤
Definitely sail and anchor
Im so used to your shorts, its refreshing to just hear you talk in depth in a normal video like this. Really enjoyed it
Hi Andy! I'm from Maryland and wasn't aware that the Chicken Parm was started in my home state. Thank you for the education! I do the american version most of the time, but I use panko. I use a little bit of Oregano with a bit more Basil. I guess I I'm half and half. 😂 I'll try the ham next time. Cheers! Love your channel!
Ham and chips haha.
When I was in SA a few years back my Parmie was served with a side of creamy garlic sauce. I was very confused at first because I didn’t ask for it. But now I will never eat one without it again. That combined with the marinara is an unexpected perfect combination. People look at me like I’m crazy when I tell them until they order it for themselves and try the combination. Highly recommend haha
Always get it with a creamy mushroom sauce, it's very popular in Melbourne now..
I like mine with either mushroom sauce or a pepper gravy
@danielcowan4901 same, I actually get both now lol..
The surf and turf topping or creamy garlic sauce is unbeatable
@ellenh5468 oww I've only tried surf n turf on steak.. never with chicken, I'll have to try it
I’m from the U.S. and I had never heard of the Aussie version but it looks tasty and I would be willing to try it! Thank you for sharing!!
I didn’t know there was an American version
@deleted.6743 There's an american version of damn near everything lol
@@deleted.6743 Chicken parm was created in the New York by Italian-Americans back in the 1950's.
This is a great video idea making a couple of different versions from around the world. Would love to see a part 2. Really enjoy your videos Andy appreciate you.
Glad you enjoyed it!
@@andy_cookscompare shwarmas and kebabs
Thanks for so many good vids. I’ve been binging your videos and shorts; making your recipes and trying the techniques that you present so clearly and friendly without any fluff. It’s been really fun learning from you.
I'm originally from Adelaide and there was a place in the western suburbs called "Schnitz and Wings" and they did plate hanger sized loaded schnitzels and parmis... examples were an entire meatlovers pizza worth of toppings on top; the "American" with american cheese, bacon and curly fries... and all sorts of other options. Absolutely incredible. 1 parmi could feed 2 people (came with an industrial amount of chips).
lmao 'industrial amount of chips' got me, i think my local fish n chips uses that same measurement
you're absolutely spot on there mate
If you're ever in Echuca, give the Shamrock a go, it deals in Parmas specifically, it has like 30+ to choose from, I've had the carbonara one (was really good) and the Aussie one (like Andy did here, also really good). It has been a while, so I'm not sure if the quality is the same, but it was great when I went last.
The Hanson Pizza Bar is still there, and still doing schnitzel. They use Pizza boxes to serve them due to the size.
Thought your comment said "Schnitz n Titz" for a second. Not sure how many of those there are around Australia, but there's one here in Melbourne. 😅
As someone born in Alaska I grew up with the American version but now I’m intrigued with chips and a salad. Thanks chef for opening up a world of opportunity 😂
Just make sure you add the ham...
I’ve seen Americans put the chicken in the sauce
@@toddavis8151 yeah, I've seen that version too. Kinda defeats the purpose of having a nice crunchy breading.
As an Aussie I've never heard of this with pasta, but I do love a good pasta
Many pub meals in Australia will give you an option of having your meal with either chips and a garden salad or mashed potatoes and vegetables (usually grilled).
As an aussie I implore everyone to try the aussie parmi/parma on a bed of spaghetti. It's the most carb loaded delicious thing you could imagine. You won't miss the chips and salad, you'll recognise it as it's own dish. Bloody amazing. 10/10
Now I have to try the Australian version.😋 Thanks Andy. No one would dare cancel you.❤🇨🇦
With the chips add chicken salt instead of regular salt, no one uses the regular salt here in Australia
We might 🤨😂
@@michaeldudgeon some people dont use any kind of salt at all
@@michaeldudgeon Plenty of people use regular salt.
What a legend you are Andy!
Love your technic, your choice of dishes and recipes and mostly your well researched content.
You're such an inspiring character for us fellow chefs from around the world !
