How to pound chicken breasts without a meat tenderizer?












16














I do not have a meat tenderizor. I want to fry my chicken breasts but need to pound out the meat. What can I use instead?










share|improve this question




















  • 1




    some more tips on pounding the meat: cooking.stackexchange.com/q/81/69382
    – Ess Kay
    Dec 17 at 17:32










  • I've heard of covering it with plastic wrap and using an unopened food can, e.g. a can of soup or beans...
    – adfaklsdjf
    Dec 18 at 17:56






  • 1




    Possible duplicate of How do I pound chicken (or other meat) without making a mess?
    – Rob
    Dec 18 at 18:45










  • Just about anything can be used as a hammer.
    – Mast
    Dec 19 at 17:50










  • Am... am I allowed to make lewd jokes in the comments? ;D
    – AmagicalFishy
    Dec 20 at 22:56


















16














I do not have a meat tenderizor. I want to fry my chicken breasts but need to pound out the meat. What can I use instead?










share|improve this question




















  • 1




    some more tips on pounding the meat: cooking.stackexchange.com/q/81/69382
    – Ess Kay
    Dec 17 at 17:32










  • I've heard of covering it with plastic wrap and using an unopened food can, e.g. a can of soup or beans...
    – adfaklsdjf
    Dec 18 at 17:56






  • 1




    Possible duplicate of How do I pound chicken (or other meat) without making a mess?
    – Rob
    Dec 18 at 18:45










  • Just about anything can be used as a hammer.
    – Mast
    Dec 19 at 17:50










  • Am... am I allowed to make lewd jokes in the comments? ;D
    – AmagicalFishy
    Dec 20 at 22:56
















16












16








16







I do not have a meat tenderizor. I want to fry my chicken breasts but need to pound out the meat. What can I use instead?










share|improve this question















I do not have a meat tenderizor. I want to fry my chicken breasts but need to pound out the meat. What can I use instead?







equipment chicken-breast tenderizing






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Dec 17 at 20:27









Tuorg

72019




72019










asked Dec 17 at 15:16









Sandy Brown

8913




8913








  • 1




    some more tips on pounding the meat: cooking.stackexchange.com/q/81/69382
    – Ess Kay
    Dec 17 at 17:32










  • I've heard of covering it with plastic wrap and using an unopened food can, e.g. a can of soup or beans...
    – adfaklsdjf
    Dec 18 at 17:56






  • 1




    Possible duplicate of How do I pound chicken (or other meat) without making a mess?
    – Rob
    Dec 18 at 18:45










  • Just about anything can be used as a hammer.
    – Mast
    Dec 19 at 17:50










  • Am... am I allowed to make lewd jokes in the comments? ;D
    – AmagicalFishy
    Dec 20 at 22:56
















  • 1




    some more tips on pounding the meat: cooking.stackexchange.com/q/81/69382
    – Ess Kay
    Dec 17 at 17:32










  • I've heard of covering it with plastic wrap and using an unopened food can, e.g. a can of soup or beans...
    – adfaklsdjf
    Dec 18 at 17:56






  • 1




    Possible duplicate of How do I pound chicken (or other meat) without making a mess?
    – Rob
    Dec 18 at 18:45










  • Just about anything can be used as a hammer.
    – Mast
    Dec 19 at 17:50










  • Am... am I allowed to make lewd jokes in the comments? ;D
    – AmagicalFishy
    Dec 20 at 22:56










1




1




some more tips on pounding the meat: cooking.stackexchange.com/q/81/69382
– Ess Kay
Dec 17 at 17:32




some more tips on pounding the meat: cooking.stackexchange.com/q/81/69382
– Ess Kay
Dec 17 at 17:32












I've heard of covering it with plastic wrap and using an unopened food can, e.g. a can of soup or beans...
– adfaklsdjf
Dec 18 at 17:56




I've heard of covering it with plastic wrap and using an unopened food can, e.g. a can of soup or beans...
– adfaklsdjf
Dec 18 at 17:56




1




1




Possible duplicate of How do I pound chicken (or other meat) without making a mess?
– Rob
Dec 18 at 18:45




Possible duplicate of How do I pound chicken (or other meat) without making a mess?
– Rob
Dec 18 at 18:45












Just about anything can be used as a hammer.
– Mast
Dec 19 at 17:50




Just about anything can be used as a hammer.
– Mast
Dec 19 at 17:50












Am... am I allowed to make lewd jokes in the comments? ;D
– AmagicalFishy
Dec 20 at 22:56






Am... am I allowed to make lewd jokes in the comments? ;D
– AmagicalFishy
Dec 20 at 22:56












10 Answers
10






active

oldest

votes


















39














This might seem silly but, . . . I use my fist. I always cover my chicken with plastic wrap to contain the mess before I pound it. You can also glove up instead/as well.



