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Chicken marsala (Italian: pollo al marsala or scaloppine al marsala) is an Italian-American dish of chicken escalopes in a Marsala wine sauce. It is a variation of traditional Italian scaloppina dishes, of which there are many varieties throughout Italy.
Scaloppine (plural and diminutive of scaloppa—a small escalope, i.e., a thinly sliced cut of meat) [1] is a type of Italian dish that comes in many forms. It consists of thinly sliced meat, most often beef , veal , or chicken , that is dredged in wheat flour and sautéed in one of a variety of reduction sauces .
Coppa di testa, coppa di Parma; Coppiette; Cosce di pollo al forno; Cosce di rana; Cotechino, cotechino delle Grazie di Curtatone, cotechino e lenticchie, cotechino friulano (or musèt), cotechino in crosta, cotechino Modena; Cotoletta, cotoletta alla bolognese, cotoletta alla milanese, cotoletta alla palermitana, cotolette in carpione
Chicken piccata. Piccata is an Italian dish of thin pan-fried flour-dredged meat in a sauce of lemon juice, butter, parsley, and often capers. [1] [2] In Italian cuisine piccata is prepared using veal (piccata di vitello al limone, lit.
A typical savory Marsala sauce, for example, involves reducing the wine almost to a syrup with onions or shallots, then adding mushrooms and herbs. One of the most popular Marsala recipes is chicken marsala, in which flour-coated pounded chicken breast halves are braised in a mixture of Marsala, butter, olive oil, mushrooms, and spices. [19]
Chicken parmesan or chicken parmigiana (Italian: pollo alla parmigiana) is a dish that consists of breaded chicken breast covered in tomato sauce and mozzarella, Parmesan or provolone. [1] Ham or bacon is sometimes added. [2] [3] The dish originated in the Italian diaspora in the United States during the early 20th century.
(Pledger v Janssen, et al.) APPEARANCES: (Continued) WEIL, GOTSHAL & MANGES, LLP BY: DIANE P. SULLIVAN, ESQUIRE ALLISON BROWN, ESQUIRE (admitted pro hac vice) 301 Carnegie Center, Suite 303 Princeton, New Jersey 08540 T: 609-986-1100 F: 212-310-8007 E-mail: diane.sullivan@weil.com E-mail: allison.brown@weil.com Counsel for Defendant Janssen 4
Fettuccine is often classically eaten with sugo d'umido ('beef ragù') or ragù di pollo ('chicken ragù'). [4] A famous dish made with fettuccine is fettuccine Alfredo, a simple dish of pasta, Parmesan cheese and butter which was created and named at a restaurant in Rome in the early 20th century as a tableside "performance". [6]