Greetings from France 🇫🇷
As a guy from New York, I’m going to say 🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺. Had it 1st time at the Pinsent hotel in Wangaratta, now its the only way I prepare it. If i could get Beechworth Pale in the states I be the happiest man on earth
"As a guy from New York..."
"You're kinda not even Aussie anyway" that has to be the most creative way to insult a Kiwi I've ever heard.
Definitely a compliment.
@@LagiShredz Haha, found the Kiwi. How's Aotearoa going at the moment brew? 😜
Chicken and eggplant parm is one of my favorite things to eat. Thanks, now I gotta make my grandma's sauce and make this tomorrow on my day off. ❤❤❤
Can't beat grandma's sauce!
Love both versions! Delightful chicken parmi❤ Two thumbs up for Chef Andy!
Glad you enjoyed it!
Greetings from BC, Canada. A fun Australian cook who actually streams in 4K. Episodes that I can stream into the living room onto the big TV for my family to enjoy... New Subscriber!
I think I am going to cook the American version with the smoked ham on it and the side salad. That sounds amazing.
Thanks!
No problem!
Wet hand, dry hand - so simple ! Thanks Andy 👍
Growing up in an Italian family, Oregano was in every sauce. Love your version of Chicken Parm.
I had no idea about Aussie chicken parm. This was such an interesting video! Cheers Andy!
I love that Andy knows the history of these dishes so well and that he makes them so well for us. Very clear instruction too.
I really like the freshness of the pub salad. So long as it's a good one. I remember my 6'5" salad avoiding mate getting a stern talking to from the 6'4" and built like a Brick Shizenhausen German Chef at the Sentimental Bloke Hotel in Bulleen back in the day for not eating his salad. I think the chef was new, or was just bored and not getting appreciation for his craft as he'd cut little rose flowers out of the radishes. (We were there drinking and playing pool from 11am or so and it was pretty quiet). This chef had forearms bigger than my thighs and came out of the kitchen redder than the beetroot in the salad and angry as hell. Suffice to say my mate ate the salad.
Did your mate like the salad?
I like a well-made salad with the usually somewhat greasy pub food.
I used to go to a dive bar for lunch. It was across the street from a bunch of corporate offices so a lot of people in suits & dresses would come in for lunch. They had the absolute best conch fritters I've ever tasted. They served them with crunchy thick french fries & a fabulous, freshly made salad. Yummy. I even asked the waitperson to ask the chef how he made the conch fritters because no other restaurant came close to his. He would fry them until they were golden brown, & then put them in the oven on a low heat to cook them in the middle. Tremendous!
@@dee_dee_place He hates salad but the salad itself was actually really good as far as pub salads go. Used cut wedges of tomato not cherry tomato. Of course, this is something like 3 decades ago and that huge hotel, once an icon of the 70's and 80's Aussie pub rock scene is now long gone, to be "club" (not nightclub, think more posh hotel motel).
The Waltzing Matilda, The Sentimental Bloke, all those big suburban pubs with big live music venues are pretty much dead. Dunno how the Hallam Hotel is going these days, it used to be another of those big venues.
I'm in Brisbane now, and we've lost a lot of those big pubs here too. Places like the Alex Hills Hotel and the Calamvale were once massive. Now they're mostly convention centres instead. The only one I can think of really still doing that sort of stuff is the Eaton's Hill Hotel.
It's sad but these days with drink driving laws, noise restrictions and local councils redirecting everything to billion dollar white elephant stadiums that they have to find a use for, the days of big suburban venues are dead.
It's called The Manningham Hotel Club and Convention Centre these days. I drive past it a lot, but I haven't been in there. $41 for a porterhouse steak is a bit steep for me.
@@professornuke7562 yeah I know. My parents live nearby still, but these days I wouldn't even use it for the bottle shop.
Sad waste of a once Iconic place.
I'll BET he ate it !! 😳
Today I made the American version, replicating your recipe. Well, as much as my student conditions allowed me. It turned out absolutely amazing. This video is truly a perfect guide, thanks a lot for it!
Years ago in Scarborough, Western Australia, My housemates and I had a sacred and long upheld tradition every Thursday night after Indoor Beach Volleyball, One of the team of four would stop at the Bottlo on the way home and grab a carton, and one of the other 3 would buy Spag Bog Chicken Parmis delivered from Tony's Spaghetti bar in Doubleview ( we took turns with the beers and food each week ) .....
