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Veal Milanese with a side of risotto alla milanese. Veal Milanese (Italian: cotoletta alla milanese, Italian: [kotoˈletta alla milaˈneːze,-eːse]; Milanese: co(s)toletta a la milanesa, Lombard: [ku(s)tuˈlɛta a la milaˈneːza]; from French côtelette) [1] is a popular variety of cotoletta (veal cutlet preparation) from the city of Milan, Italy.
Cotoletta – is an Italian word for a breaded cutlet of veal; Hortobágyi palacsinta – a savory Hungarian pancake, filled with meat (usually veal) Jellied veal - a cold cut dish made from minced cooked veal, stock, and spices that sets into a spread; Jägerschnitzel - breaded veal cutlet with generally an onion and mushroom gravy served with ...
Cotoletta (Italian: [kotoˈletta]) is an Italian form of breaded cutlet made from veal. The dish originated in France as the côtelette de veau frite (lit. ' fried veal cutlet '), and was created by the chef Joseph Menon in 1735. [1] Côtelette means 'little rib' in French, referring to the rib that remains attached to the meat during and after ...
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A tray of Italian-American style chicken cutlets. From the late 1700s until about 1900, virtually all recipes for "cutlets" in English-language cookbooks referenced veal cutlets. Then pork cutlets began to appear. More recently, [when?] in American and Canadian cuisine, cutlets have also been made using chicken, although this was also imported ...
The milanesa is a variation of the Lombard veal Milanese, or the Austrian Wiener schnitzel, where generic types of breaded cutlet preparations are known as a milanesa. [1] The milanesa was brought to the Southern Cone by Italian immigrants between 1860 and the 1920s.