Craig Claiborne’s Lemon Chicken
- Total Time
- 1 hour 15 minutes
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
Advertisement
Ingredients
- 4whole chicken breasts, boned and skinned
- 2tablespoons light soy sauce
- ¼teaspoon sesame oil
- 1teaspoon salt
- 1tablespoon gin or vodka
- 3egg whites, beaten until frothy
- 1cup water-chestnut flour or powder (available at Chinese grocery stores)
- Peanut or salad oil for frying
- ¾cup sugar
- ½cup white vinegar
- 1cup chicken broth
- 1tablespoon cornstarch
- 1teaspoon monosodium glutamate (optional)
- Grated zest and juice from 1 large lemon
- 3small carrots, cut in julienne strips
- ½large green pepper, cut in julienne strips
- 3scallions, trimmed, cut in julienne strips
- 3rings canned pineapple, drained and shredded
- 1one-ounce bottle lemon extract
- ¼head iceberg lettuce, finely shredded
For the Chicken
For the Broth
For Serving
Preparation
To Make the Chicken
- Step 1
Place chicken in a shallow dish. Combine soy sauce, sesame oil, salt and gin or vodka, and pour over chicken. Toss to coat, and let sit for 30 minutes.
- Step 2
Drain chicken and discard marinade. Add chicken pieces to beaten egg whites, and toss to coat. Pour water-chestnut flour on a plate and dredge chicken in flour.
- Step 3
Preheat oven to 200 degrees. Pour peanut oil in skillet one-half inch in depth, and heat to 350 degrees. Add chicken in batches. Brown one side, turn and brown other. Drain.
To Make the Broth
- Step 4
combine sugar, vinegar, broth, cornstarch mixed with 2 tablespoons water, MSG and lemon juice and zest in pan. Bring to a boil. Stir until thickened.
- Step 5
Cut chicken into one-inch crosswise slices, and place on top of lettuce on a serving platter. If necessary, keep it warm in oven.
- Step 6
Add vegetables and fruit to sauce. Remove from heat and stir in extract. Pour over chicken.
- the amount of extract is accurate. It should be added at the very last moment.
Private Notes
Comments
I remember being taken to Pearl's as a kid in the late 60s - it was the first Chinese food I'd ever had that wasn't awful. (Young folks these days have no idea how bad food was in America in the 60s.) Making this dish brings back those memories - it was the first inkling of all the great Chinese food that was soon to follow.
Almond flour is a good substitute for water chestnut flour.
1 tsp. lemon zest for each two. of lemon extract works well.