I have found that punching it is just the right amount of force for the job. And the uneven surface of my knuckles acts as a meat tenderizer and breaks up the tissue just a little. (But not too much.)






share|improve this answer

















  • 17




    This is my favorite technique when it's been a rough day at work, too.
    – ceejayoz
    Dec 17 at 21:21






  • 8




    i literally call my hands "meat tenderizers"
    – USER_8675309
    Dec 17 at 21:31






  • 1




    I do this, too. I put the chicken on a dishwasher-safe cutting board, cover with plastic wrap and pound away.
    – Alex Reinking
    Dec 17 at 23:09






  • 2




    You really should add a picture of your meat tenderizers.
    – SnakeDoc
    Dec 18 at 21:40






  • 2




    I have done this, but with a gallon freezer bag. I was careful not to pop the bag open but otherwise it was very clean.
    – trognanders
    Dec 18 at 23:56



















34














Anything flat, non-breakable, and reasonably heavy would work: rubber mallet, rolling pin, flat-bottomed wooden bowl, etc. I would suggest protecting the meat and implement from one another with plastic wrap.






share|improve this answer

















  • 23




    ... small skillet or frying pan... the list goes on and on.
    – Stephie
    Dec 17 at 16:05






  • 3




    A can of food (e.g. soup or beans), that you plan to open soon anyway since it may become dented during the process.
    – user3067860
    Dec 17 at 18:45






  • 4




    I find that placing the chicken under saran wrap (clingfilm) and whacking it with a rolling pin does the trick just fine
    – Richard
    Dec 17 at 18:50










  • I've used bottles for similar purposes, in the past. Grab at the neck and strike with the bottom. I also always use some sort of plastic wrap or a nylon bag to protect the meat. For bonus points, put some seasoning inside it (e.g., salt and pepper).
    – vlaz
    Dec 18 at 7:00



















14














Put breast between baking paper, roll like dough with a rolling pin. If you have any spices/herbs/salt/pepper to add you can sprinkle then mid rolling as this will push them inside meat.






share|improve this answer





























    7














    Put it between two plastic sheets, or inside of a zipblock bag big enough to accommodate the smashed size of the breast.



    Then you're going to want to grab a skillet and beat that meat into submission. Cast iron is the classic here, but anything you can swing will work. Just make sure the skillet isn't hot or warm when you start assaulting that meat.






    share|improve this answer





























      3














      I've been known to cover with plastic wrap, lay my chef's knife flat along a piece of chicken, and then hit the flat of the blade with the heel of my hand. Obviously, stay away from the sharp / pointy parts; but that is easy to do with a big chef's knife. I typically only do this when I have one or two pieces of meat that need tenderizing (as anymore will tenderize you back!)






      share|improve this answer





























        3














        We designed ourselves a wooden block (remains from a 2" laminate floor joist) about 8" by 8", drilled a hole in one side, and screwed in a handle. When we use it, we wrap it around and around with plastic wrap to keep the meat clean.



        We would then use this as an intermediate, placing the chicken breasts underneath it, and pound it with a 3 lb sledge hammer. Though it sounds a bit extreme, it is actually quite effective, works quickly, and does not damage the meat.






        share|improve this answer





























          2














          I've seen my mother use a Corningware plate or saucer in place of a meat tenderizer. She would just hold the plate sideways and pound out the meat with the edge of the plate.






          share|improve this answer





























            1














            I have used a cast iron skillet against a cutting board. Plastic wrap or parchment paper to protect the surfaces...






            share|improve this answer





























              1















              1. Iron Skillet (or another heavy pot/pan)

              2. Cutting board

              3. Rolling pin - really easy if you have the French tapered kind

              4. Big can of tomatoes...

              5. An empty wine bottle

              6. A pool ball (the kind you use on a table...not in the water!)


              Bon Appetit!






