In season now — Lemons: December – May. Chicken: year-round
Main Easy Italian-American

Lemon chicken piccata

Golden-crusted chicken cutlets in a silky lemon-butter-caper pan sauce — the 25-minute Italian classic that tastes like it came from a trattoria.

Two golden-brown chicken cutlets on a plate with a glossy lemon-butter sauce, capers, and fresh parsley scattered over the top.
Prep
10 min
Cook
15 min
Total
25 min
Serves
4

Chicken piccata is the 25-minute Italian restaurant meal that makes you feel like you know what you're doing. Pound the cutlets thin, dredge in seasoned flour, brown them golden, build a bright lemon-butter pan sauce, and dinner is on the plate. The technique — sear, deglaze, mount with butter off heat — is a master class that applies to dozens of other dishes. Once you've made it once, you'll make it a dozen times.

Lemon chicken piccata

Serves 4

Ingredients (16)

To finish

You'll need

  • Large skillet (12-inch) — not nonstick for best browning
  • Meat mallet or rolling pin
  • Plastic wrap or zip-top bag
  • Shallow dish (for dredging)
  • Paper towels
  • Tongs
Source these from local growers See growers + what's in season →

Instructions

Nutrition

Estimated per serving · 1 cutlet + sauce
410 Calories
37 g Protein
14 g Carbs
22 g Fat
1 g Fiber
1 g Sugar
780 mg Sodium
Ingredient intelligence

What to look for when you shop

Best varieties

  • Standard yellow lemons (Eureka, Lisbon) — the classic for piccata
  • Meyer lemons — sweeter and floral; creates a milder sauce
  • Bearss lemons — seedless and juicy
  • Fresh flat-leaf (Italian) parsley — essential
  • Nonpareil capers (small) — the most tender and delicate
  • Salt-cured capers — higher quality; rinse before using

Ripeness

Lemons should be heavy for size with taut, shiny skin. Soft or wrinkled lemons have less juice. Fresh parsley should be bright green and fragrant.

Imperfections are fine

Minor lemon surface scars are fine. Parsley with a few yellow leaves at the bottom is usable — trim them out.

Good substitutions

  • Veal cutlets — the original piccata; cook 2 minutes per side
  • Pork tenderloin medallions — pounded thin, same technique
  • Turkey cutlets — excellent substitute
  • Shrimp piccata — use 1 1/2 lb peeled shrimp; cook 2 minutes per side
  • Fish piccata (sole, cod, tilapia) — same sauce, 3 minutes per side

In season

Chicken and capers are available year-round. Fresh lemons are at their best in winter and early spring (December – May).

How much to buy

1 1/2 lb chicken breasts + 2 lemons + 1 bunch parsley.

From a grower near you

Find your chicken farmer and lemon grower on CollectiveCrop

Pastured chicken from a local farm has richer flavor, better texture, and fat that renders instead of weeping water into the pan. California-grown lemons — especially Meyer in winter and spring — are more aromatic than the waxed supermarket kind. CollectiveCrop is how you find both. For a pan sauce built on five ingredients, each one showing up at full strength is the entire recipe.

  • In season Lemons: December – May. Chicken: year-round
  • For this recipe 1 1/2 lb chicken + 2 lemons
  • Freshness Picked within this week
  • Imperfects welcome Second-grade produce works great here
  • Diet-friendly dairy-free (skip butter, use olive oil) · gluten-free (with GF flour)
  • While you're there Fresh flat-leaf parsley · Garlic · Butter from a local dairy · Pastured chicken · Good olive oil

At the market

1 1/2 lb chicken breasts + 2 lemons + 1 bunch parsley.

Best varieties

  • Standard yellow lemons (Eureka, Lisbon) the classic for piccata
  • Meyer lemons sweeter and floral; creates a milder sauce
  • Bearss lemons seedless and juicy

Good to know

Tips

  • Dry the chicken aggressively. Any moisture steams the surface and prevents browning — which is where the flavor comes from.
  • Don't move the chicken while it cooks. Let the first side fully brown (3 to 4 min) before flipping. Fussing with it tears the crust and prevents color.
  • White wine matters. It adds acid and depth. If using more stock as a substitute, add an extra tablespoon of lemon juice to compensate.
  • Mount with cold butter off the heat. This is the restaurant-quality finish — butter melts slowly into the sauce and creates silky emulsion.
  • Reserve the sauce time. Have everything measured and ready because the sauce comes together in 5 minutes and the chicken shouldn't wait.
  • Thin lemon slices on top are more than garnish — they look elegant and add aromatic oil.
  • Serve over pasta or with crusty bread. The sauce is too good to leave on the plate.

