My sister called me the other morning. We were both in our cars — bluetoothing and dropping off our various charges — and figuring out a possible cousin sleepover when she said, with some urgency, “Oh! Did you get my message?”
“No, what message.”
“I left you a voice-mail with a lot of questions, but I really want to tell you about the chicken.”
“What chicken?”
“My friend Trish had a bunch of moms over for lunch recently, and she served the most delicious chicken.”
Now this was unusual. I get a lot of post-game calls about recipes, but not many of them are about poultry.
“Tell me about it,” I told her, negotiating a huge snow bank so I could park the car in front of my coffee shop.
“Well, it was served on a large platter, kind of like one that you would have, and it was room-temperature, but she served it with tiny potatoes and green beans on top of lettuce, a ton of fresh vegetables, and a vinaigrette on the side.”
Deconstructed lunch! I thought to myself.
“Someone said, ‘Oh it’s a deconstructed lunch!’ She also had some salmon, but the chicken was the star. It was so healthy and flavorful, not bland like most chicken in salad is, and it was all ready to go when we got there because she made it ahead of time.”
Maybe it was just that the night before I had a ginormous bowl of Pappardelle with Pork Ragu, and the night before that, a hearty Moroccan beef stew…or maybe it was just that we were steeling ourselves for another snowstorm that would come with more buttery, stewy richness, but when she was describing this to me I was longing for a sign of spring, even if it was in dinner-form. And man, did something light surrounded by fresh vegetables sound like the ideal antidote to this relentless winter.
“How’d she make it?”
“She marinated some breasts overnight in mayo, a little olive oil, mustard, salt, pepper, garlic, and a little agave. Some fresh herbs I think. Then she grilled it.”
“On a real charcoal grill outside or in a grill pan on the stove?”
“Outside.”
Wow! Who was this Trish woman? We’re not winter grillers, especially these days, when our Weber looks like this:
But I still had to make it. The next day was a school-day, which is another way of saying a snow day, and it was clear that no work was going to get done no matter how many Sam & Cat episodes I bribed the girls with. But that chicken would get done so help me! Before I was even out of my pajamas, there were four pounded breasts steeping in a some version of Trish’s marinade. And later that night I broke out my cast iron stovetop grill. No charcoal, no charcoal chimney, no char anywhere to be found. And I obviously served it hot instead of chilled or at room temperature like Trish did. And I went with the winter vegetables I had in my fridge. But the whole process managed to thaw a few dreams of spring nonetheless.
And the chicken! I understand why it merited a next-day call from my sister. (The true mark of a successful dish in my book.) Tender, flavorful, and the leftovers were even better the next day.
Trish’s Marinated Chicken
2 tablespoons mayo
1/4 cup olive oil
squeeze of agave (or honey)
2 teaspoons Dijon mustard
salt & pepper
2 cloves garlic, peeled and halved
squeeze of lemon
fresh rosemary, thyme or torn basil leaves
Four medium size chicken breasts, pounded thin
In a medium bowl, whisk together all ingredients and, along with chicken, add to a ziploc. Marinade eight hours or overnight, flipping in the fridge at some point if you can. When you are ready to cook, heat a stovetop grill to medium-high, and brush with a tiny bit of olive oil. Grill chicken pieces about four minutes a side (let excess marinade drip off before you place on grill) or until chicken is firm but not rock hard. Serve with Kale-Brussel hash below.
Kale-Brussels Hash
Add a small piece of smoky bacon to a skillet set over medium heat. Once fat has rendered, add a little olive oil and cook a few tablespoons of onions or shallots (chopped) until soft. Add salt and pepper, maybe a few red pepper flakes if you are so inclined, then a few healthy handfuls of shredded kale and shaved brussels sprouts. Cook until just barely wilted (and still bright green) and add to a serving bowl. Drizzle with a little cider vinegar (or red wine vinegar) to taste. You can chop the bacon into small pieces if you feel like it, or just eat the chunk yourself before the kids fight over it.