              share|improve this answer























              • you forgot to list rock (run it through the dishwasher first)
                – hildred
                Dec 19 at 23:34



















              0














              First off, you'll definitely want your chicken between two sheets of plastic. You can either do this with two sheets of plastic wrap, or by putting it in a gallon ziplock bag (don't seal it though). The best alternative tool to use is a rolling pin as it's got no sharp edges (will break your plastic and can cut the chicken in half) and has weight and length to aid in leverage when whacking. Not everyone has a rolling pin, so if you don't just grab the largest heaviest can of food you have and slam it into the chicken. I wouldn't use any beverage cans, and especially not anything carbonated like soda or beer. I actually have a purpose built meat tenderizer and prefer using my rolling pin.






              share|improve this answer





















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                10 Answers
                10






                active

                oldest

                votes








                10 Answers
                10






                active

                oldest

                votes









                active

                oldest

                votes






                active

                oldest

                votes









                39














                This might seem silly but, . . . I use my fist. I always cover my chicken with plastic wrap to contain the mess before I pound it. You can also glove up instead/as well.



                I have found that punching it is just the right amount of force for the job. And the uneven surface of my knuckles acts as a meat tenderizer and breaks up the tissue just a little. (But not too much.)






                share|improve this answer

















                • 17




                  This is my favorite technique when it's been a rough day at work, too.
                  – ceejayoz
                  Dec 17 at 21:21






                • 8




                  i literally call my hands "meat tenderizers"
                  – USER_8675309
                  Dec 17 at 21:31






                • 1




                  I do this, too. I put the chicken on a dishwasher-safe cutting board, cover with plastic wrap and pound away.
                  – Alex Reinking
                  Dec 17 at 23:09






                • 2




                  You really should add a picture of your meat tenderizers.
                  – SnakeDoc
                  Dec 18 at 21:40






                • 2




                  I have done this, but with a gallon freezer bag. I was careful not to pop the bag open but otherwise it was very clean.
                  – trognanders
                  Dec 18 at 23:56
















                39














                This might seem silly but, . . . I use my fist. I always cover my chicken with plastic wrap to contain the mess before I pound it. You can also glove up instead/as well.



                I have found that punching it is just the right amount of force for the job. And the uneven surface of my knuckles acts as a meat tenderizer and breaks up the tissue just a little. (But not too much.)






                share|improve this answer

















                • 17




                  This is my favorite technique when it's been a rough day at work, too.
                  – ceejayoz
                  Dec 17 at 21:21






                • 8




                  i literally call my hands "meat tenderizers"
                  – USER_8675309
                  Dec 17 at 21:31






                • 1




                  I do this, too. I put the chicken on a dishwasher-safe cutting board, cover with plastic wrap and pound away.
                  – Alex Reinking
                  Dec 17 at 23:09






                • 2




                  You really should add a picture of your meat tenderizers.
                  – SnakeDoc
                  Dec 18 at 21:40






                • 2




                  I have done this, but with a gallon freezer bag. I was careful not to pop the bag open but otherwise it was very clean.
                  – trognanders
                  Dec 18 at 23:56














                39












                39








                39






                This might seem silly but, . . . I use my fist. I always cover my chicken with plastic wrap to contain the mess before I pound it. You can also glove up instead/as well.



                I have found that punching it is just the right amount of force for the job. And the uneven surface of my knuckles acts as a meat tenderizer and breaks up the tissue just a little. (But not too much.)






                share|improve this answer












                This might seem silly but, . . . I use my fist. I always cover my chicken with plastic wrap to contain the mess before I pound it. You can also glove up instead/as well.



