Chicken Piccata is a quick dinner comprised of a crispy pan seared chicken breast with a Lemon Butter Caper Sauce. This chicken has a bright, lemony sauce that’s just on the right side of tangy. It’s incredibly easy and amazingly tasty!
Chicken Piccata
I realise it sounds totally obnoxious to call this a “better” Chicken Piccata. I should clarify and say that this is a better one to me. This dish is a wildly popular Italian-American classic that I’ve tried making over the years following other recipes. I’ve just never been impressed with the results though, leaving me feeling that I’m somehow missing out on the enjoyment of this dish. I always found the lemon sauce mouth-puckeringly sour to the point of wincing. I also felt it just didn’t have enough interesting flavour in it to carry a somewhat bland chicken.
So many recipes also called for an insane amount of butter and oil. Sometimes up to half a cup! What the … ??
My butt cannot afford that much fat for what’s supposed to a quick, midweek meal!
So this is my version of Chicken Piccata. The sauce is not as sour – I dial it in to just the right amount of lemon tang. I use less fat than most recipes too, and reduce the white wine through cooking to add complexity in the sauce. And as for the chicken? Add a dusting of parmesan. It makes it so much tastier!
What goes in (my) Chicken Piccata
So here’s what you need:
Chicken breast – 2 breasts will serve 3 to 4 people once we cut each piece into 3 and pound into thin steaks. You could also use thigh fillets (skinless boneless) or tenderloins;
Lemon – You need a fresh lemon here. Kind of defeats the purpose if you try to make this with bottled lemon juice!
White wine – Use any dry white wine that’s not too woody, too sweet or fruity. Chardonnay is particularly great because it adds a good amount of flavour.
The wine doesn’t make the sauce taste winey at all because we reduce it right down to cook the alcohol out and just leave behind the concentrated flavour that adds depth to the sauce.
Don’t use an expensive wine. The flavour and aroma that you pay for is largely lost during cooking. It’s pretty well documented these days by notable food authorities (such as New York Times Cooking) that you do not need to use expensive wines for cooking.
Substitution: If you can’t consume alcohol, use low sodium chicken stock/broth;
Capers – Use capers in brine, drained. The capers in salt (ie no liquid) are a little too salty to use here;
Butter – For cooking and also for the sauce;
Olive oil – For cooking the chicken; and
Flour & parmesan – For dusting the chicken. Don’t skip this. It gives the chicken a crust that the sauce clings to. Without it, the sauce just slips off the chicken. (PS The additional of parmesan here is a trick that makes this Chicken Piccata a standout!).
How to make Chicken Piccata
Chicken Piccata is a straight forward, pretty quick recipe:
Pound chicken so they cook evenly;
Dust with flour > pan sear until golden; and
Make sauce in same pan (takes 3 maybe 4 minutes).
Cut and pound chicken – Cut each chicken breast into 3 pieces. Then pound each piece until it is 1/2cm / 0.2″ thick. I use a meat mallet and place the chicken between baking/parchment paper, cling wrap or what is called “Go-Between” which is a freezer film used to keep food from sticking together in the freezer. It’s basically like freezer bags in roll form.
If using tenderloin, there is no need to cut, just pound each piece. If using thigh fillets, halve then pound;
Dust chicken – Drizzle chicken with oil, then coat with the flour and parmesan. Press the chicken into the mixture to make it stick. Shake off excess well.
See comment under the Ingredients above for why a flour-parmesan coating is essential here!
