I came across a lone chicken bosom in my freezer yesterday
so I took it out to thaw, wondering how I might raise
the lowly chicken to dazzling heights.

First I gave it a good pounding.

And cut it into strips.
I'm thinking of doing my version
of
chicken piccata since you know I can't
possibly follow a recipe exactly.

My ingredients for the sauce:
pink peppercorns
capers
lemon juice
Chardonnay
veal stock cubes
beurre manie
parsley
Manie is pronounced MAHN-yay
and should have that little accent ague on the "e"
but I don't know how to do that.
A
beurre manie is basically an uncooked
roux.
Equal amounts of butter and flour are
kneaded together and gradually added to a sauce
to thicken it and add a bit of a sheen to it.
Now, a normal recipe for chicken piccata would call
for chicken stock to be added in the sauce.
As my chicken consomme is frozen in quart-sized containers
in the utility room freezer downstairs,
and I'm lazy and remember I have veal stock cubes
in the freezer upstairs, I'm using veal stock.
Plus, the veal stock is velvety and smooth
and has a depth of flavor that will give the chicken just
a little something else -
a certain
je ne sais quoi, if you will.

I added the juice of one lemon (about 1/4 cup)
and about 1/3 cup Chardonnay to my pan.

Then I poured in about 1/4 cup of my veal stock.

Here's the
beurre manie,
which generally I'd mix by hand,
but didn't feel like getting flour and butter
in my camera.

I took a small bit of the beurre manie
and stirred it into my sauce to thicken.
You can add more as needed to get the desired consistency.

Capers went in.

And pink peppercorns.

Then I added in the parsley
and a bit of basil from
the plant I have growing in the kitchen.
Sauce is done.
Cover, set aside, and keep warm.
Next up,
some veggies.

I chopped some onion and green pepper.

And sliced some broccoli and carrots.
I like to peel my broccoli stems -
makes for more tender broccoli.

I steamed the broccoli first
until just barely tender.
The reason I steamed the broccoli
is that steaming cooks the broccoli evenly.
Sometimes sauteeing the broccoli,
you end up with overcooked florets and undercooked stems.
Don't over cook, since the broccoli is going
to be added to the sauteed veggies.

I added part butter and part olive oil to a hot pan.
(I use Bertolli Extra Light which, being light,
doesn't mask the flavor of my veggies.)
The reason I use both butter and olive oil
is I use butter for the butter flavor
and the oil to obtain a higher
smoke point.

Action shot!

After swirling the carrots around for a minute or two,
I added in the onion and pepper.

Finally I tossed in the broccoli just to coat.
Veggies done.

Next I made a quick batter -
flour, freshly ground salt and pepper, paprika.

Mix thoroughly and dredge chicken pieces,
shaking off excess.

Chicken pieces went, one at a time,
in hot oil and butter.
Maybe 60 seconds per side, if that much.

You don't want to overcook the chicken.
Just a nice browning on the outside
so the inside is still moist and not dried out.

And ta daaaa ...
Here's dinner.
Lightly battered chicken strips with
a lemon/wine/caper sauce which certainly
benefited by the boost of the veal stock
and sauteed vegetables.
Looks yummy!
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