There’s a short story to tell: when I was still in college (oh, many years ago) I worked every Friday night and all day Saturday at Marston’s (an old family-run San Diego department store). I worked in the Personnel Dept. (remember when they used to call Human Resources the Personnel Dept.?). My job was to train new sales employees – things like how to use the cash register (no electronics at all although they were electrically run). And about the company’s general policies including ethics – plus some limited safety info – mostly boring stuff. Anyway, on Saturdays when I wasn’t teaching I’d walk to a diner a few blocks away. They had a Caesar Salad on their menu that I was crazy about. It was just the best. It had all the elements of a perfect Caesar – Romaine, an egg-based olive oil dressing with good Parmesan, some big honkin’ croutons and a strip or two of anchovies on top. And lemon. That began my my appetite for anything Caesar, I’ll tell you. Hence you’ll find many Caesar type dressings here on my blog.
It would logically follow, then, that as I was reading the most recent issue of Bon Appetit, I was motivated by a recipe in the issue for a Parmesan Chicken and Caesar Roasted Romaine (salad). As I’m writing this, it’s not yet “up” on epicurious or I’d link to it. It got me to thinking. I had everything I needed to make this, but I wanted some dressing on the salad. So I improvised a bit, although I roasted the chicken and Romaine as indicated in the recipe. I went to my current favorite Caesar dressing – a Phillis Carey one that is cinchy easy made with mayo as the base. I’ve printed it up below as a separate recipe – you need that recipe IF you like Caesar. Phillis served it on a steak salad (and I wrote it up then as an integral part of that salad) at a cooking class a couple of years ago and I’ve been a fan of it ever since!
It was an easy dinner. Well – let me re-phrase that – it took me one hour to do it all – make the dressing, prep the chicken, make the panko crumb topping, prep the Romaine, heat the oven, roast the chicken, then roast the Romaine, cook some haricot verts (my very favorite recipe, garlic green beans), toss them in a skillet with some garlic and olive oil, plate it, drizzle on some of the Mayo Caesar dressing and serve! Whew! I felt a little like a one-armed paper hangar. Normally time isn’t of an element, but we had choir rehearsal and my magic time is “sit down to eat by 6:00.” We made it at 6:05, fortunately. (As an aside – we had sufficient leftovers of the chicken – so I chopped them up, cut up about a cup of the garlic green beans, made a Romaine salad with tomatoes, celery – and tossed it with more of the Mayo Caesar Dressing – that was out dinner the next night.)
The photo at left shows you one little deviation. I have good Parmigiano-Reggiano cheese, but I decided to use some Pecorino cheese I bought recently that contains some truffles. You can see some of the truffle stuff (little black specks). Oh does it make this cheese fantastic. It’s called Pecorino al Tartufo. It was sprinkled on top of the salad only – I used good Parmigiano for the dressing.
Once I lightly pounded the chicken breasts, they were placed on a large baking sheet (you need a large one to fit the big Romaine head halves). The panko crumb/cheese mixture was spooned on top and it went into the oven for exactly 10 minutes. The crumb mixture had just started to brown. Meanwhile I had brushed the cut Romaine halves with olive oil. They went on the tray and were baked another 5 minutes. At that point I didn’t think the lettuce had enough color, so I turned the oven on the broil for about 1 minute only (more and the chicken would have turned too firm and the Romaine would have been a black mess). Remove and serve. With the dressing dribbled over the Romaine and some cheese sprinkled on top.
What I liked: the overall taste – but then I love chicken Caesar salad under most circumstances. As long as the dressing is good.
What I didn’t like: not a thing. Delicious.
printer-friendly PDF for the salad
printer-friendly PDF for the dressing only
MasterCook 5+ import file – for the salad – right click to save file, run MC, then File|Import
MasterCook 5+ import file for the dressing only – right click to save file, run MC, then File|Import
Deconstructed Chicken Caesar Salad
Recipe By: Adapted from Bon Appetit, 2012
Serving Size: 4
NOTES: I used a little sprinkle of Pecorino cheese on top of the roasted Romaine – and what I had contained some truffles. You can use regular Pecorino, or Parmigiano too.
4 pieces boneless skinless chicken breast halves
Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper
1/2 cup Pecorino Romano cheese — grated (or Parmigiano)
1/2 cup panko bread crumbs
2 tablespoons olive oil
2 tablespoons Italian parsley
2 large garlic cloves — smashed, minced
GRILLED ROMAINE:
2 whole Romaine lettuce — heads, halved lengthwise
1 tablespoon extra virgin olive oil
1 whole lemon — cut in wedges, on each plate
About 1/2 cup Mayo Caesar Dressing
1/4 cup Pecorino Romano cheese — grated, for garnish on the lettuce (or Parmigiano)
1. Trim chicken breasts as needed, and pound them slightly to an even 1/2 inch thickness.
2. Sprinkle chicken with salt and pepper to taste.
3. In a small bowl mix together the cheese, panko, olive oil, parsley and smashed garlic.
4. Preheat oven to 450°.
5. Using a large baking sheet, line it with foil. Place the chicken breasts on the foil. Gently spoon the cheese/panko mixture on top of each breast.
6. Bake for 10 minutes, until the topping has just begun to brown (no longer).
7. Meanwhile, cut the Romaine heads in half, lengthwise, leaving some of the root end intact, so it holds together. Brush the cut side of each half with oil.
8. After the chicken has roasted for 10 minutes, remove pan and place the oiled Romaine heads on the baking sheet, and try to roll them so the cut edge is level, if possible. Return to oven and continue roasting for about 5 more minutes. Watch the pan carefully. If the Romaine hasn’t browned much, turn heat element to broil, and cook for about 1 more minute, just so the Romaine begins to brown on the edges (not necessary for the cooking, but it looks more interesting).
9. Place chicken breast on each plate, with the Romaine half next to it. Drizzle the Romaine with the Mayo Caesar Dressing. Sprinkle with additional Pecorino cheese, if desired.
Per Serving: 377 Calories; 17g Fat (39.8% calories from fat); 41g Protein; 17g Carbohydrate; 7g Dietary Fiber; 80mg Cholesterol; 411mg Sodium.
. . .
Mayo Caesar Dressing
Recipe By: Phillis Carey, instructor and cookbook author
Serving Size: 6
2 cloves garlic — peeled
1/2 cup mayonnaise — Best Foods or home made
1/4 cup Parmigiano-Reggiano cheese — grated
2 tablespoons olive oil
1 tablespoon capers — drained (or use anchovies, if desired)
1 tablespoon fresh lemon juice
1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce
1 teaspoon Dijon mustard
1/2 teaspoon hot pepper sauce
1/2 teaspoon kosher salt
1/2 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
1. Turn blender motor on and removing lid slightly drop garlic cloves into bowl. Turn motor off.
2. Add all remaining ingredients and blend until mixture is smooth. (Ideally you might want to double the dressing quantities because this amount “throws” the dressing all over the workbowl.) Pour dressing into a container and refrigerate. It tastes best if used within a week, but will keep for several weeks under refrigeration.
Per Serving: 190 Calories; 21g Fat (94.6% calories from fat); 2g Protein; 1g Carbohydrate; trace Dietary Fiber; 9mg Cholesterol; 365mg Sodium.

Kathleen Heckathorn
said on March 8th, 2012:
Carolyn, I so love your blog. Your stories continue to delight.
Oh, thank you, Kathleen! It’s nice to know people are reading my blog . . . I go for days and days sometimes between comments from somebody so I wonder if people are still tuning in. So, thanks! . . .carolyn