                I have found that punching it is just the right amount of force for the job. And the uneven surface of my knuckles acts as a meat tenderizer and breaks up the tissue just a little. (But not too much.)







                share|improve this answer












                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer










                answered Dec 17 at 17:36









                bruglesco

                2,1301618




                2,1301618








                • 17




                  This is my favorite technique when it's been a rough day at work, too.
                  – ceejayoz
                  Dec 17 at 21:21






                • 8




                  i literally call my hands "meat tenderizers"
                  – USER_8675309
                  Dec 17 at 21:31






                • 1




                  I do this, too. I put the chicken on a dishwasher-safe cutting board, cover with plastic wrap and pound away.
                  – Alex Reinking
                  Dec 17 at 23:09






                • 2




                  You really should add a picture of your meat tenderizers.
                  – SnakeDoc
                  Dec 18 at 21:40






                • 2




                  I have done this, but with a gallon freezer bag. I was careful not to pop the bag open but otherwise it was very clean.
                  – trognanders
                  Dec 18 at 23:56














                • 17




                  This is my favorite technique when it's been a rough day at work, too.
                  – ceejayoz
                  Dec 17 at 21:21






                • 8




                  i literally call my hands "meat tenderizers"
                  – USER_8675309
                  Dec 17 at 21:31






                • 1




                  I do this, too. I put the chicken on a dishwasher-safe cutting board, cover with plastic wrap and pound away.
                  – Alex Reinking
                  Dec 17 at 23:09






                • 2




                  You really should add a picture of your meat tenderizers.
                  – SnakeDoc
                  Dec 18 at 21:40






                • 2




                  I have done this, but with a gallon freezer bag. I was careful not to pop the bag open but otherwise it was very clean.
                  – trognanders
                  Dec 18 at 23:56








                17




                17




                This is my favorite technique when it's been a rough day at work, too.
                – ceejayoz
                Dec 17 at 21:21




                This is my favorite technique when it's been a rough day at work, too.
                – ceejayoz
                Dec 17 at 21:21




                8




                8




                i literally call my hands "meat tenderizers"
                – USER_8675309
                Dec 17 at 21:31




                i literally call my hands "meat tenderizers"
                – USER_8675309
                Dec 17 at 21:31




                1




                1




                I do this, too. I put the chicken on a dishwasher-safe cutting board, cover with plastic wrap and pound away.
                – Alex Reinking
                Dec 17 at 23:09




                I do this, too. I put the chicken on a dishwasher-safe cutting board, cover with plastic wrap and pound away.
                – Alex Reinking
                Dec 17 at 23:09




                2




                2




                You really should add a picture of your meat tenderizers.
                – SnakeDoc
                Dec 18 at 21:40




                You really should add a picture of your meat tenderizers.
                – SnakeDoc
                Dec 18 at 21:40




                2




                2




                I have done this, but with a gallon freezer bag. I was careful not to pop the bag open but otherwise it was very clean.
                – trognanders
                Dec 18 at 23:56




                I have done this, but with a gallon freezer bag. I was careful not to pop the bag open but otherwise it was very clean.
                – trognanders
                Dec 18 at 23:56













                34














                Anything flat, non-breakable, and reasonably heavy would work: rubber mallet, rolling pin, flat-bottomed wooden bowl, etc. I would suggest protecting the meat and implement from one another with plastic wrap.






                share|improve this answer

















                • 23




                  ... small skillet or frying pan... the list goes on and on.
                  – Stephie
                  Dec 17 at 16:05






                • 3




                  A can of food (e.g. soup or beans), that you plan to open soon anyway since it may become dented during the process.
                  – user3067860
                  Dec 17 at 18:45






                • 4




                  I find that placing the chicken under saran wrap (clingfilm) and whacking it with a rolling pin does the trick just fine
                  – Richard
                  Dec 17 at 18:50










                • I've used bottles for similar purposes, in the past. Grab at the neck and strike with the bottom. I also always use some sort of plastic wrap or a nylon bag to protect the meat. For bonus points, put some seasoning inside it (e.g., salt and pepper).
                  – vlaz
                  Dec 18 at 7:00
















                34














                Anything flat, non-breakable, and reasonably heavy would work: rubber mallet, rolling pin, flat-bottomed wooden bowl, etc. I would suggest protecting the meat and implement from one another with plastic wrap.






                share|improve this answer

















                • 23




                  ... small skillet or frying pan... the list goes on and on.
                  – Stephie
                  Dec 17 at 16:05






                • 3




                  A can of food (e.g. soup or beans), that you plan to open soon anyway since it may become dented during the process.
                  – user3067860
                  Dec 17 at 18:45






                • 4




                  I find that placing the chicken under saran wrap (clingfilm) and whacking it with a rolling pin does the trick just fine
                  – Richard
                  Dec 17 at 18:50