Pan fry chicken in butter and oil until golden, amount 3 minutes. Turn, then cook the other side for 1 minute until golden (I know that sounds odd, 3 minutes then 1 minute, but the 2nd side really does cook much faster than the 1st side!). Once cooked, remove from the pan;
Clean skillet – The skillet will be a bit dirty which will tarnish what is supposed to be a clean, clear sauce. So before we proceed, it’s best to clean the skillet. Pour out the excess fat from the pan, then give it a quick wipe with a paper towel. No need to be meticulous here;
Reduce wine – To make the sauce, add the white wine and simmer rapidly to reduce by half. In this step, the alcohol will cook out so you won’t have any boozy flavour in the sauce. Then add lemon and bring to a simmer;
Swirl in butter – Turn down heat to low, then add cubes of butter and swirl it to make it melt. This makes the butter emulsify with the wine and lemon juice to form a glossy, clear, slightly thickened sauce. The sauce would not thicken as well and it would split if you let the butter bubble and melt over high heat;
Capers & parsley – To finish the sauce, add in capers and parsley; and
Serve! Then serve the chicken pieces with the Lemon Butter Sauce. You’ll notice that there is not a ton of sauce. You don’t need loads, the sauce has enough flavour. From a practical perspective, the flour-parmesan crust of the chicken gets soaked with the sauce, and that’s all you need really, to enjoy this dish. (And regular readers know I’m a Sauce Girl!).
Serve this with your starchy side of choice and a side salad to get some greens on your plate. Choose from:
Some suggestions for you:
Enjoy! – Nagi x
Watch how to make it
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Chicken Piccata (Lemon Chicken with Capers)
Ingredients
- 450g / 16oz chicken breast (2 large pieces), skinless boneless (Note 1)
- 4 tbsp flour (sub cornflour/cornstarch for GF)
- 2 1/2 tbsp parmesan , finely grated (Note 2)
- 1/2 tsp salt
- 1/4 tsp pepper
- 2 1/2 tbsp olive oil
- 1 tbsp / 15g unsalted butter
Lemon Sauce:
- 2 tbsp / 30g unsalted butter , cut into 1.5cm / 1/2″ cubes
- 2/3 cup dry white wine (Note 3)
- 2 tbsp lemon juice , fresh
- 3 tbsp capers in brine , drained (Note 4)
- 1 1/2 tsp parsley , finely chopped, plus more for garnish
Instructions
Crispy Parmesan Chicken:
- Cut each breast into 3 pieces. Then place between 2 pieces of cling wrap or paper and pound to 1/2 cm / 0.2″ thickness.
- Drizzle chicken with 1/2 tbsp olive oil and spread with your fingers on both sides.
- Mix flour, parmesan, salt and pepper in a shallow dish. Coat chicken, pressing to adhere, then shaking off excess.
- Heat olive oil in a large skillet over medium high heat. Then add butter and let it melt.
- Place 3 pieces of chicken in the skillet. Cook 3 – 4 minutes until golden, then turn and cook the other side for 1 minute. Remove onto plate, repeat with remaining chicken.
Chicken Piccata Sauce:
- Pour out and discard excess fat in skillet, then give it a quick wipe with paper towels (no need to clean thoroughly).
- Still on medium high heat, add wine. Let it simmer rapidly until it reduces by half – around 3 minutes.
- Add lemon and simmer 1 minute.
- Reduce heat to low. Add cubed butter and swirl pan to make it melt but not go foamy. Sauce should be glossy, translucent and slightly thickened.
- Stir in capers and parsley. Serve chicken with Sauce, sprinkled with extra parsley if desired!
Recipe Notes:
Nutrition Information:
When life gives you lemons …
Life of Dozer
He’s so stinky, I should put him in for dry cleaning too!
Tina says
Just made this for dinner today! Everyone loved it so much. I never am disappointed when making one of your recipes they have all been so good. Now when my daughter wants to make something she always says “I wonder if Nagi has a recipe for that” and looks to see if you do! 😝😁 keep them coming! lol
Nagi says
Thanks so much Tina, I truly love hearing this!!! N x
Brenda Sparkes says
Simple but tasty 😋
Nagi says
Exactly Brenda, no need to overcomplicate things 🙂 N x
Brenda Sparkes says
Simple but tasty
Brenda says
Simple but so tasty
Ailsa McQuade says
Thats interesting – no egg wash just oil and flour with parmesan (of course with all the eggs I have its a shame😄) Ive done this before as a what can i do to jazz it up dish but didnt realise it was called piccata-well a version of it anyway -Im going to try it your way next time itll make it a much better sauce!
