Scallopini is a classic Italian recipe often made with chicken, and a white wine sauce with capers. Other meats work too: pork, beef, veal, or lamb scallopini as I make here.
Lamb scallopini with pan sauce, wild mushrooms, capers and mint.
Chef Alan Bergo
This recipe is by James Beard Award-winning Chef Alan Bergo. He’s a chef from Minnesota and author of The Forager Chef’s Book of Flora. Learn more about Chef Alan at foragerchef.com.
How to Make Lamb Scallopini
The dish comes together quickly, as the only prep needed is to pound some cutlets out of a loin or leg as illustrated below. Chef suggests using lamb or goat loin for the most tender scallopini, but you could also buy a boneless leg and keep the remaining meat for a roast or stew. Cuts like top sirloin and lamb eye of round cut from the leg as we demonstrate in this post can work well too.
Take a 4 oz piece of lamb leg, and carefully cut in half without separating it.
Use a sharp utility knife.
When finished, it should resemble a heart, or butterfly.
Pound the cutlets with the spiked portion of a mallet to spread them out and tenderize them.
Continue gently pounding with the flat side of a mallet.
After the cutlets get lightly pounded and tenderized, they’re seasoned and dusted with flour, sauteed, and stored in a warm oven to rest while the others cook. I like to cook in batches using an 10-12 inch pan.
A traditional lemon-caper sauce is good, but I love this variation using wild or cultivated mushrooms. I also add fresh mint which works so well with lamb. Pictured are wild chanterelle and lobster mushrooms, but any combination you can buy (or find) is fine.
Black trumpet mushrooms are good. You could also use Puffball mushrooms but cut them into small pieces. You might try a blend of shiitake and oyster mushrooms if you can’t find wild mushrooms.
Fresh sliced mint leavesabout 2 tablespoons, plus more to garnish
8ozmushroomspreferably wild (substitute shiitake in a pinch)
Fresh lemon juiceto taste
Vegetablesespecially wilted spinach or other greens, for serving
Instructions
Cut the loin into 4 equal sized pieces, then, with a sharp knife, cut them almost in half to butterfly them (see pictures). Next, pound the meat with a mallet on both sides to even it out and flatten it. Season the meat lightly with salt and pepper.
Heat an oven to warm. Heat the oil in a large skillet. Working in batches, dust the lamb cutlets with flour one at a time, tap off the excess and brown on one side, until the cutlets are nearly cooked. Quickly "kiss" the other side of each cutlet but don't brown as they might toughen.
Transfer the finished cutlets to a pan and keep warm in the oven, and repeat until all the cutlets are done. Try not to burn the flour in the pan.
Add the butter to the pan, along with the mushrooms, and cook until lightly browned and wilted, about 5 minutes—if the pan dries out, add some more butter or oil.
Add the garlic to the pan and cook for a minute until aromatic. Sprinkle the flour over the pan, cook for another minute, then deglaze with the wine and cook down by half. Add the stock and continue cooking until the sauce is lightly thickened. Add the lemon juice to taste, along with the mint and capers.
Double check the seasoning, adjust as needed, then serve the picatta with the sauce and mushrooms drizzled over each cutlet.
Notes
Lamb loin is the most expensive and the most tender for this recipe. Cuts from the leg trimmed of silverskin can be substituted.