The last Ali tray size before a family spog bog serving size was used to house these amazing creations, these things were massive, half filled with Spaghetti Bog, and a thick assed Chicken parmi on top, ( only with sandwich ham, but for $13 each, I was never complaining ) When they put the lid on at the shop and crimped the edges on the lid, sauce tended to push through it was that full. I swear they were half a kilo each delivered.
Devoured with 3 or 4 beers, they were by far the best mid week meal and energy recharge with mates ever!!!! ( Widely known fact on those nights was whomever delivered it from the shop that night was " Tony " regardless of ethnicity, age or gender, and would be greeted as Tony at the door, and when saying goodbye :))
My absolute favorite chef on u-tube!! Love from Tennessee.. USA ❤
The Aussie Variant is basicly a "Hänchenschnitzel mit Pommes und Käse überbacken" .
Breaded meats(in germany Schnitzel) in many variants you will find all around europe. We have restaurants similar to what you said that just do 20 Variants of Schnitzel, which then differ in the type of sauße, side dishes and meat used for the dish.
I agree, particularly where it originally hails from in Australia, with it's large german ancestry and we have schnitzels up the wazoo here with a multitude of sauces and styles.
They both look delicious! I’ve started putting the cheese on without sauce into the oven and serve the pasta and sauce on the side so it doesn’t get soggy
I'm Italian and I approve of both of these recipes. Buon appetito!
Thought you would disapprove because the dish didn't originate in Italy!
@@shakendog90what about it, all ingredients are Italian, Italians are the best in doing it
@@shakendog90We have something similar called Pollo alla Pizzaiola. But yes you are correct this is not an Italian dish but rather Italian diaspora.
@@shakendog90 Nah, why? It originated among Italians abroad, still counts. Anyway who cares where it comes from. If it tastes good to you, it is good.
@@AndreaAustoni what about macoroni?
The great thing about making food is that you can mix & match. Next time make the parma & serve it with pasta. That way you get the best of both worlds. Very Diplomatic, My Friend.
Thanks for this wonderful video, Andy.
The parmi has to be the most popular dish in Australian pubs and clubs. An absolute classic!
*parma
@@majesticskeever*parmi
@@Herbert12864”Parmo”
@@Azzury.Parmi
Parma from Melbourne
Andy, you've changed my life with the wet-hand dry-hand method! Just last night I was lamenting the fact that my fingers ended up crumbed better than the last of the four schnitties that I'd made. Thanks mate!
I grew up in a multi-ethnic anthracite coal town in the 1950s with plenty of WWII war brides from Germany, Poland, France, Japan, the PI, and Italy (Neapolitans to Sicilians), etc., to share their ethnic recipes. Each Roman Catholic Church took a weekend in summer to host a block party. One of my friend's mother came from Sicily and she gave me tips in cooking Italian/Sicilian food. Another friend's mama taught me to make Polish pierogi. My own family had French, Dutch, English, and Lithuanian recipes to share. It was great food with wonderful friends and their families.
You're very lucky mate
@@rustledjimmes I wish I had appreciated it more at the time. But I pass down the recipes and the stories to my children and grandchildren.
Andy! Yes chef, legend as are you and all Your team. Never tried either version, but that's an experiment for the future!. Peace and ❤ to you all!
Got to be the Australian version for me. Love a good chip. Nice one Andy. Legend 👍
I have to say, I’ll be ordering a parma at most pubs around Australia, but I have also fell in love with the “Irish Parma” with chip shop curry sauce on it. Life changing.
I did a Roo Parm here in the US at the recommendation of a friend of mine from Australia, the smoked kangaroo was great, and loved the fries(chips) in place of pasta
Sounds yum
As a 37yo Aussie :)
Not surprised you gave it to the US but all your videos you knock it out of the park. You sure that knowledge you have and your experience.
