Skip to main content

Za’atar Chicken Cutlets With Cabbage Salad

4.2

(5)

Zaatar Chicken breast recipe Cutlets With Cabbage Salad recipe with
Photograph by Laura Murray, food styling by Rebecca Jurkevich, prop styling by Sophie Strangio

Breading chicken with panko plus homemade za’atar creates cutlets with tons of nutty, floral, and tangy flavor. Senior food editor Andy Baraghani recommends mixing your own za’atar to ensure that the proportions of bright, lemony sumac and textural sesame seeds are just right for the purposes here. Leftover cutlets and cabbage can be layered between slices of tahini-slathered sourdough for a deliciously crunchy chicken sandwich the next day. 

Recipe information

  • Yield

    4 Servings

Ingredients

Tahini Sauce

1 small garlic clove, finely grated
½ cup tahini (such as Soom)
¼ cup fresh lemon juice
3 Tbsp. extra-virgin olive oil
Kosher salt

Chicken and Assembly

3 large eggs, beaten to blend
1 cup all-purpose flour
1 cup panko
½ cup raw white sesame seeds
⅓ cup crushed dried thyme and/or oregano
¼ cup sumac
2 skinless, boneless chicken breasts (about 1½ lb. total)
Kosher salt
Vegetable oil (for frying; 3–4 cups)
½ head of green cabbage, thinly sliced
½ small red onion, very thinly sliced
2 Tbsp. extra-virgin olive oil
2 Tbsp. fresh lemon juice
6 salt-brined Middle Eastern–style or other pickles, halved lengthwise, sliced on a diagonal

Preparation

  1. Tahini Sauce

    Step 1

    Whisk garlic, tahini, lemon juice, oil, and ¼ cup water in a small bowl to combine; season with salt.

  2. Chicken and Assembly

    Step 2

    Place eggs, flour, and panko in 3 separate shallow bowls. Mix sesame seeds, thyme, and sumac into panko.

    Step 3

    Working one at a time, hold a long knife parallel to a cutting board and cut chicken breasts in half, slicing along a long side to make 4 thin cutlets. Place a cutlet between 2 large sheets of wax paper or plastic wrap. Using a meat mallet or rolling pin, pound to ⅓" thick. Repeat with remaining cutlets.

    Step 4

    Season both sides of a cutlet with salt. Dredge in flour, shaking off excess, then dip into egg wash, letting excess drip back into bowl. Dredge in panko mixture, pressing firmly to adhere. Repeat with remaining cutlets.

    Step 5

    Pour vegetable oil into a large heavy high-sided skillet to come ½" up sides. Heat over medium until an instant-read thermometer registers 400°. Working in batches and returning oil to 400° after each batch, carefully lower cutlets into skillet with tongs; cook, turning halfway through, until deep golden brown, about 4 minutes. Transfer cutlets to paper towels to drain and sprinkle lightly with salt.

    Step 6

    Place cabbage, onion, olive oil, and lemon juice in a medium bowl; season with salt. Toss, lightly squeezing, until cabbage is slightly wilted. Add pickles and toss again just to combine.

    Step 7

    Serve cutlets with cabbage salad and tahini sauce.

Read More
These crispy cutlets feature a coconut-breadcrumb coating and sriracha mayo. Pair with a bright cuke salad to turn into a meal.
Lacking an actual tandoor, the air fryer might be the best way to make chicken tikka. Juicy, charred, and well-spiced, it’s your new weeknight MVP.
Who says ground chicken is boring? Two whole bunches of mint and some aromatics give these chicken meatballs their bracingly herby flavor.
Bone-in, skin-on chicken legs glossed in a sticky honey mustard glaze strike the perfect balance of tangy, sweet, and delightfully savory.
Baking meatballs and green beans on two sides of the same sheet pan streamlines the cooking process for this saucy, savory dinner.
An easy technique that results in juicy, tender roast chicken. Cooking two chickens at once is the secret to easy meals throughout the week.
Chicken pieces and meaty bits of torn mushrooms beautifully team up in this deeply savory, scallion-studded, easy-to-make stir-fry.
This weeknight-friendly chicken dinner—made with pomegranate molasses and a toasted walnut relish—is inspired by the flavors of Persian fesenjan.