Milanese con insalata di pomodoro (Milanese Veal Chop with Tomato Salad)

FrankLombardia, secondi piatti, summer17 Comments

Veal Chop with Tomato Salad

I once knew a charming couple from Milan named Omer and Maria Grazia. My memory of them is a bit hazy by now—sadly, we lost contact and it’s been years since I’ve seen them—but two food-related memories still stick out in my mind. The first was the time I made them minestrone alla milanese and they pronounced it not just excellent, but the best they had ever had! They had me describe how I had made it, step by step, and the table, which included a friend of theirs from Bologna, decided that my ‘secret’ was the time and care I had taken with the rosolatura of the aromatic vegetables. I had to admit, I was beaming with pride—after all, this was their dish, so to speak, and here I was, an Italo-American with southern roots and no real connections to Milanese cooking. I still count that as the nicest culinary compliment I have ever received.

It was at that same meal that Omer and Maria Grazia described to me one of their favorite dishes, which has come to be a part of my summer repertoire: a cotoletta alla milanese (a breaded veal chop) served with a delicate tomato salad, not as a contorno (side dish) but spooned on top as an integral part of the dish. It’s a simple combination that looks and tastes like summer on a plate. Even though I don’t care at all for breaded items in tomato sauce (a common Italian-American conceit in dishes like Chicken ‘Parm’) I do find the combination of the breaded meat with fresh tomato simply to die for. Go figure.

Ingredients

Per person:

For the tomato salad:

  • One ripe, juicy tomato, cut into small dice or sliced
  • Olive oil
  • Salt and pepper
  • A few basil leaves, ripped into small pieces

Directions

Make the costoletta as per the usual recipe.

While the cotoletta is cooking, make your salad by putting your tomato in a mixing bowl with a bit of salt. Allow the tomato to macerate for just a minute or two, then drain out the excess liquid along with most of the seeds. Take the pulp, mix it with the basil leaves and toss with the olive oil. Adjust for seasoning.

Serve the cotoletta, still hot, with the tomato salad spooned over the top, and eat it right away!

Notes

The character of the dish depends almost entirely on using the best possible tomatoes. If you have access to some garden or farm tomatoes at the peak of the season, by all means use those. If not, small hydroponic tomatoes, the kind called ‘Campari’ tomatoes here in the US, or cherry or grape tomatoes, will do.

You may have noticed, the tomato salad used in this recipe contains no vinegar or lemon juice, which was a point that Omar and Maria Grazia really emphasized. And you can see why: the assertive sourness of either condiment would throw off what is otherwise a very delicate combination of flavors. In fact, many Italians will tell you that neither vinegar nor lemon belongs in a proper tomato salad anyway. My usual preference (when making tomato salad on its own) is to add just the tiniest bit of white wine vinegar, hardly enough to notice.

For more information on making a perfect Italian Tomato Salad, check out this post.

The costoletta is, classically, a veal chop. But as mentioned in the master recipe, a nice pork chop is very nice made the same way and costs much, much less. And this dish succeeds even with your ‘cotoletta’ made with chicken or turkey breast, too. In fact, you could even made a vegetarian version with eggplant slices, which is perfectly delicious too.

Milan, by the way, as Omar never tired of pointing out, may be one of Italy’s most under-appreciated cities, by tourists and other Italians alike. Heavily bombed during the Second World War, many parts of Milan lack the overwhelming ‘surface’ beauty of so many other Italian cities. But Omar’ was fond of saying that Milan’s beauty was hidden away—in its courtyards, on its side streets and other unexpected places. Its shopping is second to none in Italy and it has some of the best food in Italy. As Italy’s business capital, Milan can afford to eat very, very well, and it does.

17 Comments on “Milanese con insalata di pomodoro (Milanese Veal Chop with Tomato Salad)”

  1. something about breaded meats just does something to me, and good tomatoes can send me over the edge…. thank goodness for welbutrin… (kidding) – hey, can't imagine your new kitchen dishing out any thing better, even with more windows and lighting…

  2. The photo and this dish made me smile. An ex-boyfriend would make fun of me for eating tomato salads as a meal in the summer. I'm sure he would approve of this dish, and it's a nice way to add a little protein to tomato salad meals.

  3. you deserve a compliment on just about everything I read, okay, everything I have ever seen on here so to not grace you with a sincere one at your table would be unthinkable… this is of course, no exception

  4. It looks wonderful. I have never had veal although my husband like sit a lot. I always tell him I would try veal if the dish looked worth having. Yours looks worth having!

  5. Delicious – and I completely agree with you regarding tomatoes. Nothing can ruin a dish faster than bad tomatoes. Like you, I enjoy campari or grape tomatoes when nothing else is available. Brilliant post!

  6. Mmmm… I don't usually like my meat wrapped in breading either (especially as I am allergic to wheat) but this does look DIVINE! And I've never actually eaten veal (completely hypocritically) but this recipe makes me want to be brave and touch my toe in the veal-making pool. Delicious!

  7. This is possibly one of my favorite summer dishes! Funny thing is, I don't really like cotoletta if it is not accompanied by the tomato salad…. Something as simple as that really changes the flavor profile of the dish almost completely!

We'd love to hear your questions and thoughts! And if you tried the recipe, we'd love to hear how it went!

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