Nagi says
I hope you try this way – I’d love to know what you think Ailsa! N x
Vicky says
Do you think this would work with fish – say, Coral Trout?
Nagi says
Yes definitely Vicky!!! Any firm white fish would be great! N x
Mary Tognazzini says
YOU THINK DOZER IS STINKY, SMELL TWO DOGS THAT LOVE TO JUMP IN OUR CREEK AND ROLL IN COW PIES. I DO LIKE THE COLOR GREEN BUT NOT ON THE DOGS.QUEENSLANDS POSUM AND DEXTER.
Nagi says
Oh noooooo 😂😂😂
Julia Hesketh says
Hi Nagi and the beautiful blonde bundle of fur!
I’m GF AND DF. I’ve seen the comments about corn flour, but how can I substitute the butter? Would block baking margarine work (eg Stork)?
I really like the sound of this recipe, and have used some of your others and love them, and hope it isn’t closed off to me because of the dairy 😕
Thanks Nagi
Nagi says
Hi Julia, you won’t get the full flavour like butter but I’m sure a butter alternative will work here – love to know if you try! N x
Chef Patrick says
You do a GREAT job on ALL your dishes Nagi!!!! a lot of Ol’ Classics | one suggestion for “Pan Sauces” always start deglaze process with a Soffritto! Italian – Garlic & Shallot sometimes zest | Spanish Onion/Garlic/Peppers/ | French G/S/Parsley/Thyme | Ginger/Garlic/ sometimes Lemongrass/Scallion/Galangal | Persian is the same + fresh Turmeric
Ailsa says
Im going to try this too yum
Janine Treffone says
Absolutely beautiful as usual..love your work
Nagi says
Thanks so much Janine!! N x
Deb says
This dish was simply delicious!
I made it with boneless thighs and cooked a little longer. Kept warm in oven while I did the sauce.
I agree Nagi the cornflour doesn’t give you the ‘golden touch’
In my opinion, the capers in the sauce, together with other ingredients was really, really delicious!
Definitely a ‘go to again’ recipe,
Relatively easy too!
Thank you Nagi 💪💪
Nagi says
I’m so happy you enjoyed it Deb, thanks so much for letting me know!! N x
Peter Formosa says
Hi Nagi, thanks for all your recipes and posts, my question is, can I use cornflour as a GF alternative ?
thanks Peter
Nagi says
Hi Peter! You sure can. The chicken won’t go quite as golden because cornflour doesn’t colour the same way flour does, but you’ll get the same crispiness! 🙂 N x PS Updating recipe notes
Joanne Murphy says
Love the look of this chicken piccata but not a lover of capers, any suggestions for an alternative. Thank you 😊
Valleycat1 says
I would just make this without the capers. Perhaps some fresh thyme if you think the sauce needs more finesse.
Tyler Brown says
Maybe olives?
Joanne says
Capers and olives the two things I don’t like unfortunately, I have tried to like them but they make me gag , thanks for replying though 😀
Martin says
I’m with you Joanne – guess this is one recipe I’ll pass on.
Mary says
Are the capers necessary in this recipe? Couldn’t it just be made without them or is there too much flavour loss? I’m not a caper lover either.
Eha says
Perfect ! If you live alone ! If you are in a hurry ! I you love food ! If you want to and need to eat ‘healthy’. If you do not want to spend an arm and a leg – I ate my very, very similar version of the beloved piccata for lunch three hours ago . . . a huge mixed green salad alongside tasted great . . . kudos !
Fran DiLeo says
I’d like to nestle the chicken over rice on a big serving platter. What should I do to make more sauce? Instead of more wine, can I use chicken stock?
Tyler Brown says
Maybe olives?