I have one of those cast iron reversible grill pans that stretches across two burners. The flip side is a griddle, but I never use it.
Related: I Want to Marry Marinating.
I’m always looking for new ways to do chicken and this looks and sounds gorgeous- thanks for the recipe!
My husband ate one bite and said “this is one of the best things you have ever made”. Although a little hurt because it was one of the easier things I have made – I agreed! It was so moist and delish! I served it with some roasted cauliflower and it worked well.
It was warm enough to melt the snow off the deck in boston this weekend and felt inspired to fire up the grill…so glad we did. Made this kale-brussel hash with chicken in one of your yogurt marinades. Delicious meal. Thanks for the recipe and the inspiration!
made the hash last night and loved it! thank you for posting it.
When do you pound the chicken? Before or after marinating?
I love you! just had to say. And I can’t wait to try this recipe! HOWEVER, for the love of whatever you hold dear, do some research on agave ‘nectar’. Make your own judgment, but seriously…
Hi Jenny,
Love your blog and book. Totally random question here, but that green cast iron-looking pot on your stove top in this pic–who makes it??? I am looking for a new cast iron pot and not only do I like the the look of this one, I swear I’ve seen it before and can’t remember where?????? Any help would be much appreciated!!!
We made this the other night and it was so delicious!!! It’s definitely my new favorite way to prepare chicken! We loved the kale and Brussels sprouts, too!
I stood out in the winter temps on the first day of spring to grill this chicken and it was completely WORTH IT! We served it for my father-in-law’s birthday dinner and it was worthy of the celebration! Excited to hear of your new cookbook…it’s on my list!
I am making this for the first time this summer tonight! It has been the hit of the neighborhood for late spring. Btw, re shaved Brussels sprouts – after cutting my finger using a knife, I use the slicing blade on my Cuisinart. It gets the job done quickly and efficiently!!
I’ve had this recipe bookmarked for ages, and finally made it tonight with a side of brown rice. I also added a “glug” of hard cider that I was drinking to the Brussel sprouts. Great recipe, my guy really liked the marinade!
@Bearsmama
It’s a Le Creuset 🙂
We make this ALL the time. Revisiting this morning to send it to a friend and reminded to leave a comment about how this is our absolute favorite. Guests always rave too! Yeah for summer entertaining!
Making this for dinner tonight but with the follow substitutions (currently marinating), I didn’t have any Dijon mustard so used wholegrain instead, forgot to add the agave/honey and I didn’t have any lemon juice in the house!
Using it for thigh fillets and going to oven bake them as I’m not a fan of BBQing (what you call grilling) chicken due it often being overcooked or undercooked (there is no in between for me!). I also got a late start on marinating it so its only been sitting for a few hours but considering how bad I usually am that’s good (normally its 30 minutes if I am lucky!) as I’m not a plan a head meal type girl (unless its for entertaining then the menu will be planned down to a T!).
Going to serve it with zucchini chips, oven baked chips, roasted carrot and broccoli and some corn.
First of all, thank you. And thank you Trish, wherever you are!. This one is in the regular rotation – I never imagined a boring chicken breast could taste like this. Last night I was grilling up a batch in my grill pan, and couldn’t fit that darn 4th breast in the pan. No mind – we are just three, including a 5 year old, so I threw the straggler back in the fridge to cook off after dinner for a possible next day lunch when…….. I forgot about it. Today I worked from home and found it there….still happily marinating away, uncooked. Dare I try to cook it after 48 hours? I was sure it would be mush, but alas…… wow. So juicy. So tender. So delicious. I could cry. That Chicken really is something.
I am revisiting this simply to leave you a comment that this chicken has changed the way I cook. It is in my regular rotation and it is the most requested recipe whenever people try it. I use your recipe as a loose base at this point (even making a schwarma like version tonight) and no matter what we do to tweak / it is always delicious. THANK YOU!