Grandma's Easy German Schnitzel Recipe - foodiecrush .com (2024)

This post may contain affiliate links. Read my .

Cooking thinly sliced, breaded meat in a fry pan is the easy technique used for any authentic, crispy German or Austrian schnitzel recipe. I use bone-in, thinly cut, tenderized pork chops coated in panko bread crumbs, but you can easily substitute tenderized chicken breast instead.

There are precious few things that can take you right back to childhood like certain foods can.

When looking back to those childhood faves, you either crave it like no tomorrow, laugh in hysterics at the lengths you’d go though to avoid it (liver and onions passed under the table to Posey the dog), or vehemently defend it as haute cuisine.Ambrosia anyone?

At my house, German schnitzel—or as we knew it, wiener schnitzel—was a favorite of everyone at the table. My dad loved it because he grew up on it, my mom loved it because it’s easy to make, and me and my little sister loved it because it was breaded, crispy, and totally non-threatening. Sorry pup, you’re not getting any of this passed to you for dinner.

Today you can find a version of schnitzel on many dinner tables, and you don’t even have to be Austrian, or German, or attend Oktoberfest to make it your own family favorite recipe, too.

What Kind of Meat to Use in Schnitzel

Growing up, we called this dish wiener schnitzel, but I’ve seen it elsewhere as plain old schnitzel. So what’s the difference between the two? I had to look it up, and discovered traditional wiener schnitzel is Austrian and made from veal, where German style schnitzel is made from pork.

In fact schnitzel actually describes the cooking technique rather than the meat it’s made from. The meat is pounded thin with a meat tenderizer then lightly breaded and fried, for a juicy but crispy pork chop.

It’s likely that here in the U.S. you’ll most traditionally see schnitzel made with thin cuts of pork (we prefer bone-in pork chops) but chicken breast has definitely made it’s way up the schnitzel popularity poll, too.

see more: 31 Days of Comfort Food Favorite Recipes to Make Now

How to Make Easy German Schnitzel

When my mom and dad were married 55 years ago, my Grandma Frieda passed along this recipe to my mom, probably in an attempt to help this young bride satisfy my dad’s love of his German mother’s cooking.

I mean the guy likes head cheese. Really Dad?

Today at our house, my husband Jeff has taken over the schnitzel-making reigns where he’s made one or two slight changes along the way.

Bone-in pork chops are still our protein of choice. Be sure to buy the thin-cut version to make the process of tenderizing them easier.

The pork chops are lightly dredged in flour, then egg, then patted down with panko. My grandma’s original recipe calls for bread crumbs, but we’ve found that panko delivers a crispy crust that just can’t be beat.

My mom makes these in the electric fry pan, but my man cooks his on the stove in a heavy-bottom skillet. You don’t need a lot of oil for frying, but don’t skimp on it either or the pork chops won’t brown and crisp. Move the pork chops in the pan as they cook so they cook evenly to achieve more consistent browning.

If you can’t commit to cooking in oil, you could try this in the air fryer or oven instead, and let me know how it goes. But for me, I’ll forego butter on my toast for a crisp juicy pork chop any day of the week.

see more: 31 Days of Weeknight Chicken Dinner Recipes to Make Now

What to Serve With Schnitzel to Make a Meal

This is one of those times I defer to my childhood where we ALWAYS ate schnitzel with Pasta Roni Angel Hair Pasta with Herbsand jarred—not canned—sweet and sour red cabbage. I’m partial toAunt Nellie’s, my mom swears bySteinfelds. I had a devil of a time finding it in the grocery store this time around so it looks like I better come up with my own recipe for it soon.

Or, go full-on with the German theme with:

  • German Potato Salad Recipe
  • Roasted Brussels Sprouts with Pancetta
  • German Chocolate Cake

And don’t forget the lemon wedges to spritz on top of the pork chop. Thank you, I’ll have another.

Tools You’ll Need for this Recipe

If you make this recipe, please let me know! Bookmark this recipe and leave a comment below, or take a photo andtag me onInstagramwith #foodiecrusheats.

Grandma's Easy German Schnitzel Recipe - foodiecrush .com (8)

Print

4.97 from 26 votes

My Grandma's Easy German Schnitzel Recipe

Cook these thinly sliced pork chops over medium-high heat and move them around in the pan to keep them frying evenly. Add more oil as needed for a crispy pork chop that stays juicy on the inside.

Course Main Course

Cuisine German

Keyword schnitzel

Prep Time 10 minutes minutes

Cook Time 20 minutes minutes

Total Time 30 minutes minutes

Servings 4

Ingredients

  • 8 thin-cut, bone-in pork chops
  • ½ cup all-purpose flour
  • ¼ cup milk
  • 2 eggs, whisked
  • ½ teaspoon kosher salt
  • ½ teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
  • 1 cup panko bread crumbs
  • ¼ cup oil for frying, divided
  • 1 lemon, cut into wedges

Instructions

  • With a meat tenderizer or the bottom of a heavy pan, pound out the pork chops to ¼ inch thickness.

  • Add the flour to a shallow bowl. In another bowl, whisk the eggs with the milk, and season with the salt and pepper. Add the panko to another shallow bowl.

  • One at a time, lightly dredge the pork chops first in the flour, then the egg mixture, and then in the panko crumbs, shaking off excess. Repeat with the remaining pork chops.

  • Heat 2 tablespoons of oil in a heavy skillet over medium high heat. Fry the chops in batches, moving the chops in the pan, until golden brown and crispy, about 5 minutes on each side. Add 1 tablespoons of oil to the pan at a time and repeat with the remaining pork chops. Serve with lemon wedges, noodles, and sweet and sour cabbage.

More Recipes Like This You’ll Want to Make Too

Quick and easy, no-fuss dinners made in the skillet or fry pan are always on demand. Check out these to add to your must-make soon list:

  • 30 Minute Pork Scallopini With Lemons And Capers
  • One-Pot Creamy Chicken and Rice
  • Easy Chicken Breasts With Creamy Mushroom Sauce
  • 30-Minute Caprese Chicken Recipe
  • How to Make Homemade Chicken Parmesan
  • 30-Minute Creamy Mushroom And Leek Chicken Breasts

As always, thank you for reading and supporting companies I partner with, which allows me to create more unique content and recipes for you. All opinions are always my own.

Thanks for reading andsubscribe to FoodieCrushto have each post delivered straight to your e-mail box.

Learn more about my printed day-plannerNourished Planner here, and sign up for free, emailed weekly meal plans.

Follow me onInstagram,Facebook,PinterestandTwitterfor more FoodieCrush inspiration.

Grandma's Easy German Schnitzel Recipe - foodiecrush .com (2024)

References

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Greg O'Connell

Last Updated:

Views: 6688

Rating: 4.1 / 5 (42 voted)

Reviews: 81% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Greg O'Connell

Birthday: 1992-01-10

Address: Suite 517 2436 Jefferey Pass, Shanitaside, UT 27519

Phone: +2614651609714

Job: Education Developer

Hobby: Cooking, Gambling, Pottery, Shooting, Baseball, Singing, Snowboarding

Introduction: My name is Greg O'Connell, I am a delightful, colorful, talented, kind, lively, modern, tender person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.