Storage

  • Refrigerator: 3 days in an airtight container.
  • Freezer: not ideal — sauce separates and chicken toughens on reheating.

Reheating

  • Stovetop: medium-low heat in a skillet with a splash of chicken stock or water, 5 minutes until warmed through.
  • Oven: 325°F (160°C) for 10 minutes, covered with foil.
  • Microwave: 90 seconds on medium power with a splash of water or stock.

Make ahead

  • Pound and dredge the chicken up to 8 hours ahead; keep refrigerated.
  • Zest and juice lemons up to 4 hours ahead.
  • Measure out all sauce ingredients ahead (stock, wine, capers) — it all happens fast in the pan.
  • Best served fresh; sauce is hard to reheat gracefully.

Variations

  • Chicken piccata with mushrooms: sauté 8 oz sliced mushrooms after the chicken; add to the sauce.
  • Cream-mounted version: stir in 2 tablespoons heavy cream with the butter for a richer sauce.
  • Chicken piccata with artichokes: add 1 cup quartered jarred artichoke hearts to the sauce.
  • Chicken piccata pasta: serve over 12 oz cooked linguine or angel hair.
  • Spicy piccata: add 1/4 teaspoon red pepper flakes with the garlic.
  • Veal piccata: substitute 1 lb veal cutlets, pound thin; cook only 2 minutes per side.
  • Fish piccata: use 4 pieces of cod, sole, or tilapia, about 6 oz each. Cook 3 minutes per side. Same sauce.
  • Gluten-free piccata: use GF all-purpose flour blend or almond flour for dredging.

Swaps

  • Gluten-free: use a 1:1 GF flour blend or cornstarch for dredging.
  • Dairy-free: use olive oil instead of butter (flavor is less rich but works).
  • No capers: use 2 tablespoons finely chopped green olives or skip.
  • No wine: use an extra 1/4 cup stock + 1 tablespoon lemon juice.
  • Protein swap: pork medallions, turkey cutlets, shrimp, or firm white fish.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does "piccata" mean?

"Piccata" is the feminine past participle of the Italian verb "piccare" (to prick, pierce, or sting) — linguistically related to "piccante." In culinary context, it refers to the sauce's sharp, zesty character (the lemon-and-caper tang that "stings" the palate), not to the pounding of the meat. Veal piccata is the traditional Italian version; chicken piccata is the American adaptation that became a trattoria standard on this side of the Atlantic.

Why do I have to pound the chicken?

Pounding creates uniform thickness so the chicken cooks evenly. Without pounding, the thick end is raw when the thin end is done. It also tenderizes the meat and helps it brown better. Five minutes of work = dramatic improvement.

How do I pound chicken safely?

Place a chicken breast between two sheets of plastic wrap or in a zip-top bag. Pound with the flat side of a meat mallet, the bottom of a heavy skillet, or a rolling pin from the center outward. Work firmly but don't tear the meat. Aim for 1/2 inch thick.

Can I use chicken thighs instead?

Yes — boneless, skinless thighs work well. Pound to similar thickness (a bit thicker is okay). Cook time is similar. Flavor is richer and juicier than breast. Breast is traditional but thighs are forgiving.

What are capers?

Pickled flower buds of the caper bush, sold in brine or salt-cured. Small capers (nonpareil) are most tender; larger ones have more intense flavor. They add a salty, briny, tangy bite that's essential to piccata.

Can I skip the capers?

You can, but they're iconic to piccata. If you genuinely don't like them, substitute 1 tablespoon finely chopped green olives for similar salty-briny bite. Nothing fully replaces capers.

What do I serve with chicken piccata?

Pasta (especially angel hair or linguine), buttery mashed potatoes, rice pilaf, crusty bread for sauce-sopping, roasted asparagus, sautéed spinach, a simple green salad. The sauce wants starch to soak it up.

Can I make this ahead?

Partially. Pound and dredge the chicken up to 8 hours ahead. The sauce is best made fresh (it tightens on reheat). If you must reheat, do so gently with a splash of chicken stock.

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