The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Treat yourself to dinner and a show

Treat yourself to dinner and a show

- By Emily Ryan

Dino’s Backstage & The Celebrity Room in Glenside wants you to try something different for a change.

Tired of the same-old date night? Skip the movie and savor a supper club.

It used to be “you get dressed up and see a show,” said Antonio “Tino” Cione, executive chef at Dino’s Backstage & The Celebrity Room in Glenside. “We’re trying to bring that back, and I’m so happy to be a part of it.”

The son of an entertaine­r himself, Cione joined the team in July, offering a “whole new menu.”

“Everything is homemade. Everything is fresh,” he described. “I’m a first-generation Italian-American. Both my parents were born in Italy. I’ve been cooking since I was 5 years old.”

It’s all about the food (try his ricotta gnocchi), the ambiance and the acts, which range from Grammy-nominated singer Marilyn Maye to “The Snow Show,” featuring holiday favorites.

“When you come to dinner and a show, you’re getting quality entertainm­ent, a night out,” said chef Bob Imperial of Imperial Music Hall and Imperial’s Catering in Trappe. “We don’t get bar bands. We get bands that travel the country and play at different venues.”

He tailors the menu to each show like steak, chili and corn bread for a country band or Elvis-worthy peanut butter-andbanana desserts.

“If you have the same meal, it takes the fun out of it,” Imperial explained. “I get to try new recipes and do things that are different.”

So does executive chef Fred Duerr of Rising Sun Inn in Telford, who hosts catered concerts in a restored barn. Think Jamaican jerk chicken at a Bob Marley tribute and “magic mushroom soup” for a Jerry Garcia birthday show.

He also partnered with Montgomery Theater in Souderton, giving tickethold­ers 20-percent off dinner, including his signature bison Wellington.

“After a show, enjoy a good meal and talk about the show,” Duerr said. “It’s good marketing for us because it reaches an audience we potentiall­y wouldn’t reach.”

It’s become so popular that Montgomery Theater teamed up with other restaurant­s too.

“It’s a showstoppi­ng deal,” he added.

Now that my kids are on their own and cooking for themselves, both have thanked me for passing on one technique in particular: how to cook a thin piece of protein and make a pan sauce from the drippings. It is indeed a quick, easy and affordable skill with endless variations. It also guarantees a deeply delicious entree. Consider this recipe — chicken cutlets topped with a tart orange sauce — the template for the technique.

Whenever you use it, you have to start with a thin piece of protein to ensure that it cooks quickly and evenly. Here I’ve chosen thinly sliced chicken cutlets. If the only breasts available at your supermarke­t are large and thick, bring them home, pop them in the freezer for 30 to 40 minutes (which firms them up) and then, very carefully, slice them in half width-wise to produce two thinner cutlets. If you’d prefer pork to chicken, just buy half-inch-thick boneless pork chops and trim off any excess fat.

Before sauteing the meat, you’ll need to dredge it in flour. This step prevents the meat from drying out by coating and insulating it. (Both chicken breasts and boneless pork chops are very lean.) It also serves to thicken the sauce when the protein is added back to the pan. My flour of choice is Wondra, a venerable brand favored by my grandmothe­r that was magically designed not to lump up in gravy. It also produces a nice light coating for the cutlets.

After you’ve browned the cutlets in a little oil and moved them onto a plate, there’ll be some concentrat­ed juices sitting on the bottom of the pan. To deglaze the pan and dilute the brown bits, you’ll need to add liquid, usually something acidic. Wine is traditiona­l, but a little vinegar and/or citrus can also do the job. Here I call for sherry vinegar, but balsamic, red, white, or cider vinegar would be fine, too.

Next you’ll add some chicken broth, then reduce the liquid a bit before returning the cutlets to the pan to finish cooking them gently as the flour coating thickens the sauce. The last touch? Add some butter to enrich and thicken the sauce a trifle further. That’s it. You’ve landed a delicious entree on the table in just 30 minutes.

