![]() ![]() Source: Top Secret Restaurant Recipes 3 by Todd Wilbur. This dish goes great with the clone recipe for BJ's White Cheddar Mashed Potatoes. You'll want to plan ahead a bit for this dish since the chicken fillets will need to marinate in the brine solution for 2 to 3 hours. Still, the lemony Chardonnay butter sauce used at the restaurant is cloned here too, so you'll have the complete flavor experience. Combining these coarse breadcrumbs with shredded Parmesan cheese makes a crispy breading for the chicken that doesn't even need a sauce to taste good. While you're at the market, head down the aisle where the Asian foods are parked and pick up some Japanese breadcrumbs, also called "panko" breadcrumbs. Served with white cheddar mashed potatoes and steamed broccoli and topped with a lemon Chardonnay butter sauce, sun-dried tomatoes, fresh basil and Parmesan cheese." This re-creation lays out a great way to prepare that 4-pack of chicken breasts you dropped into your shopping cart. Menu Description: "Our marinated chicken breast coated with Parmesan cheese and crunchy panko breadcrumbs, lightly pounded and pan fried to a golden brown. Bake for 20 minutes, or until mixture is heated through. Add salad dressing, Buffalo or hot sauce, and blue cheese mix to combine. Source: Top Secret Restaurant Recipes by Todd Wilbur. Place softened cream cheese into a casserole dish or deep baking dish. To further enhance the Hooters experience when you serve these messy wings, throw a whole roll of paper towels on the table, rather than napkins, as they do in the restaurants. The original dish can be ordered in 10-, 20-, or 50-piece servings or if you want to splurge, there's the "Gourmet Chicken Wing Dinner" featuring 20 wings and a bottle of Dom Perignon champagne, for only $125. Today there are over 375 Hooters across the United States serving more than 200 tons of chicken wings every week. But while some might say it's the buffalo wings that are their favorite feature of the restaurant, others say it's the restaurant chain's trademark Hooters girls-waitresses casually attired in bright orange short-shorts and skin tight T-shirts. True, the six fun-loving Midwestern businessmen who started Hooters in Clearwater, Florida, on April Fool's Day in 1983 chose a classic recipe for chicken wings as their signature item. Often imitated, hardly ever duplicated." "Hooters is to chicken wings what McDonald's is to hamburgers," claims promotional material from the company. ![]()
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