Wednesday, September 19, 2007 10:47 AM

How do I "deglaze" a pan?

After sautéeing or roasting food (usually meat), you “deglaze” the pan by adding a liquid, like water, wine, broth or even lemon juice, turning up the heat to bring the liquid to a boil and scraping up the sticky browned bits stuck to the pan. The liquid reduces to a more concentrated, flavorful sauce. (If a lot of oil or fat is left in the pan after sautéing, most recipes recommend pouring off the fat before adding the liquid.)

The deglazed liquid can be used as a kind of simple gravy for the meat, or it can be souped up with herbs, spices, flour, butter and more to make a pan sauce. You can also deglaze bigger roasting pans—after roasting a whole chicken, for example—to make a big quantity of gravy or sauce.

The next time you sauté chicken breasts, try my easy recipe for a lemon-caper pan sauce. Or, if you're a veteran de-glazer, step up your skills with Wolfgang Puck's Pan-Seared Beef Filets in Port-Dijon-Cream Sauce (pictured) or Pan-Roasted Chicken with Lemon and Whole Grain Mustard.

Lemon-caper Chicken

For the best sauce, pound the chicken cutlets to an even thickness and dredge each breast in heavily salt-and-pepper-seasoned flour.

Heat 2 tbsp. butter and 2 tbsp. olive oil in a large, heavy-bottomed skillet until shimmering. Add the chicken to the skillet and brown on both sides, about 1-2 minutes per side. Remove chicken from skillet to a plate and cover with foil to keep warm.

Pan Sauce Ingredients
1/4 cup dry white wine (or vermouth)
1/4 cup low-sodium chicken broth
1 lemon, sliced in thin rounds and seeded
2 tbsp. capers, drained
2 tbsp. unsalted butter
chopped parsley to garnish

Preparation
After sautéing chicken, pour off the fat in the skillet. Add the white wine and, over a medium flame, deglaze the pan, scraping up any browned bits with a heat-proof spatula or wooden spoon. Add chicken broth and cook until the consistency of the liquid slightly thickens (think: cough syrup). Add one lemon slice and capers to the skillet and cook for 2 minutes.

Remove the skillet from the heat. Swirl in the butter and sprinkle the parsley in the sauce. Return the chicken breasts to the skillet and reheat in the pan, 1-2 minutes. Plate the chicken and drizzle with sauce. Serve immediately.

Got your own secret, custom pan sauce? Share it!

Posted by Nest Colleen

Comments

It’s Crock-Pot stew weather! To brown, or not to brown?

Technically, unless the recipe calls for ground beef (which should be browned and drained of fat), most

Posted by Posted by Dinner    Wednesday, October 17, 2007 5:37 PM


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