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HealthRecipesUkrainian

Kotleta po-kyivsky (chicken Kyiv)

UkrainianUkrainemain

When I think of Kotleta po-kyivsky, I am immediately transported to the bustling kitchens of early twentieth-century Kyiv, where this magnificent dish was truly perfected. While its exact origins are sometimes playfully debated—some tracing it back to French chefs in pre-revolutionary Russia or even Nicolas Appert—it was in Ukraine that this breaded, butter-stuffed chicken cutlet became a national treasure. Making it from scratch is an act of culinary love, yielding a spectacular contrast between a shatteringly crisp golden crust, tender pounded chicken, and a glorious, molten core of garlic and dill butter. The shop-bought versions, which often cost a steep ten to twelve dollars for a meager pack of two, are a tragic disappointment. They rely on mechanically separated meat, skim milk powders, and artificial flavorings, resulting in a dry, rubbery puck that leaks a pool of greasy, flavorless oil rather than rich, herbaceous butter. The most common pitfall when making this at home is the dreaded butter leak, which happens when the filling isn't cold enough or the chicken seal is compromised. My golden rule is to freeze your butter logs until they are rock hard and to ensure every millimeter of the chicken is tightly wrapped and sealed before breading. Because this is a brilliant batch hero, I highly recommend stuffing and freezing them raw. You can bake them straight from frozen, making them an ultimate convenience food that actually tastes like a masterpiece, completely bypassing the processed aisles.

Nutrition

Per servingCaloriesProteinCarbsFatSat fatFibreSugarSodium
beginner450kcal38g8g28g14g1g1g450mg
intermediate600kcal36g20g41g22g1g1g450mg
expert580kcal38g24g36g18g2g2g620mg

Per serving · Ava-estimated — a guide, not a clinical figure.

Source: Perfected at the Kyiv restaurant in the early 20th century.
Informational only. Not medical, fitness, or dietary advice. Consult a qualified professional before starting any new programme. Read the safety policy →