The organic chicken breasts that I buy are always very thick, and I almost never use them whole. In most cases, I slice them through the middle -- I am just too impatient to wait for the thick ones to cook. I am also lazy, so in most cases I won't even pound the chicken breast to create a uniform thickness. I guess that means that my recipe isn't a true pailliard, but what the hell -- it's my blog, I'll call it what I want.
Since I essentially made this up as I was going along, the ingredient amounts aren't exact, but are probably a pretty good estimation.
Chicken Paillard with Lemon and Shallot Sauce
(serves 2-4)
4 chicken breasts, about 1/2 inch thick
2-3 tablespoons canola oil
Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper
1-2 tablespoons minced shallot
3 tablespoons butter
2 tablespoons flour
1 cup chicken broth
Juice of 1/2 lemon
Salt to taste
-- Pat dry chicken breasts and sprinkle with salt and pepper
-- Heat canola oil in skillet over med-high heat
-- When oil is hot, add chicken and sear about 2-3 minutes per side
-- Remove chicken when just opaque, tent with foil, and set aside
-- Reduce heat and add shallot, cooking until soft and fragrant, less than 2 minutes
-- Add butter and let melt
-- Add flour and wisk to incorporate it into butter
-- Add chicken broth, then increase heat to allow sauce to reduce
-- When reduced by almost half, add lemon juice
-- Let reduce a little more, add salt to taste
-- Return chicken to pan to rest in sauce for about a minute
-- Serve breasts with sauce spooned over top
I served the chicken to my husband and kids with quartered potatoes and peas -- a solid, balanced weeknight meal. For me, I had some arugula I wanted to use, so I shredded a breast, and served it over a little salad I made with the arugula, thinly sliced red onion, kalamata olives, and thinly shaved slices of parmigiano cheese. Instead of a dressing, I just drizzed a couple of teaspoons of the sauce over my salad. The combination of the arugula with the sauce was really tasty. I think that I will also use this sauce on fish in the future.
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