Anyone watching this in Aus, use Mutti crushed tomatoes. Can get them from woolies/coles/ritches. Makes the best sauce base. Thank me later
Use the Mutti shole tomatoes.Even better quality. Srusb them with your hands. Thank me later. ❤️
Mutti Baby Romas are my go to......😎👍
Yes, i found them a few months ago ... excellent 👏
Use pasata
Mutti whole tomatoes! And squish them, done! The whole tomatoes are better quality, and yes it makes a difference.
Serve the parm on a nice big roll from an Italian bakery served with fries/chips is also incredibly popular in the northeast US at least. Both made look amazing. Thank you again for an awesome post
Keys to a good Aussie parma
- Panko breadcrumbs
- Triple smoked ham
- Basic Aussie pub salad made with iceberg lettuce, cucumber, tomato, Spanish onion and some dressing
- Good chips
- Big enough plate so that the parma don't sit on the chips and they get soggy.
Order one at The London Tavern,Richmond.
I tried this recipe and mine had no taste sigh.
Maybe I should try a thigh chook Schnitzel next time?
Or add more seasoning into my tomatoes ?
Why do restaurant parmas especially The London Tavern version taste so much better?
Some trickery going on.
Should I season the bird also?
*parmi
@@mozzarellabmx*parma
And olives and feta in the salad
@@marabanara *Parmi
You won't get canceled, my dude. You're a home and restaurant chef and super tender, and a joy to watch. Big love from another home chef!
Thought for sure Andy would choose the home country. LOL
We had an awesome restaurant in Townsville that served its Parmi with Pasta and we loooooooved it . ❤
Thanks!
Thanks for watching!
Could not imagine schnitty and spaghetti.. great video
The thought of it actually disgusts me, even though I'll happily eat a chicken katsu
...and half the world couldnt imagine serving chicken parm with fries (chips). 🤭
@@KPA78 America isn't half the world champ.
@@HillsPatrolTD42👌
Open your mind and tastebuds
I'm a Canadian watching this and I've only had the American version. The Australian way is intriguing. Thanks for your honest review and the easy to replicate cooking methods.
They both look amazing!
Aussie here. I was served a Parmi in Fremantle with pasta. Bloody awesome! It's very hard to find in Perth, so this is how I make it at home. Winner, winner, chicken parmi dinner.
Actually, chicken parm was barely a thing in the US until the 1980s. Veal parm was the standard meat adaption of eggplant parm. Only when veal started becoming much more expensive than chicken breasts did that change and today almost no one other than restaurants, make veal parm. And I had one aunt who always made pork cutlets.
My mum used to make veal parm decades ago😋💖
Hey Andy! You are a brilliant chef and your crew are awesome! I own your book and it's great I also watch your videos every day. I'm a chef in America and worked in many Italian restaurants. My question is I was always taught to call it red sauce. Reason being is because historically Marinara was always made on a ship, aka Mariners. Keep up the fantastic work all of you and greetings from America!
Marinara, Mariners. I always thought there was a connection somewhere. Thanks for bringing up this interesting bit from history.
I've always seen this served on ciabatta here in South Africa 🤩
Oh, you can definitely make a burger/sandwich out of it too.
Yum !
I’m a 2nd gen Italian American, and I love Italian American dishes like Chicken Parm, so I gave a little cheer when it “won”. 🎉 The only difference between Chef Andy’s version and my family’s recipe is that my family made the pasta sauce with dried Italian Seasoning herb mix, instead of just fresh basil, and sometimes put the same in the dredge for the chicken too (though I think that can be overpowering and I prefer the dredge plain, personally).
I’m always fascinated by how recipes have been interpreted by, and evolved in, various different groups and areas based on what’s available, their own cultural backgrounds and influences, etc., so it was really cool to see a different version of this dish! I didn’t know the Australian version existed, but I’d totally be down to try it. We all win when there are even more delicious options to try!
Hey!
Andy this looks so delicious!
Love from
England!😊
🙏
@@andy_cooks Hey! Andy thank you so much for the Reply! 😊
@@andy_cookshope babe is well!
Very nice video. My American variant uses pounded deboned chicken thights, fennel in the seasoning, panko as the breading. Order of operations is different: broil mozz directly on the fried chicken, then sauce, then grate copious parm on top. A fair amount of crushed red pepper in the sauce. The result is an improvement, I think - tastier chicken, with crunch preserved.
