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    Home » Wild Mushroom Recipes

    Chicken of the Woods Piccata

    Published: Jun 15, 2019 Modified: Mar 15, 2023 Author: Alan Bergo

    Jump to Recipe

    Mushrooms wrapped in prosciutto or pancetta, sauteed and served with a simple lemon caper sauce makes for a great chicken of the woods recipe. Read on and I'll go over the details.

    Chicken of the woods mushroom piccata

    I went to one of my favorite places a few days ago: a wayside rest on the way up to Northern Minnesota. Well, the wayside rest isn't my favorite, but there's a tree I know of, that *is* my favorite.

    The tree in question is a red oak that typically bears chickens early in June, and not just any chicken, white chicken mushrooms (Laetiporus cincinnatus). If you're not familiar, white-pored chicken of the woods are better eating than their yellow-pored chicken of the woods (Laetiporus sulphureus), at least in my opinion, and that of many other seasoned mushroom hunters.

    Laetiporus cincinnatus Chicken of the woods mushroom (1)

    Rest areas are great, especially in Minnesota and Wisconsin where they're often composed of a few wooded acres with trails for dogs to run around on. What we forget as we drive past them though, is often those trails, and that small patch of rest area woods can hold treasures, they're a glimpse of what the land used to be before the roads came through, remnants from before the surrounding woods was developed and used to grow corn, soy, or have a culdesac installed.

    I'm getting a little romantic here, and, it's only kind of true, as most of the woods are not actual old-growth forest in Minnesota, but that's also besides the point as young growth forest are much better for hunting wild mushrooms, in my experience.

    Laetiporus cincinnatus Chicken of the woods mushroom (1)

    Anyway, the take-away is a rest stop can be a great place to grab a quick mushroom or two on a dog trail, while you're on your journey to get more mushrooms at the big patch you know of that's a few hours away, that is.

    The only catch is that you probably shouldn't be flashing that big orange chicken mushroom like a trophy to the civilians, hollering "found one!" to your comrades across the parking lot like the feverish, fiending mushroom addicts you are, as sometimes harvesting is not allowed. But, as the old adage goes, if you pick a Laetiporus cincinnatus in the woods, and no one sees you.....

    I digress. This week is all about a chicken of the woods recipe I've been waiting a long time to make: piccata. Well, it's kind of a cross between two Italian dishes: picatta and saltimbocca. Both are dishes made with cutlets, but, with slightly different preparations.

    Saltimbocca vs. Piccata

    If you're not familiar with the differences between the two, here's the technical definition: saltimbocca (translates literally to "jump in your mouth") refers to cutlets layered with a leaf of sage, and then a layer of prosciutto. Piccata, pichotta, or piccatina (small), refers to cutlets that are simply dredged and served with lemon sauce and capers, etc.

    Skip the proscuitto and it's vegetarian 

    My version is a hybrid. Chicken of the woods mushrooms are often a little dry and not easy to sear whole, so wrapping them in proscuitto, or another ham, salame, etc, etc, gives them a little more surface area that can brown and mingle in a pan, and helps to insulate them. You could sure do it without the proscuitto to make it vegetarian, to be clear, but wrapping mushrooms in fine dry cured Italian ham never sucked.

    Choose your proscuitto carefully 

    Only use the good stuff. I use La Quercia proscuitto since it's an American product that actually, finally, rivals the real thing. La Quercia is made next door to me in Iowa, but the real-deal Italian stuff is great too, specifically Proscuitto di Parma, and San Danielle. You can also use salame or mortadella too, but avoid American products like Hormel "proscuitto", taste like garbage.

    Chicken of the woods mushroom piccata
    Wrapping the chicken leaves in proscuitto before cooking adds insulating fat and salty deliciousness.

    Tips for a great chicken of the woods piccata

    Here's the skinny: for the best results, you need a young, tender chicken of the woods that you can fashion a cutlet out of somehow, which will usually be using the leaves, as I've done here, or, if you're supremely lucky, cutting a slice of a mushroom that's still growing and hasn't developed the rosette or shelf formation yet, where they could be cut like slices of meat.

    If your chicken mushroom doesn't seem tender enough to cook the leaves whole, skip this recipe and cut it up into pieces for soup, or something else you like. Only young, tender mushrooms can be used in large pieces like this.

    For the garnishes, wilted greens of your choice, and a few sprigs of edible things from your yard are all this chicken mushroom could ever dream of. Freshly cooked nettles or other greens cry out to be mixed around in lemon sauce on a plate, and a little crunch of purslane makes an attractive garnish too.

    Chicken of the woods mushroom picatta recipe (10)
    Chicken of the woods mushroom picatta recipe (10)
    Print Recipe Pin Recipe
    5 from 2 votes

    Chicken of the Woods Mushroom Picatta

    Picatta made with chicken of the woods wrapped in prosciutto, in a lemon caper sauce
    Prep Time15 minutes mins
    Cook Time15 minutes mins
    Total Time30 minutes mins
    Course: Main Course
    Cuisine: Italian
    Keyword: Chicken of the woods, Picatta
    Servings: 2 Servings
    Calories: 672kcal
    Author: Alan Bergo

    Equipment

    • 1 10 inch saute pan

    Ingredients

    • 2 leaves of chicken of the woods as young as possible, any tough stem removed
    • 3 tablespoons cooking oil
    • ¼ cup dry white wine
    • ½ cup chicken vegetable, or mushrooms stock, preferably homemade
    • Fresh lemon juice to taste
    • ¼ teaspoon kosher salt plus more to taste
    • 1 Tablespoon non-pareil capers in brine
    • 1 Tablespoon each all purpose flour and unsalted butter for the kneaded roux
    • Thin slices of proscuitto for wrapping the mushrooms (optional)
    • Fresh cut chives or parsley a pinch, (optional)
    • For serving wilted greens, wood sorrel and sprigs of purslane (optional)

