NEW The BBQ grilling guide 2026 is live Read it →
Chicken Piccata Recipe: Crispy, Buttery & Ready in 30 Min Jump to recipe
HOME CHICKEN RECIPES CHICKEN PICCATA RECIPE: CRISPY,
RECIPE · CHICKEN RECIPES

Chicken Piccata Recipe: Crispy, Buttery & Ready in 30 Min

E
By Emma Delacourt · March 25, 2026 · 14 min read
chicken piccata
Reader Rating★★★★★
Total Time30 mins
Servings4 servings
Chicken Piccata Recipe: Crispy, Buttery & Ready in 30 Min

If you’ve never made chicken piccata at home, tonight is the night. This Italian-American classic delivers everything you want from a weeknight dinner — a golden, paper-thin crust that shatters when your fork hits it, and a glossy lemon-caper butter sauce so bright it almost wakes you up. In my kitchen tests, I’ve found that the difference between a flat, rubbery result and a genuinely restaurant-quality piccata comes down to two things: a proper pound-out and precise heat management at the moment the chicken hits the pan.

The recipe is faster than ordering delivery — about 30 minutes start to finish — and uses fewer than ten pantry staples. Let’s break it down the right way.

10 min Prep
20 min Cook
30 min Total
4 pers. Servings
390 kcal Calories

Why You’ll Love This Recipe

Chicken piccata is a study in Italian restraint: few ingredients, maximum flavor. The acidity of fresh lemon juice does two jobs simultaneously — it cuts through the richness of the butter and deglazes the fond (those caramelized brown bits left in the pan), building the sauce’s backbone in under three minutes. The capers add a briny, floral pop that no other ingredient replicates. What you end up with is a dish that tastes complex but cooks simply.

From a meat science standpoint, pounding the chicken breasts to an even ¼-inch thickness is non-negotiable. It exposes more surface area to the hot pan, accelerating the Maillard reaction — the chemical process at around 300°F (149°C) that produces the hundreds of flavor compounds responsible for that savory, nutty crust. Thin cutlets also reach their safe internal temperature of 165°F / 74°C in roughly 3 minutes per side, keeping the meat juicy rather than dried out.

The Butcher’s Selection — Ingredients

Ingredients — Serves 4
  • 2 large boneless, skinless chicken breasts (about 700g / 1.5 lb)
  • ½ cup (65g) all-purpose flour, for dredging
  • 1 tsp fine sea salt + ½ tsp freshly cracked black pepper
  • 3 tbsp extra-virgin olive oil
  • 3 tbsp unsalted butter, divided
  • ½ cup (120ml) dry white wine (or low-sodium chicken broth)
  • ⅓ cup (80ml) fresh lemon juice (about 2 large lemons)
  • 3 tbsp capers, drained (not rinsed — keep that brine)
  • 2 tbsp fresh flat-leaf parsley, finely chopped
  • Lemon slices, for garnish

Chicken selection note: Look for breasts in the 170–200g (6–7 oz) range each. Oversized breasts (above 280g) create thick, uneven cutlets that cook unevenly. If your butcher carries air-chilled birds, the drier surface will produce a crisper sear. Fat ratio here is minimal — the richness comes entirely from the butter mount in the sauce, not the protein itself.