                • I've used bottles for similar purposes, in the past. Grab at the neck and strike with the bottom. I also always use some sort of plastic wrap or a nylon bag to protect the meat. For bonus points, put some seasoning inside it (e.g., salt and pepper).
                  – vlaz
                  Dec 18 at 7:00














                34












                34








                34






                Anything flat, non-breakable, and reasonably heavy would work: rubber mallet, rolling pin, flat-bottomed wooden bowl, etc. I would suggest protecting the meat and implement from one another with plastic wrap.






                share|improve this answer












                Anything flat, non-breakable, and reasonably heavy would work: rubber mallet, rolling pin, flat-bottomed wooden bowl, etc. I would suggest protecting the meat and implement from one another with plastic wrap.







                share|improve this answer












                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer










                answered Dec 17 at 15:43









                Tuorg

                72019




                72019








                • 23




                  ... small skillet or frying pan... the list goes on and on.
                  – Stephie
                  Dec 17 at 16:05






                • 3




                  A can of food (e.g. soup or beans), that you plan to open soon anyway since it may become dented during the process.
                  – user3067860
                  Dec 17 at 18:45






                • 4




                  I find that placing the chicken under saran wrap (clingfilm) and whacking it with a rolling pin does the trick just fine
                  – Richard
                  Dec 17 at 18:50










                • I've used bottles for similar purposes, in the past. Grab at the neck and strike with the bottom. I also always use some sort of plastic wrap or a nylon bag to protect the meat. For bonus points, put some seasoning inside it (e.g., salt and pepper).
                  – vlaz
                  Dec 18 at 7:00














                • 23




                  ... small skillet or frying pan... the list goes on and on.
                  – Stephie
                  Dec 17 at 16:05






                • 3




                  A can of food (e.g. soup or beans), that you plan to open soon anyway since it may become dented during the process.
                  – user3067860
                  Dec 17 at 18:45






                • 4




                  I find that placing the chicken under saran wrap (clingfilm) and whacking it with a rolling pin does the trick just fine
                  – Richard
                  Dec 17 at 18:50










                • I've used bottles for similar purposes, in the past. Grab at the neck and strike with the bottom. I also always use some sort of plastic wrap or a nylon bag to protect the meat. For bonus points, put some seasoning inside it (e.g., salt and pepper).
                  – vlaz
                  Dec 18 at 7:00








                23




                23




                ... small skillet or frying pan... the list goes on and on.
                – Stephie
                Dec 17 at 16:05




                ... small skillet or frying pan... the list goes on and on.
                – Stephie
                Dec 17 at 16:05




                3




                3




                A can of food (e.g. soup or beans), that you plan to open soon anyway since it may become dented during the process.
                – user3067860
                Dec 17 at 18:45




                A can of food (e.g. soup or beans), that you plan to open soon anyway since it may become dented during the process.
                – user3067860
                Dec 17 at 18:45




                4




                4




                I find that placing the chicken under saran wrap (clingfilm) and whacking it with a rolling pin does the trick just fine
                – Richard
                Dec 17 at 18:50




                I find that placing the chicken under saran wrap (clingfilm) and whacking it with a rolling pin does the trick just fine
                – Richard
                Dec 17 at 18:50












                I've used bottles for similar purposes, in the past. Grab at the neck and strike with the bottom. I also always use some sort of plastic wrap or a nylon bag to protect the meat. For bonus points, put some seasoning inside it (e.g., salt and pepper).
                – vlaz
                Dec 18 at 7:00




                I've used bottles for similar purposes, in the past. Grab at the neck and strike with the bottom. I also always use some sort of plastic wrap or a nylon bag to protect the meat. For bonus points, put some seasoning inside it (e.g., salt and pepper).
                – vlaz
                Dec 18 at 7:00











                14














                Put breast between baking paper, roll like dough with a rolling pin. If you have any spices/herbs/salt/pepper to add you can sprinkle then mid rolling as this will push them inside meat.






                share|improve this answer


























                  14














                  Put breast between baking paper, roll like dough with a rolling pin. If you have any spices/herbs/salt/pepper to add you can sprinkle then mid rolling as this will push them inside meat.






                  share|improve this answer
























                    14












                    14








                    14






                    Put breast between baking paper, roll like dough with a rolling pin. If you have any spices/herbs/salt/pepper to add you can sprinkle then mid rolling as this will push them inside meat.






                    share|improve this answer












                    Put breast between baking paper, roll like dough with a rolling pin. If you have any spices/herbs/salt/pepper to add you can sprinkle then mid rolling as this will push them inside meat.







                    share|improve this answer












                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer










                    answered Dec 17 at 16:06









                    SZCZERZO KŁY

                    2,532812




                    2,532812























                        7














                        Put it between two plastic sheets, or inside of a zipblock bag big enough to accommodate the smashed size of the breast.