    Instructions

    • Mix the tablespoon each of flour and butter well into a ball, and reserve one teaspoon (you'll only need a teaspoon but it's hard to make just a teaspoon) Heat the oil in a saute pan wide enough to accommodate the mushrooms.
    • Wrap the mushrooms in the prosciutto, making sure to press the seam to make it adhere, then dredge in flour, tap off excess, and brown well in the oil on both sides, starting with the seam.
    • Season the mushrooms lightly with salt and pepper. It's very important not to burn the flour that comes off in the pan, as that is what will make your sauce.
    • Remove the cooked mushrooms from the pan and keep warm. Deglaze the pan with the wine, reduce by half, and add the chicken stock and kneaded roux. Heat, whisking to break up the roux.
    • The sauce will start to thicken, season it with salt to taste, lemon juice and capers.
    • From here as long as the mushrooms are completely cooked, and to keep the prosciutto crisp, you can plate them and pass the sauce separately, or, you can put the mushrooms back in the pan simmer for a moment and serve--both ways are fine.
    • If the sauce thickens or threatens to break, adjust it by adding a little water to return it to a saucy consistency, swirl the pan to emulsify, and simmer until you like the consistency/thickness.

    Notes

    This is best with chicken of the woods mushrooms, but you can also use mushrooms that have large caps, such as shaggy parasols or meadow mushrooms. 

    Nutrition

    Serving: 5oz | Calories: 672kcal | Carbohydrates: 1g | Protein: 0.1g | Fat: 72g | Saturated Fat: 17g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 17g | Monounsaturated Fat: 36g | Trans Fat: 0.1g | Cholesterol: 44mg | Sodium: 292mg | Potassium: 25mg | Fiber: 0.01g | Sugar: 0.3g | Vitamin C: 0.02mg | Calcium: 3mg | Iron: 0.1mg

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    Reader Interactions

    Comments

    1. Kat

      October 02, 2019 at 10:26 am

      Made the vegetarian version of this because I didn't have any prosciutto, but used some bacon grease with the oil in the pan. So very good! Doubled the recipe and served it over fregola ( small round pasta similar to Israeli/ pearl couscous), with some creamed swiss chard on the side. A delicious and mostly foraged/home grown meal! Thanks for sharing a creative use for chicken of the woods!

      Reply
      • Alan Bergo

        October 07, 2019 at 9:30 am

        Thanks Kat.

        Reply
    2. Tiffany J Burns

      August 27, 2019 at 7:53 am

      Yum! I made this last night using your recipe for dandelion capers (that I put up this spring). I didn't have proscuitto and didn't fancy a trip to the store, so dredged in seasoned flour then egg and flour again, and fried in bacon fat plus ghee. Served it on quinoa spaghetti with some garlicky cubed summer squash. We both love mushrooms but my husband said if I hadn't told him it was mushroom, he'd swear it was chicken! Thanks!!!

      Reply
      • Alan Bergo

        September 01, 2019 at 11:28 am

        Glad you liked it.

        Reply
    3. Doris

      August 17, 2019 at 8:03 pm

      The photo shows capers and you mention capers, but the recipe does not include the amount of capers needed. It looks like a tablespoon-full or two. Will that do?

      Reply
    4. Car Hunter

      June 21, 2019 at 12:18 pm

      great technique for sometimes tough mushrooms like chicken of the woods- salt and braise with white wine at 205 degrees for 6 hours. turn over at 3 hours. The dry texture/ flavor becomes tender and flavorful. I've used technique with a Berkley polypore that took 2 days to soften but was excellent- guest thought it was a grilled portobello. because the temp is under boiling point, you don't lose liquid while cooking so can let sit in oven for as long as needed with little/ no attention.

      Reply
    5. Maddy

      June 15, 2019 at 5:08 pm

      I love your blog. You probably stopped reading it as I used the word Love!
      I still only use ½ butter to ½ olive oil to sauté my mushrooms.
      Saw you at a Mushroom cooking class a couple of years ago.
      Everyone ???? me along with you.
      Maddy Papermaster
      I do like your Blog????

      Reply
      • Keith

        June 16, 2019 at 4:26 pm

        Gave up on chicken of the woods because even when young, not crazy about the flavor. But have only picked the yellow pored variety. Will now try the whites which I thought might just be older yellow ones that were starting to fade.

        PS- ever done anything with Milk Thistle? I picked the flowers and tried to cook as artichoke- too small to mess with. But the purple flower petals have a lot of scent. And when boiled with a little lemon juice, turned the water the color of pink grapefruit and retained the same spicy, clove-like taste as the scent. Thought in your creative hands could be something great- maybe a gelato with sumac? Anyway....thanks for sharing your knowledge and great recipes

        Reply
    6. Kathleen Bradley

      June 15, 2019 at 3:14 pm

      Hey, we're neighbors! Iowa here!!!

      Reply
    7. Micheal Dean

      June 15, 2019 at 12:49 pm

      ...oh my...yumm...
      Northern Minnesota? Hmmm...Been looking at property around St. Paul.
      Now I really have to do this...Bruuck-bruk-bruk (scratch, peck, strut...)

      Reply
    5 from 2 votes (2 ratings without comment)

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