How to Make Chicken Piccata

  1. Butterfly and pound. Slice each breast horizontally through the middle to create two even halves. Place between two sheets of plastic wrap and pound with a meat mallet or rolling pin to an even ¼-inch (6mm) thickness. Season both sides generously with salt and pepper.
  2. Dredge in flour. Spread flour on a wide plate. Dredge each cutlet, pressing gently so it adheres on both sides, then shake off any excess. The thin flour coating gelatinizes on contact with hot oil, creating that signature silky-crisp surface.
  3. Sear in batches. Heat olive oil and 1 tbsp butter in a large (12-inch) stainless steel or cast-iron skillet over medium-high heat. When the butter foam subsides and the pan shimmers, add 2 cutlets — never crowd the pan. Sear for 3 minutes undisturbed, flip, and cook 2–3 minutes more until golden and cooked through. Transfer to a warm plate, tent loosely with foil, and repeat.
  4. Build the sauce. Lower the heat to medium. Add white wine and let it bubble for 30 seconds, scraping up all the fond with a wooden spoon. Add lemon juice and capers, simmer 2 minutes until slightly reduced.
  5. Mount with butter. Remove the pan from the heat completely. Add the remaining 2 tbsp cold butter in one piece and swirl the pan in circles — never stir with a spoon at this stage. This emulsification technique creates a sauce that’s glossy and thick rather than greasy and broken.
  6. Plate and rest. Return cutlets to the pan for 60 seconds to warm through. Plate immediately, spoon sauce over the top, and finish with fresh parsley and lemon slices.
🔬 Meat Science Moment

Letting the cooked cutlets rest — even briefly under foil — allows muscle fibers to reabsorb some of the expelled juices as internal pressure equalizes. Slice or serve immediately after searing and those juices puddle on the plate instead of staying in the meat.

Pro Cooking Tips

💡 Tip: Pan Temperature is Everything

Test your pan by flicking a drop of water into it. If it evaporates immediately with a sharp hiss, the pan is ready. If it just steams slowly, wait. A cold pan means the flour coating absorbs oil rather than searing — you’ll get greasy, pale chicken instead of a golden crust.

Use stainless steel, not nonstick. The Maillard reaction requires direct contact between the protein and a very hot surface. Nonstick coatings degrade above 500°F (260°C) and prevent proper fond formation — and it’s that fond that makes the sauce remarkable.

For a deeper dive into sauce-making science and how pan sauces build flavor through reduction, the Serious Eats Food Lab guide on pan sauces is one of the most technically sound resources available.

Cold butter only for mounting. The emulsification step works because cold butter contains both fat globules and water. When swirled off-heat into a warm acid (lemon juice), the fat disperses into tiny droplets suspended in the liquid — creating a stable, velvety sauce. Warm or melted butter breaks this immediately, leaving an oily slick.

Recipe Variations

Slow Cooker

Dredge and brown the cutlets in a skillet first (don’t skip this). Transfer to slow cooker with wine, lemon juice, and capers. Cook on LOW 2–3 hours. Mount butter just before serving.

Instant Pot

Use the Sauté function to sear, then pressure cook on HIGH for 4 minutes with ½ cup liquid. Quick-release, remove chicken, switch back to Sauté to reduce sauce by half, then mount butter.

Keto / Low-Carb

Replace all-purpose flour with finely ground almond flour or a 50/50 blend of almond flour and grated parmesan. The crust is slightly denser but still develops good color and holds the sauce well.

Artichoke Piccata

Add ½ cup marinated artichoke hearts (quartered, drained) to the sauce with the capers. The artichoke’s earthiness creates a more complex, slightly sweet counterpoint to the lemon’s acidity.

What to Serve With This Dish

The bright, acidic sauce calls for sides that absorb without competing. Starch and mild vegetables are your best allies here. If you’re planning a full Italian-American spread, consider pairing this alongside one of our Italian chicken recipes for a broader weeknight menu.

  • Angel hair or thin linguine — toss directly in the leftover sauce for a built-in second course
  • Creamy mashed potatoes — the buttery richness cushions the lemon’s sharpness
  • Steamed or roasted asparagus — the grassy bitterness echoes the capers
  • Crusty Italian bread — essential for sauce mopping
  • Simple arugula salad — a few drops of the piccata sauce doubles as dressing
  • Risotto bianco — a classic northern Italian pairing, creamy against the sharp sauce

Storage & Meal Prep

❄️
Refrigerator

Store cutlets and sauce separately in airtight containers. Keeps 3–4 days. Reheat sauce gently over low heat, add 1 tsp cold butter to re-emulsify before serving.

🧊
Freezer

Freeze seared, unsauced cutlets only — the butter sauce doesn’t freeze well. Wrap individually in plastic, then foil. Freeze up to 2 months. Thaw overnight in fridge.

