Sautéed Chicken With Meyer Lemon Recipe (2024)

By Melissa Clark

Sautéed Chicken With Meyer Lemon Recipe (1)

Total Time
About 30 minutes
Rating
5(2,583)
Notes
Read community notes

Instead of letting the age-old combination of salt and time tame the bitterness of lemon pith, heat and sugar speed the process along here, pickling the citrus in minutes. Just blanch a thinly sliced lemon to remove some of its bite, then simmer it again in a pot of heavily sugared and salted water. You’ll end up with lemon slivers that are at once salty, sweet, sour and bitter — and far more interesting than they should be given the amount of work that went into them. They get even better when you fry them in oil, letting their flavors caramelize and turn honeyed. This technique works particularly well with Meyer lemons but regular lemons can work, too. If you use this substitution, blanch them in plain water twice before simmering them in the sugar-salt mixture.

Featured in: A Good Appetite: Preserved Lemons Brighten a Stir-Fry

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Ingredients

Yield:4 to 6 servings

  • pounds boneless, skinless chicken thighs or breasts, cut into ½-inch strips
  • 3tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
  • 2teaspoons minced rosemary
  • Kosher salt
  • ½teaspoon black pepper
  • Meyer lemons
  • 2tablespoons sugar
  • 2leeks, thinly sliced
  • 2garlic cloves, finely chopped

Ingredient Substitution Guide

Nutritional analysis per serving (6 servings)

238 calories; 12 grams fat; 2 grams saturated fat; 0 grams trans fat; 7 grams monounsaturated fat; 2 grams polyunsaturated fat; 10 grams carbohydrates; 1 gram dietary fiber; 6 grams sugars; 23 grams protein; 395 milligrams sodium

Note: The information shown is Edamam’s estimate based on available ingredients and preparation. It should not be considered a substitute for a professional nutritionist’s advice.

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Sautéed Chicken With Meyer Lemon Recipe (2)

Preparation

  1. Step

    1

    Toss the chicken with 1 tablespoon oil, rosemary, 1 teaspoon salt, and pepper.

  2. Trim the ends from 1 lemon, quarter lengthwise and remove the seeds. Slice quarters crosswise into ⅛-inch slices.

  3. Step

    3

    Bring a small pot of water to a boil over high heat. Add the lemon slices, lower the heat and simmer for 5 minutes. Drain under cold running water. Rinse out the pot and refill it with 1 cup water, the sugar and 1 tablespoon salt. Bring to a boil. Drop in the blanched lemon slices and simmer for 3 minutes. Drain under cold running water, pat dry.

  4. Step

    4

    Heat a skillet over high heat for 5 minutes. Add 2 tablespoons oil. It should start to shimmer immediately; add the lemon slices and stir-fry quickly until golden. Stir in the leeks and reduce heat to medium-high. Cook until leeks are soft and golden, about 3 minutes. Stir in garlic and cook 1 minute. Push the leek mixture to one side of the skillet; stir in the chicken mixture and sear, without moving, about 4 minutes. Mix in the leeks and continue cooking until the chicken is no longer pink, about 3 to 6 minutes more. Drizzle with juice from the remaining lemon half, to taste.

Ratings

5

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2,583

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Private Notes

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Cooking Notes

SB of SH in NY

Chose Melissa's recipe as inspiration for what was on hand: jar of Trader Joe's preserved lemons, chicken tenderloins, shallots, garlic, parsley. Patted dry, but didn't rinse, lemons and fried them. LOTS of shallots. Cut tenderloins into bite sized pieces. Lots of parley. TJ jasmine rice cooked in One Pot in FOUR minutes. Squeezed fresh lemon juice to top. Super easy (esp. if like me you never measure or follow times of anything, just enjoy glass of wine.) Will make again.

Lyn

I used a wok and removed the cooked leeks and lemon to a side dish until the chicken was almost cooked and then added the leeks and lemon back to the wok for a fast warm-up.

Deb

I made this dish with oranges, because I didn't have Myer Lemons (which are sweeter than traditional lemons). I eliminated the sugar entirely and cut the salt in half. It was wonderful. :) My family wants it again.

Irene

After seeing other notes mention that it was a bit dry, I saved the liquid from the second cooking of the lemons and used a bit of it to deglaze the pan. I then poured that over the dish at the end.

Mark

Tastes great! Marinated chicken strips in oil/rosemary/garlic/S&P for a few hrs in refrig; seemed to enhance flavors. Like a much earlier commenter, found the end result a bit dry even with the squeezes of lemon juice. And this was with thighs -- beware if using chicken breasts! Next time I'll toss in a pat or two of butter to finish after taking pan off heat.

Lilikoi

Adapted for use with bow tie pasta and artichoke hearts:
Saute lemon slices in 2T butter + 2T olive oil until caramelized. Add steamed artichoke hearts, toss until coated. Serve over cooked pasta with shaved parmesan + fresh cracked black pepper.

Regina

We really liked this easy recipe! I used regular lemons and only blanched them once. And I used shallots instead of leeks, since that was what I had in the house. Will definitely make again.

