This is one of my favorite meals, and I don't eat it often. It is a special occasion kind of meal. Not only is it pretty labor-intensive to make, its also about 8000 calories per tsp. It has 1.5 - 2.5 STICKS of butter in this recipe. If that doesn't scare you away, nothing will. If you can spare a cheat day for a special meal though, this should be it. It was taught to me by my mother-in-law and my sister-in-law in Washington shortly after we moved there in 2006. It quickly rose to near the top of my list, and made it on the "birthday dinner" rotation pretty often between the 15 of us. There was no such thing as a "small family dinner" when we all got together! I loved it!
Start out by trimming and cleaning your chicken breasts well, and then pounding them down to ½ inch thick. I use a large freezer baggie for this. Get as much of the air out as you can before sealing it, then pound with a rolling pin. The baggie keeps in all the raw chicken yuck, and keeps your counters and rolling pin clean. You can also use a couple pieces of wax paper, but I don't like that method as well.
Now melt the butter and toss some oil into a large frying pan. Let it heat up and put in the sliced mushrooms and green onions. Cook until the water from the mushrooms is released and cooked off, and the mushrooms are beginning to brown.
This is how I like to keep the mushrooms. It lets the excess butter/fat drain out, so I can add it back in while the chicken is cooking. You'll need it. You don't HAVE to do this. It'd be just as good if the mushrooms were kept in a bowl or on a plate, but this is what I do.
Here's a close up of the mushroom after they are cooked. I had to stop myself from just taking spoon-fulls and eating them. I was a mushroom hater for most of my life. I'm making up for it now.
Coat the chicken in your flour and marjoram mixture just before adding to the hot oil. Brown the coated chicken. Add more butter/oil as needed. You want as little oil as possible, but it helps keep the butter and bits from burning. Try not to crowd the pan too much.
Excuse the raw chicken picture. Not appetizing, but I wanted to show you the foam. The butter/oil mixture will do this after a bit. Keep a CLOSE watch under it. Make sure your temp is high enough to cook and brown the chicken well, but not hot enough to burn the butter and bits of flour/flavor that are collecting on the bottom of the pan. There have been a few ruined sauces due to these bits going from brown to black. This is caused from heat being too high. No one likes the taste of burnt unless its a nice char on the outside of a steak! If you DO overcook the oil/butter/bits, do not fear.
If you still have more chicken to cook, start with a fresh clean pan, melt some more butter, add in a bit more oil, and start again. If you've already cooked all the chicken you can still make the sauce by melting some more butter in a fresh pan, adding the stock and wine, and simmering, but it won't be as good as it normally would be. Passable, but not nearly as flavorful.
Close-up of cooked chicken, set aside.
After you have cooked all the chicken, removed it from the pan, and set it aside, add in your marsala wine and chicken stock. Let simmer for 2-3 minutes over medium heat, stirring frequently, and then add back in the mushrooms, onions, and chicken.
Get the best Marsala that you can. I like dry. Sweet would work too, but the flavor will definitely be different, and, well...sweeter. This bottle wasn't terribly expensive. Under $13.00 I believe.
Here is the whole mixture cooking down. The sauce will be thin when you first add everything back into the pan. Once it simmers about 20 minutes it'll thicken up from some of the flour coating that it steals off the chicken. This is a good thing. A delicious, amazing, good thing. If for some reason it does not thicken up don't be afraid to use a little cornstarch slurry to get it where it needs to be.
Butter, browning. See those brown bits rising to the top? WATCH it! It's almost there. Swish it around a bit to keep an eye on it, remove just after you think you need to. Improperly browned butter just tastes greasy. Well-browned butter tastes...well...just do it. Its unique and really adds a whole new dimension to the pasta.
It was worth it.
Chicken Marsala with Brown Butter Pasta
Recipe Tweaked by Nicole Johnson - originally by Denise Johnson & Jennifer Barncard
Prep time: 25 minutes
Cook time: 35 - 45 minutes
Total time: 1 hour +
Yield: 8 servings
Calories per serving: too many to count
Fat per serving: I'd rather not know
Ingredients:
Cooking Directions
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