🍱
Meal Prep

Pound and dredge cutlets up to 24 hours ahead. Refrigerate on a parchment-lined tray, uncovered, so the flour coating dries slightly — this produces a crispier sear.

Nutritional Information

NutrientPer Serving% Daily Value
Calories390 kcal
Protein38g76%
Total Fat18g23%
Saturated Fat7g35%
Carbohydrates14g5%
Sodium620mg27%
Fiber0.5g2%

Common Mistakes to Avoid

1
Skipping the pound-out. Thick, uneven cutlets cook unevenly — the thicker end stays raw while the thinner end dries out. Always pound to a uniform ¼ inch.
2
Crowding the pan. Two cutlets per batch maximum. Crowding drops the pan temperature, trapping steam and stewing the chicken rather than searing it. You lose all crust development.
3
Adding butter to a hot pan for mounting. The emulsification only works off-heat. If the pan is still on the burner, the water in the butter evaporates instantly and the fat separates — greasy sauce guaranteed.
4
Using bottled lemon juice. The flavor profile of bottled juice is flat and slightly metallic from pasteurization. Fresh lemon juice has volatile aromatic compounds that evaporate during cooking, leaving a clean acidity that bottled juice cannot replicate.
5
Rinsing the capers. The brine is part of the flavor. Rinsed capers taste milder and add less of the fermented, briny depth that defines the dish.

FAQs

Can I use chicken thighs instead of breasts?
Yes — boneless, skinless thighs work well and are more forgiving of overcooking due to higher fat content (around 7–9% vs 2–3% in breasts). Pound them to even thickness and aim for the same internal temp of 165°F (74°C). The sauce clings beautifully to thigh meat.
What can I substitute for white wine?
Low-sodium chicken broth is the most neutral substitute. For a closer flavor profile, use half broth and half a splash of dry vermouth. Avoid sweet wines — they make the sauce cloying against the lemon.
My sauce is too thin — how do I fix it?
Return the pan to medium heat after removing the chicken and reduce the liquid by about half before mounting the butter. Alternatively, a ½ tsp cornstarch dissolved in 1 tbsp cold water, stirred in before the butter, tightens the sauce without changing the flavor.
Is chicken piccata gluten-free?
Not with standard flour dredge. Substitute a 1:1 gluten-free flour blend or fine almond flour. The texture is slightly different but the crust still develops color and holds the sauce adequately.
Why does my chicken turn grey instead of golden?
The pan wasn’t hot enough. Always preheat your skillet over medium-high for at least 2 minutes before adding fat. A grey color means the chicken is steaming, not searing — the Maillard reaction only kicks in above 280°F (138°C) at the surface.

Love This Recipe?

Save it to your Pinterest boards and share the flavor! One click keeps this recipe in your feed forever.

📌 Save to Pinterest
Chicken Piccata Recipe: Crispy, Buttery & Ready in 30 Min

Chicken Piccata Recipe: Crispy, Buttery & Ready in 30 Min

Italian-American classic with a golden, paper-thin crust and a glossy lemon-caper butter sauce

Prep time10 mins
Cook time20 mins
Total30 mins
Servings 4 servings
Course Main Course
Cuisine Italian-American
Calories 390
Quantities:
  • 2 large boneless, skinless chicken breasts chicken breasts about 700g / 1.5 lb
  • ½ cup all-purpose flour flour for dredging
  • 1 tsp fine sea salt salt
  • ½ tsp freshly cracked black pepper pepper
  • 3 tbsp extra-virgin olive oil olive oil
  • 3 tbsp unsalted butter butter divided
  • ½ cup dry white wine white wine or low-sodium chicken broth
  • ⅓ cup fresh lemon juice lemon juice about 2 large lemons
  • 3 tbsp capers capers drained, not rinsed
  • 2 tbsp fresh flat-leaf parsley parsley finely chopped

Butterfly and pound chicken

1

Slice each breast horizontally through the middle to create two even halves. Place between two sheets of plastic wrap and pound with a meat mallet or rolling pin to an even ¼-inch thickness.

