Our resident butcher STEVE BAIN tucks into a tasty, but often neglected, cut of chicken.
What are ‘thigh cutlets’? They are the thigh-part of a chicken Maryland; often with the skin on and the bone still in.
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The beauty of this cut is that it is dark, delicate, juicy meat that many prefer to breast meat.
Additionally, with the bone still in, these cutlets do require a bit of ‘sit-down-with-a-knife-and-fork’ to eat.
Yet they are the easiest chicken to eat off a bone because there are no ‘sneaky’ bits, like small bones or tendons that get in the way.
Being flat(ish) and juicy/moist makes chicken thighs one of the easiest and quickest to cook evenly.
METHOD
Step 1: I've started with a whole chicken with breast side up. Here the breast skin is peeled back to give a better visual understanding of the thigh to 'frame' connection as we work through the processing of 'just' the thigh.
Step 2: Lay the entire leg of the bird out to the side.
Step 3: Now cut through the chicken meat between leg and frame/ribs.
Step 4: Next, cut through the meat from the other side — cut towards where the leg joints to the frame.
Step 5: To confirm the location of the leg/frame joint, bend the leg 'backwards'. Often the joint will open up and the bones will pop apart.
Step 6: A close up of the leg joint. In this photo the bones have separated from the joint.
Step 7: Finally, for this phase, cut through the remaining flesh and separate the leg from the rest of the chicken carcase.
Step 8: The Maryland separated from the bird.
Step 9: Now flip the Maryland skin side up.
Step 10: You can locate the Maryland's 'knee' joint — between the drumstick and thigh — by bending both bones towards each other. Then lay the Maryland flat and cut through the 'knee' joint (where the drumstick and thigh bones meet).
Step 11: The drumstick and the thigh now present two different eating options. Drumsticks are great finger food, whereas the thigh is arguably one of the best bone-in options for knife and fork cuisine.