                        Then you're going to want to grab a skillet and beat that meat into submission. Cast iron is the classic here, but anything you can swing will work. Just make sure the skillet isn't hot or warm when you start assaulting that meat.






                        share|improve this answer


























                          7














                          Put it between two plastic sheets, or inside of a zipblock bag big enough to accommodate the smashed size of the breast.



                          Then you're going to want to grab a skillet and beat that meat into submission. Cast iron is the classic here, but anything you can swing will work. Just make sure the skillet isn't hot or warm when you start assaulting that meat.






                          share|improve this answer
























                            7












                            7








                            7






                            Put it between two plastic sheets, or inside of a zipblock bag big enough to accommodate the smashed size of the breast.



                            Then you're going to want to grab a skillet and beat that meat into submission. Cast iron is the classic here, but anything you can swing will work. Just make sure the skillet isn't hot or warm when you start assaulting that meat.






                            share|improve this answer












                            Put it between two plastic sheets, or inside of a zipblock bag big enough to accommodate the smashed size of the breast.



                            Then you're going to want to grab a skillet and beat that meat into submission. Cast iron is the classic here, but anything you can swing will work. Just make sure the skillet isn't hot or warm when you start assaulting that meat.







                            share|improve this answer












                            share|improve this answer



                            share|improve this answer










                            answered Dec 17 at 20:23









                            Steve

                            40126




                            40126























                                3














                                I've been known to cover with plastic wrap, lay my chef's knife flat along a piece of chicken, and then hit the flat of the blade with the heel of my hand. Obviously, stay away from the sharp / pointy parts; but that is easy to do with a big chef's knife. I typically only do this when I have one or two pieces of meat that need tenderizing (as anymore will tenderize you back!)






                                share|improve this answer


























                                  3














                                  I've been known to cover with plastic wrap, lay my chef's knife flat along a piece of chicken, and then hit the flat of the blade with the heel of my hand. Obviously, stay away from the sharp / pointy parts; but that is easy to do with a big chef's knife. I typically only do this when I have one or two pieces of meat that need tenderizing (as anymore will tenderize you back!)






                                  share|improve this answer
























                                    3












                                    3








                                    3






                                    I've been known to cover with plastic wrap, lay my chef's knife flat along a piece of chicken, and then hit the flat of the blade with the heel of my hand. Obviously, stay away from the sharp / pointy parts; but that is easy to do with a big chef's knife. I typically only do this when I have one or two pieces of meat that need tenderizing (as anymore will tenderize you back!)






                                    share|improve this answer












                                    I've been known to cover with plastic wrap, lay my chef's knife flat along a piece of chicken, and then hit the flat of the blade with the heel of my hand. Obviously, stay away from the sharp / pointy parts; but that is easy to do with a big chef's knife. I typically only do this when I have one or two pieces of meat that need tenderizing (as anymore will tenderize you back!)







                                    share|improve this answer












                                    share|improve this answer



                                    share|improve this answer










                                    answered Dec 17 at 21:50









                                    Van

                                    1486




                                    1486























                                        3














                                        We designed ourselves a wooden block (remains from a 2" laminate floor joist) about 8" by 8", drilled a hole in one side, and screwed in a handle. When we use it, we wrap it around and around with plastic wrap to keep the meat clean.



                                        We would then use this as an intermediate, placing the chicken breasts underneath it, and pound it with a 3 lb sledge hammer. Though it sounds a bit extreme, it is actually quite effective, works quickly, and does not damage the meat.






                                        share|improve this answer


























                                          3














                                          We designed ourselves a wooden block (remains from a 2" laminate floor joist) about 8" by 8", drilled a hole in one side, and screwed in a handle. When we use it, we wrap it around and around with plastic wrap to keep the meat clean.