2

Season both sides generously with salt and pepper.

Dredge in flour

3

Spread flour on a wide plate. Dredge each cutlet, pressing gently so it adheres on both sides, then shake off any excess.

Sear in batches

4

Heat olive oil and 1 tbsp butter in a large (12-inch) stainless steel or cast-iron skillet over medium-high heat.

5

When the butter foam subsides and the pan shimmers, add 2 cutlets — never crowd the pan.

6

Sear for 3 minutes undisturbed, flip, and cook 2–3 minutes more until golden and cooked through.

7

Transfer to a warm plate, tent loosely with foil, and repeat.

Build the sauce

8

Lower the heat to medium. Add white wine and let it bubble for 30 seconds, scraping up all the fond with a wooden spoon.

9

Add lemon juice and capers, simmer 2 minutes until slightly reduced.

Mount with butter

10

Remove the pan from the heat completely. Add the remaining 2 tbsp cold butter in one piece and swirl the pan in circles — never stir with a spoon at this stage.

Plate and rest

11

Return cutlets to the pan for 60 seconds to warm through.

12

Plate immediately, spoon sauce over the top, and finish with fresh parsley and lemon slices.

  • stainless steel or cast-iron skillet
  • meat mallet or rolling pin
  • plastic wrap
Servingper serving
Calories390 kcal
Carbohydrates14g
Protein38g
Fat18g
Saturated Fat7g
Sodium620mg
Fiber0.5g

Pound chicken breasts to an even ¼-inch thickness for a proper crust and juicy meat

Did You Try Our Recipe ?

0
0 out of 5 stars (based on 0 reviews)
Excellent
Very good
Average
Poor
Terrible

Scrumptious

March 25, 2026

My husband (who is extremely picky) loved the liver & onions so much!! I didn’t have any beef broth or Sherry so I used about a tbl of Worcestershire and 1/4 c of white wine …..it was scrumptious

Camille

Response from MeatRecipesBox

Oh wow, I’m so happy to hear that!! 😍 I love that you made it work with what you had on hand — Worcestershire and white wine sound like a delicious twist. So glad your husband enjoyed it, especially being picky! Thank you for sharing your version, it makes me smile knowing it turned out scrumptious!

This was amazing

March 6, 2026

This recipe turned out really amazing! It’s juicy and spiced deliciously. I definitely would use less of the spicy pepper next time, but it really was delicious and I don’t think I’ll make chicken legs any other way from now on.!

Emily

Response from MeatRecipesBox

Thank you for taking the time to leave such a thoughtful review. I’m really glad to hear the recipe turned out juicy and full of flavor for you. That’s exactly what I was hoping for when putting it together. Good call on the spicy pepper as well. Adjusting the heat level to your own taste is always the best approach, and using a little less next time should make it just right for you. I really appreciate you trying the recipe and sharing your experience. It’s great to know it worked so well for you.

I Didn’t Expect This Cornbeef Hash Recipe to Taste This Good!!

February 20, 2026

One skillet. A handful of simple ingredients. Thirty minutes on the clock. And somehow… I ended up with the crispiest, most comforting cornbeef hash recipe I’ve made in years.

I wasn’t expecting much—just a quick, no-fuss meal. But that first bite? Crispy edges, tender potatoes, smoky corned beef, a little kick of pepper. It tasted like something straight off a cozy diner griddle.

Honestly, it caught me off guard—in the best way. Here’s why this simple skillet completely won me over.

Georgiana
Emma Delacourt

Emma Delacourt

Recipe Developer & Founder, MeatRecipesBox

Emma has been developing and testing meat recipes since 2019. She focuses on temperature precision, food science, and making restaurant-quality results accessible for home cooks. Every recipe on this site is tested multiple times before publishing.

Read full bio →

Some links may be affiliate links. As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases.

More chicken recipes recipes

View all →
THE SUNDAY EMAIL

Get the Sunday email

One tested recipe every Sunday. No junk.