I made an incredible chicken parm for me and my housemate a few months back. I used chicken thighs and sous vide the chicken first, then crumb and deep fry. Seasoned the crumbs a bit like fried chicken. It was so good my chef housemate said he’d definitely be happy paying for it
Open a food truck and do Parmas haha. Maybe have a few variations.
@@SilentHotdog28 funny enough, my housemate actually ran a number of food trucks down in Tasmania. I believe mostly desserts. He described it as very hard work, so I think I’ll stick to programming 😂
You are a great Chef a great communicator and teacher Andy. Thank you.
Mate I am definitely making those! Made the classic Australian version before! Also smashed a 2.5KG PARMI challenge here in Perth! In an hour! Cheers Andy 🤙🏻
2.5kg that's hectic!
great stuff mate I cooked the American style yesterday and the Australian version today my wife loved them
Great chef, great content, keep it up bro
I made the Aussie version last night. You just changed a South Africans life
Andy of late I've been seasoning and then pounding the chicken, and have received lots of compliments , also the Italians seem to love this with some garlic inside the crumb. Thanks for your work good job mate😎👍.
do the parma with ham along with pasta on the side...best of both worlds!
I love elements of both dishes and I want to try both versions
I would enjoy eating both versions. Yum❤❤❤
Basically this, there's a place for both. Are you craving chips or pasta
Hi Andy i always love watching your videos would you create some dishes for people who have high cholesterol... And want to watch there health.. i would say there is a larger community out there who would really appreciate it.
I'm so sorry that this was the end of the channel, but you had a good run
🤣
This is fantastic! I never knew so much about chicken palma. And yes... I always eat the salad!
As an American, I love our Chicken Parm. I didn't even KNOW about an Australian version. I love the addition of the ham. But, I agree, I think the pasta works better than the chips. Still, I would be happy to try the Aussie version.
Love the little details of using a us madein pan for the American parmie and the Aussie solidteknics for the Aussie parmie
The Aussie version is kind of like if chicken parmesan, cordon bleu, and poutine had a baby. I wonder if the pubs used fries since they would have already been making them anyways. It looks fantastic.
It’s an open faced cordon bleu!
Most Aussie pubs offer a choice of vegetables or chips and salad for most main courses (entree for Americans).
Highly likely, they had already been doing fish and chips and steak and chips on the menu. Natural progression haha
Aussies make a distinction between British-style pub "chips" (thicker cut, his were definitely on the thicker side of chips), and American-style fries (sometimes called shoe-lace chips, but not often)
Parmi definitely goes with thicker chips. You might get fries with a burger or hotdog, but with fish or chicken, definitely need the thicker, more fluffy chips.
Australians _love_ chips man. Literally every meal you get will have chips, or at least an option of chips. It’s definitely the most prolific food we have here.
Using panco is great, try already mixing in there a bit of parmesan and maybe some crushed almonds or peanuts.
Where’s the love for the Teesside chicken parmo Andy?! 😢
Teesside😉
There's only one Parmo, and that's the Boro Parmo. 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
Earliest Uk records date back to sort of mid-50’s. Post-war migration out of Italy to places like USA, Australia and the…..north east of England…
I was just about to comment this! Boro hot shot parmo!
Teeside Parmo would be a great addition too seen as it’s different again. Get the béchamel out…
I am a chef of 30 years. Worked all over the world. I’ve never heard of the Aussie version. I’m going to make this for family meal and see what the team thinks of it.
What did they think of the Australian version ?
Ok so I’m South Australian. We invented the Parmi and so in respect to us it should be called parmi everywhere. In all seriousness lov the vid Andy. Keep it up
First the parmy then the AB we're innovators
No the fuck you didn’t 😂😂😂, chicken parmi was invented in the us by immigrants from Italy in in the 1800s
South australia should never be respected
@@Sprinkl3s you're a bit lost. The Australian recipe for chicken parmi was invented/created in south australia.
as the video above shows you, the recipes are different.
@@jjperceval That's alright, we never really cared much about the opinion of the convict colonies anyway :D
I'm from Adelaide. Our local version originated through the Germans as Wiener schnitzel (which is really an Austrian dish), not the Italian parmigiana. Parmigiana came later, as you mentioned, in the 50s, when we had a huge wave of Italian immigration.