Sauteed Chicken Cutlets with Tart Orange Sauce and Olives Start to finish: 30 minutes Servings: 4

¼ cup all-purpose flour (preferably Wondra)

2 tablespoon­s extra-virgin olive oil

1 pound boneless skinless chicken breast cutlets, preferably thin sliced

Kosher salt and black pepper 1 orange, peeled and cut into sections plus 1/3 cup orange juice (preferably fresh)

1/3 cup sherry vinegar

1 cup chicken broth

1/3 cup chopped pitted green olives

Spread out the flour on a piece of parchment on the counter. In a large, nonstick skillet heat the oil in a large skillet over mediumhigh heat. Season the cutlets on both sides with salt and pepper and coat them with the flour, shaking off the excess before adding them to the skillet. Reduce the heat to medium and cook the chicken until lightly golden, about 2 minutes per side. Transfer the chicken to a plate.

Add the orange juice and sherry vinegar to the skillet and simmer until reduced by half, scraping up the brown bits in the bottom of the pan. Add the chicken broth and olives and bring the liquid to a boil. Reduce the heat and simmer for a few minutes. Return the chicken to the pan, along with the orange segments and any juices from the plate and simmer very gently, turning the chicken over several times, for 2 to 3 minutes until it is just cooked through. Do not let the liquid boil.

Transfer the chicken to 4 plates and simmer the sauce until it has thickened. Add butter to the skillet and swirl the pan just until the butter is incorporat­ed. Add salt and pepper to taste and spoon the sauce over the chicken.

Nutrition informatio­n per serving: 283 calories; 109 calories from fat; 12 g fat (1 g saturated; 0 g trans fats); 83 mg cholestero­l; 533 mg sodium; 13 g carbohydra­tes; 1 g fiber; 5 g sugar; 27 g protein.

Editor’s Note: Sara Moulton is host of public television’s “Sara’s Weeknight Meals.” She was executive chef at Gourmet magazine for nearly 25 years and spent a decade hosting several Food Network shows including “Cooking Live.” Her latest cookbook is “HomeCookin­g 101.”

 ??  ??
 ?? COURTESY OF RISING SUN INN ?? Mike Guldin and Rollin’ & Tumblin’ take the stage at Rising Sun Inn.
COURTESY OF RISING SUN INN Mike Guldin and Rollin’ & Tumblin’ take the stage at Rising Sun Inn.
 ?? COURTESY OF JESSIE MAE KANAGIE PHOTOGRAPH­Y ?? ”Elvis” takes the stage at Imperial Music Hall.
COURTESY OF JESSIE MAE KANAGIE PHOTOGRAPH­Y ”Elvis” takes the stage at Imperial Music Hall.
 ?? COURTESY OF JESSIE MAE KANAGIE PHOTOGRAPH­Y ?? Elvis would have loved this peanut butter-andbanana dessert at Imperial Music Hall.
COURTESY OF JESSIE MAE KANAGIE PHOTOGRAPH­Y Elvis would have loved this peanut butter-andbanana dessert at Imperial Music Hall.
 ?? COURTESY OF KEVIN ALVEY ?? See award-winning singer Marilyn Maye at Dino’s Backstage & The Celebrity Room.
COURTESY OF KEVIN ALVEY See award-winning singer Marilyn Maye at Dino’s Backstage & The Celebrity Room.
 ?? COURTESY OF MICHAEL KELLY-CATALDI ?? Experience the food, ambiance and acts at Dino’s Backstage & The Celebrity Room.
COURTESY OF MICHAEL KELLY-CATALDI Experience the food, ambiance and acts at Dino’s Backstage & The Celebrity Room.
 ?? SARA MOULTON VIA AP ?? Sauteed chicken cutlets with tart orange sauce and olives in New York. This dish is from a recipe by Sara Moulton.
SARA MOULTON VIA AP Sauteed chicken cutlets with tart orange sauce and olives in New York. This dish is from a recipe by Sara Moulton.

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