Deb W

Leeks or any type of onions are not my friends, so I used haricot vertes instead. Beautiful presentation over plain white rice. But the flavor - oh, my goodness! So much better than using purchased preserved lemons, and so easy. I was a little hesitant cooking the lemons over high heat for fear of them burning by the time everything else had cooked, but made myself follow the recipe exactly. Well worth it. The caramelization of the lemons is fabulous!

DTN

Such bright flavor to this easy dish. Next time I will bump up the amount of leeks and lemon for more robust servings/leftovers. Easy to prep ahead too.

Philip

Love the recipe! Next time I'll remove the leek mixture before sautéing the chicken to prevent overcooking and burning the leeks. Once the chicken is close to being done, I'll add the leek mixture back in.

kittypro

so yeah. WOW! Yummy! I planted a Meyer Lemon tree this past Spring, and harvested eight precious lemons from it recently. Totally surprised I got that many! So I doubled this recipe tonight and used half of my precious crop. And it was superb!

Heather

The 30 minute time projection for this dish counts only cooking time, no allowance for all the slicing, cleaning up the leeks, etc. Allow at least an hour unless you're a lot handier with a knife than I am!

Lesa

This was good! I overdid the rosemary, throwing everything off balance -- definitely something I'll be careful about when I make this again (and I will). What I like most about this recipe is the lemons. I've often needed preserved lemons for recipes and been unable to easily find them where I live. This technique gives you a quick and fresh substitute (and less expensive substitute) that I'm certain I will use often.

Gina

Awesome flavor. Added capers to the cooking of the lemons, think it added a nice flavor. Would cook lemons a a mod-high heat next time; high heat charred lemons rather then golden brown.

Will definately cook again.

Anne

One of our all-time fast favorites; it leaves you wanting more. I usually use onions instead of leeks so no special shopping is needed. I have a Meyer lemon tree and rosemary in the yard, but have also used store lemons (Eureka?) and dried rosemary. The quick preserving technique is much less complicated than it looks. Also, letting the chicken strips sear untouched makes a big difference in texture and flavor. I flip the seared mat of chicken over before mixing in the sautéed lemon/onion/leek.

margot

Outside comments— can use Trader Joe’s jar of preserved lemons, lots of parsley, and lots of shallots, instead of the leaks.

Joseph E

Tofu works — I’ve made this many times with chicken breasts and thighs, and this year used tofu that i had cut into 1x2x0.5 inch blocks, frozen, defrosted, and drained. Make sure the pan and oil are hot, and brown it but don’t cook it as long as chicken or move it around as much. It’s delicious alongside noodles. My husband was skeptical but deemed it a success, as did I. I also found that you can make extra Meyer lemon peels and freeze them, making this dish very easy to put together.

michele

Easy. 3-4 stars. Definitely needs the lemon juice at the end. Used 6 cloves of garlic.

Mel

Only problem with recipe is not specifying size of skillet especially when you are cutting recipes in half

Fed Up

If you didn't make the recipé, but instead made 5 additions/substitutions, please don't tell us about it. I came here for Melissa Clark's expertise because she is an award-winning professional. You are not an award-winning professional.

araff

Cooked 1/18/24 Be sure to sear properly. Cooked sautéed artichoke hearts in butter on the side and when combine with the chicken, it was so much better!

Jeanne

I found the texture of the lemon rinds off-putting and there was significant flavor loss of lemons in the blanching. Lots of lemon juice, some zest with white wine reduction would have been much better.

Eliz K

Just made this for the first time. Inspired to use our copious Meyer lemons that we harvested this year. I am very surprised… both my wife and I are taken aback by the flavor. It’s bitter, which could work, but paired with the rosemary, we both agreed that it tasted like a household cleaner smelled. After guessing through anguished bites, we realized that it’s Pine Sol. I followed the recipe to a T. And I’ve never disagreed with a 5 star review on NYT Cooking. Maybe just not for us.

annie

Be sure to get Meyer lemons. I was so excited to try this recipe, but my tree is just budding - so I went to sprouts and bought regular lemons. So tart and awful. I’m sure it’s lovely with rice, but I ended up just adding more onion and roasting veggies. It was fine that way - without the lemon. So sad.

Samantha P.

This is one of my favorite recipes! I've made it as it's written countless times, but I've also made it with substitutions when ingredients weren't on hand—e.g., regular lemons for Meyers, scallions for leeks, poultry seasoning for herbs de Provence. No matter what, it always comes out perfectly!

orzo with lemon and asparagus

Delicious. Used shallot since no leek and added a pat of butter at the end. Subtle but delicious.

Dana

After realizing I accidentally skipped the second cooking of lemons and reading the comment about dryness, I thought, “Eureka! Orange juice!” Cooked down about 3/4 cup of OJ in the final cooking step and the resulting sauce is magic. Wouldn’t do it any other way now!

shoebender

Made as written - yum! Then adapted the leek/lemon with halibut and a second rave meal.

Alexandra

I thought this was delicious! Didn't have sugar so omitted. Used more lemons per the comments. Also used chicken breast. Added mushrooms and sliced red peppers. Yum yum!

Rick from Lancaster

My family found this dish boring. I think next time I will triple the amount of of lemons or maybe use a mix of blanched and non-blanched lemon slices.

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Sautéed Chicken With Meyer Lemon Recipe (2024)
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