                                          We would then use this as an intermediate, placing the chicken breasts underneath it, and pound it with a 3 lb sledge hammer. Though it sounds a bit extreme, it is actually quite effective, works quickly, and does not damage the meat.






                                          share|improve this answer
























                                            3












                                            3








                                            3






                                            We designed ourselves a wooden block (remains from a 2" laminate floor joist) about 8" by 8", drilled a hole in one side, and screwed in a handle. When we use it, we wrap it around and around with plastic wrap to keep the meat clean.



                                            We would then use this as an intermediate, placing the chicken breasts underneath it, and pound it with a 3 lb sledge hammer. Though it sounds a bit extreme, it is actually quite effective, works quickly, and does not damage the meat.






                                            share|improve this answer












                                            We designed ourselves a wooden block (remains from a 2" laminate floor joist) about 8" by 8", drilled a hole in one side, and screwed in a handle. When we use it, we wrap it around and around with plastic wrap to keep the meat clean.



                                            We would then use this as an intermediate, placing the chicken breasts underneath it, and pound it with a 3 lb sledge hammer. Though it sounds a bit extreme, it is actually quite effective, works quickly, and does not damage the meat.







                                            share|improve this answer












                                            share|improve this answer



                                            share|improve this answer










                                            answered Dec 18 at 0:11









                                            anonymous2

                                            1513




                                            1513























                                                2














                                                I've seen my mother use a Corningware plate or saucer in place of a meat tenderizer. She would just hold the plate sideways and pound out the meat with the edge of the plate.






                                                share|improve this answer


























                                                  2














                                                  I've seen my mother use a Corningware plate or saucer in place of a meat tenderizer. She would just hold the plate sideways and pound out the meat with the edge of the plate.






                                                  share|improve this answer
























                                                    2












                                                    2








                                                    2






                                                    I've seen my mother use a Corningware plate or saucer in place of a meat tenderizer. She would just hold the plate sideways and pound out the meat with the edge of the plate.






                                                    share|improve this answer












                                                    I've seen my mother use a Corningware plate or saucer in place of a meat tenderizer. She would just hold the plate sideways and pound out the meat with the edge of the plate.







                                                    share|improve this answer












                                                    share|improve this answer



                                                    share|improve this answer










                                                    answered Dec 18 at 15:54









                                                    R. McMillan

                                                    1212




                                                    1212























                                                        1














                                                        I have used a cast iron skillet against a cutting board. Plastic wrap or parchment paper to protect the surfaces...






                                                        share|improve this answer


























                                                          1














                                                          I have used a cast iron skillet against a cutting board. Plastic wrap or parchment paper to protect the surfaces...






                                                          share|improve this answer
























                                                            1












                                                            1








                                                            1






                                                            I have used a cast iron skillet against a cutting board. Plastic wrap or parchment paper to protect the surfaces...






                                                            share|improve this answer












                                                            I have used a cast iron skillet against a cutting board. Plastic wrap or parchment paper to protect the surfaces...







                                                            share|improve this answer












                                                            share|improve this answer



                                                            share|improve this answer










                                                            answered Dec 18 at 18:48









                                                            KMcCMedia

                                                            111




                                                            111























                                                                1















                                                                1. Iron Skillet (or another heavy pot/pan)

                                                                2. Cutting board

                                                                3. Rolling pin - really easy if you have the French tapered kind

                                                                4. Big can of tomatoes...

                                                                5. An empty wine bottle

                                                                6. A pool ball (the kind you use on a table...not in the water!)


                                                                Bon Appetit!






                                                                share|improve this answer























                                                                • you forgot to list rock (run it through the dishwasher first)
                                                                  – hildred
                                                                  Dec 19 at 23:34
















                                                                1















                                                                1. Iron Skillet (or another heavy pot/pan)

                                                                2. Cutting board

                                                                3. Rolling pin - really easy if you have the French tapered kind

                                                                4. Big can of tomatoes...

                                                                5. An empty wine bottle

                                                                6. A pool ball (the kind you use on a table...not in the water!)


                                                                Bon Appetit!






                                                                share|improve this answer























                                                                • you forgot to list rock (run it through the dishwasher first)
                                                                  – hildred
                                                                  Dec 19 at 23:34














                                                                1












                                                                1








                                                                1







                                                                1. Iron Skillet (or another heavy pot/pan)

                                                                2. Cutting board

                                                                3. Rolling pin - really easy if you have the French tapered kind

                                                                4. Big can of tomatoes...

                                                                5. An empty wine bottle

                                                                6. A pool ball (the kind you use on a table...not in the water!)


                                                                Bon Appetit!