Also, for the record, in Adelaide it's 'Parmi' or 'Parmy'. Parma is what the Melbournites call it.
Schnitzel is still the basis of all crumbed meat dishes and parmigiana is merely an optional topping.
Not having tasted either in the end I can't judge for real which tastes best, but as a chef myself, I very much prefer the concept of the Australian version.
It’s not traditional but putting cheese on first and then the tomato sauce prevents the chicken’s crispy crust from getting all soggy so quickly
Flashback to Binging w/ Babish vs Mythical Kitchen on the chicken parm debate😂
or you can use a thin layer of baby spinach if you have no ham... you barley notice the spinach and stops the sogginess.
The Chicago deep dish approach
Hey mate, been watching your vids since they were no frills with crappy audio, your channel's come a long way. We've recently switched from using tinned tomatoes to a good quality (mutti or similar) passata *not an ad. The difference is huge - much lower acidity in a good way, better tomato flavour with natural sweetness. You should try it and see what you think
Try buying the mutti whole tomatoes and chopping them up! I once read the best tomatoes are sold to those that can them whole (it’s why they’re slightly more expensive); chopped / crushed is second dibs. Passata is slightly different in that it’s tomatoes cooked down into sauce. Both good but different flavors / uses!
What about the kiwi version with a crumed Pawa Pattie, White sauce, grilled cheese and chips Cuzzy Bro!!!😂😂❤❤
I made an Aussie/ American fusion version last night. Chicken in panko, with marinara sauce, ham, mozz & parmesan. Spaghetti on side for the win!
"save this for something else"
Yeah, chicken nugget to snack on while the parma's cooking
Always a big fan of a cook who uses the same tongs for raw chicken as the cooked chicken. Awesome.
“Marry”-“Land”. Us crazy Americans pronounce it “Mare-Lin”. Great video, and good looks phenomenal
I've never heard it called that and my wife and her parents are from there
Thanks for the Sunday dishes, Chef!
I am Italian-American and while I aven't tried the Aussie version, I think I would like it better.
The old Miami hotel on the Gold Coast used to do the best Parmy chips and salad with a pot for $ 10 so sad it's been renovated for the hipsters was a run down old place but the pub food was amazing I love the idea of the pasta but i can't go past the chips love the honey mustard dressing idea will try that next time Cheers Andy great Vid 👏👌
As an American who’s never had the Aussie version, I like the chips part, but the addition of the ham seems a tad odd. Not bad, just odd. Reminds me more of Chicken Cordon Bleu than a chicken parm but I bet it’s still good!
What's wrong with a hybrid? Aussie Parma with pasta. Could you mix Panko for crunch and seasoned breadcrumbs for flavor? If you use ham, I don't think you'd need Parmesano Reggiano. The ham will have the salt tang you'd get from the cheese (but it's up to individual taste). This video opened up all kinds of possible combinations. Love it.
Parmigiana di Melanzane comes from the south of Italy, not Parma. Some believe that the name refers to the horizontal slats of the shutters on the windows, (to keep the sun out) shingled as you would layer the fried eggplant slices in a baking dish alongside the marinara sauce, the mozzarella and the basil.
I loved learning about Australia cooking different than America's. Thank you.😊
I love my parmi with pasta too!!❤
American here. I've never even heard of the Aussie version. But it wins! Ham AND potatoes? No contest. I'd still add parm cheese though. Awesome video!
I’m sorry. But if anyone ever serves me a chicken parmi on bed of pasta, I want a refund 😂
In Brazil this one is also a classic... we serve it with rice (brazilian style cooked) and mash potatoes... We don't use ham, just souce and cheese
Combine the two! Aussie Parma with spaghetti! 😋
Classic dish, neat trick as well to grab a handful of breadcrumbs before laying the chicken down for breading
Yeah, it's Parmi
Yeah nah
@@mrsuperwog100 nah yeah.
I cook the Australian chicken with ham but have it on the spaghetti pasta! (From the UK.) I need to try with chips and salad on the side too now!