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Grilled Chicken Marsala on the Egg
NibbleMeThis
Posts: 2,295
We converted this classic to the Egg Sunday afternoon and loved it.
Grilled Chicken Marsala
Source: Nibble Me This
Ingredients
3 ea chicken breast, boneless, skinless
1 Tbsp coarse kosher salt
2 tsp pepper (I like to use garlic pepper)
1 Tbsp butter, unsalted
1 ea shallot, finely diced
1/4 cup marsala wine
1/2 cup chicken stock
1 Tbsp butter, unsalted and chilled
2-3 springs fresh thyme
Instructions
1) Pound chicken breasts to 1/2" thickness, cut each in half, and then season with salt and garlic pepper. My tips for this are
* making sure the breasts are completely thawed. If they are still partially frozen, pounding will tear the meat instead of flattening it.
* pound them with the flat side of a meat mallet
* you can put it between two sheets of plastic wrap so the meat slides as flattening, but I like to do it in a gallon zip top bag. It's thicker and prevents break through, but more importantly it helps keep e-coli chicken goo from flying around your kitchen.
2) Set your Egg up for direct heat and preheat it and a grill safe pan to medium hot (400f).
3) Melt 1 Tbsp of butter in the saute pan and saute the diced shallots until softened (about 2-3 minutes).
4) Deglaze the pan with the marsala wine and simmer until the wine is almost totally evaporated .
5) Add the chicken stock and allow to simmer until the volume is reduced by half.
6) Remove the pan from heat, add the cold pat of butter, and stir in to emulsify into the sauce. Don't just let it sit. That's the point of using the COLD butter (tip courtesy of Rouxbe Online Cooking School)...it will slowly melt into the sauce as you stir, much like slowly adding olive oil into a vinaigrette to make sure it all stays mixed together (emulsified) instead of separating into an oily mess.

7) Grill the chicken over 400f direct heat for 4 minutes.
8) Flip, brush the cooked top with some of the sauce, sprinkle with thyme leaves, and cook 4 more minutes.

9) Flip, turning 90 degrees (for cross hatch grill marks), brush with more sauce and cook another 1-2 minutes, or until the internal temp is 160f. The nice part about this is it is grilling the sauce onto the chicken.
10) Remove from the grill and then drizzle the remaining sauce on top.

We just ate it as is but everyone loved it. It had that marsala flavor mixed in with the taste of grilled chicken.
You could take this in a more formal direction and would be exceptional sliced up into pasta and sauteed mushrooms, then topped with more of the sauce. Or you can go casual and toss it on to a toasted onion roll with dijon mustard for an amazing grilled chicken marsala sandwich. Either way, chicken marsala is perfectly adaptable to the Egg!
Grilled Chicken Marsala
Source: Nibble Me This
Ingredients
3 ea chicken breast, boneless, skinless
1 Tbsp coarse kosher salt
2 tsp pepper (I like to use garlic pepper)
1 Tbsp butter, unsalted
1 ea shallot, finely diced
1/4 cup marsala wine
1/2 cup chicken stock
1 Tbsp butter, unsalted and chilled
2-3 springs fresh thyme
Instructions
1) Pound chicken breasts to 1/2" thickness, cut each in half, and then season with salt and garlic pepper. My tips for this are
* making sure the breasts are completely thawed. If they are still partially frozen, pounding will tear the meat instead of flattening it.
* pound them with the flat side of a meat mallet
* you can put it between two sheets of plastic wrap so the meat slides as flattening, but I like to do it in a gallon zip top bag. It's thicker and prevents break through, but more importantly it helps keep e-coli chicken goo from flying around your kitchen.
2) Set your Egg up for direct heat and preheat it and a grill safe pan to medium hot (400f).
3) Melt 1 Tbsp of butter in the saute pan and saute the diced shallots until softened (about 2-3 minutes).
4) Deglaze the pan with the marsala wine and simmer until the wine is almost totally evaporated .
5) Add the chicken stock and allow to simmer until the volume is reduced by half.
6) Remove the pan from heat, add the cold pat of butter, and stir in to emulsify into the sauce. Don't just let it sit. That's the point of using the COLD butter (tip courtesy of Rouxbe Online Cooking School)...it will slowly melt into the sauce as you stir, much like slowly adding olive oil into a vinaigrette to make sure it all stays mixed together (emulsified) instead of separating into an oily mess.

7) Grill the chicken over 400f direct heat for 4 minutes.
8) Flip, brush the cooked top with some of the sauce, sprinkle with thyme leaves, and cook 4 more minutes.

9) Flip, turning 90 degrees (for cross hatch grill marks), brush with more sauce and cook another 1-2 minutes, or until the internal temp is 160f. The nice part about this is it is grilling the sauce onto the chicken.
10) Remove from the grill and then drizzle the remaining sauce on top.

We just ate it as is but everyone loved it. It had that marsala flavor mixed in with the taste of grilled chicken.
You could take this in a more formal direction and would be exceptional sliced up into pasta and sauteed mushrooms, then topped with more of the sauce. Or you can go casual and toss it on to a toasted onion roll with dijon mustard for an amazing grilled chicken marsala sandwich. Either way, chicken marsala is perfectly adaptable to the Egg!
Knoxville, TN
Nibble Me This
Nibble Me This
Comments
-
Hi S.
Nothing better than detailed recipe and photos! ThanksBGE'er since 1996 Large BGE 1996, Small BGE 1996, Mini BGE 1997 -
Wow!
-
Looks great, Chris. I'm going to try it. I suppose you mean dry marsala rather than sweet marsala. I use dry in scallopine and sweet in tiramisu.__________________________________________Dripping Springs, Texas.Just west of Austintatious
-
Chris that looks good.
Will add to the "got to do this" list.Salado TX & 30A FL: Egg Family: 3 Large and a very well used Mini, added a Mini Max when they came out (I'm good for now). Just given a Mini to add to the herd. -
Perfection! I love the golden color of this dish!
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