                                                                share|improve this answer















                                                                1. Iron Skillet (or another heavy pot/pan)

                                                                2. Cutting board

                                                                3. Rolling pin - really easy if you have the French tapered kind

                                                                4. Big can of tomatoes...

                                                                5. An empty wine bottle

                                                                6. A pool ball (the kind you use on a table...not in the water!)


                                                                Bon Appetit!







                                                                share|improve this answer














                                                                share|improve this answer



                                                                share|improve this answer








                                                                edited Dec 18 at 19:41









                                                                Erica

                                                                6,41664173




                                                                6,41664173










                                                                answered Dec 18 at 17:32









                                                                Hope 2 Help

                                                                111




                                                                111












                                                                • you forgot to list rock (run it through the dishwasher first)
                                                                  – hildred
                                                                  Dec 19 at 23:34


















                                                                • you forgot to list rock (run it through the dishwasher first)
                                                                  – hildred
                                                                  Dec 19 at 23:34
















                                                                you forgot to list rock (run it through the dishwasher first)
                                                                – hildred
                                                                Dec 19 at 23:34




                                                                you forgot to list rock (run it through the dishwasher first)
                                                                – hildred
                                                                Dec 19 at 23:34











                                                                0














                                                                First off, you'll definitely want your chicken between two sheets of plastic. You can either do this with two sheets of plastic wrap, or by putting it in a gallon ziplock bag (don't seal it though). The best alternative tool to use is a rolling pin as it's got no sharp edges (will break your plastic and can cut the chicken in half) and has weight and length to aid in leverage when whacking. Not everyone has a rolling pin, so if you don't just grab the largest heaviest can of food you have and slam it into the chicken. I wouldn't use any beverage cans, and especially not anything carbonated like soda or beer. I actually have a purpose built meat tenderizer and prefer using my rolling pin.






                                                                share|improve this answer


























                                                                  0














                                                                  First off, you'll definitely want your chicken between two sheets of plastic. You can either do this with two sheets of plastic wrap, or by putting it in a gallon ziplock bag (don't seal it though). The best alternative tool to use is a rolling pin as it's got no sharp edges (will break your plastic and can cut the chicken in half) and has weight and length to aid in leverage when whacking. Not everyone has a rolling pin, so if you don't just grab the largest heaviest can of food you have and slam it into the chicken. I wouldn't use any beverage cans, and especially not anything carbonated like soda or beer. I actually have a purpose built meat tenderizer and prefer using my rolling pin.






                                                                  share|improve this answer
























                                                                    0












                                                                    0








                                                                    0






                                                                    First off, you'll definitely want your chicken between two sheets of plastic. You can either do this with two sheets of plastic wrap, or by putting it in a gallon ziplock bag (don't seal it though). The best alternative tool to use is a rolling pin as it's got no sharp edges (will break your plastic and can cut the chicken in half) and has weight and length to aid in leverage when whacking. Not everyone has a rolling pin, so if you don't just grab the largest heaviest can of food you have and slam it into the chicken. I wouldn't use any beverage cans, and especially not anything carbonated like soda or beer. I actually have a purpose built meat tenderizer and prefer using my rolling pin.






                                                                    share|improve this answer












                                                                    First off, you'll definitely want your chicken between two sheets of plastic. You can either do this with two sheets of plastic wrap, or by putting it in a gallon ziplock bag (don't seal it though). The best alternative tool to use is a rolling pin as it's got no sharp edges (will break your plastic and can cut the chicken in half) and has weight and length to aid in leverage when whacking. Not everyone has a rolling pin, so if you don't just grab the largest heaviest can of food you have and slam it into the chicken. I wouldn't use any beverage cans, and especially not anything carbonated like soda or beer. I actually have a purpose built meat tenderizer and prefer using my rolling pin.







                                                                    share|improve this answer












                                                                    share|improve this answer



                                                                    share|improve this answer










                                                                    answered Dec 17 at 19:14









                                                                    Sdarb

                                                                    1,022519




                                                                    1,022519






























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