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Cheesy Chicken Melt With All of the Onions Relish

Two halves of a cheesy chicken melt with a bowl of ridged potato chips on the side.
Photo by James Ransom

I have never been a huge fan of patty melts, and I accept and embrace your anger at that statement. A big hunk of meat, a bunch of melted cheese, bread, and all of that butter just doesn’t sound like something I really need in my life. But switch it up with some perfectly cooked chicken and throw in a big pile of caramelized onions, and all of a sudden, I am very interested in that chicken melt sandwich. After making the components of the sandwiches and the sandwiches themselves (all told, a one-pan affair), I recommend listening to the Radiolab episode about colors while making a quick and easy Thousand Island dressing (mayo, ketchup, relish, maybe a little harissa!) and dipping potato chips in the sauce to test it repeatedly.

Ingredients

2 large sandwiches

4 teaspoons vegetable oil
2 boneless, skinless chicken breasts, about 1 pound (450g), sliced lengthwise into 4 flat 1⁄2-inch-thick (1.3cm-thick) pieces
1 teaspoon kosher salt
1⁄2 yellow onion, sliced
1 teaspoon distilled white vinegar
1⁄2 red onion, thinly sliced
1⁄2 bunch scallions, white and green parts, thinly sliced
2 tablespoons fried shallots (store-bought is totally great)
3 tablespoons salted butter
4 slices rye bread
4 slices good melting cheese, such as Colby Jack or Muenster
  1. Step 1

    Heat a large sauté pan with 2 teaspoons of the vegetable oil over high heat until it is smoking. Season the chicken with 3⁄4 teaspoon of the salt and gently place it in the pan. Cook on one side until almost cooked all the way through, about 5 minutes. Flip the chicken and cook on the other side for about 30 seconds, or until it is no longer pink. Transfer the chicken to a plate to rest.

    Step 2

    Immediately add the yellow onion and the remaining 2 teaspoons vegetable oil to the pan. Stir and cook for 5 minutes, or until the onion is dark and smells amazing but is not burnt. If it’s getting too dark, lower the heat. Add the vinegar, along with the liquid that has collected on the plate where the chicken is resting, and turn the heat to low. Simmer the onion for 2 to 4 minutes, or until the liquid has evaporated. Transfer the onion to a bowl, using a rubber spatula to scrape the pan out completely. When the onion has cooled down a little, about 5 minutes, add the red onion, scallions, fried shallots, and remaining 1⁄4 teaspoon salt and stir to combine.

    Step 3

    Melt 2 tablespoons of the butter in the same pan. Lay out two slices of bread on your work surface and place a slice of cheese on each. Top each piece of cheese with half of the onions, two pieces of chicken, and another slice of cheese, and cover with another slice of bread. Place the sandwiches in the pan with the melted butter. Cook over medium heat, about 3 minutes, until the cheese on the bottom slice is melted and the bread is nicely toasted. Add the remaining 1 tablespoon butter to the pan and flip the sandwiches. Cook them for another 1 to 2 minutes, until the cheese is melted and the bottom is toasty. Remove the sandwiches from the pan, cut them in half, and insert a frilly toothpick or cocktail sword near the top in each half and serve.

Excerpted fromFood52 Dynamite Chicken: 60 Never-Boring Recipes for Your Favorite Bird© 2019 by Tyler Kord. Photography © 2019 by James Ransom. Reproduced by permission of Ten Speed Press, an imprint of Penguin Random House.All rights reserved. Buy the full book fromAmazon.
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  • Very tasty. Works well with leftover chicken. I had some leftover cornish game hen breasts, so I used that. Only downfall is that I can still taste onion a bit the next day. Not that I am complaining, but your domestic partner might.

    • Anonymous

    • Boulder, CO

    • 4/29/2020

  • 作为一个休闲烤奶酪鸡肉和洋葱,it's pretty good; I particularly appreciated the method for cooking the yellow onion, which turned out great. However, I'd recommend adding something on the sharper side to cut through the fattiness (e.g., pickles, hot sauce, etc.—maybe even a tomato, if it's in season). It was nice to have the three different types of onion for the variance in texture & taste, but I'd probably just use the whole yellow onion, since it really shrinks down and gets overwhelmed by the red & green onion. Only other complaint is why stack two pieces of chicken directly on top of each other? Not only does it make a too-thick chicken layer right in the middle of the sandwich, but it also makes it easier for the whole thing to fall apart, since the sides of the chicken pieces more easily slide against each other than they do against the onion layer or the melted cheese. I'd just use one chicken piece per sandwich—that way you can make twice as many. Overall, it's a good base for a recipe, very easy & quick with relatively little clean-up, and I would make it again albeit with the adjustments mentioned.

    • Anonymous

    • Chicago, IL

    • 4/22/2020

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