Fried Chicken Cordon Bleu, Southern-Style
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Y’all are gonna love my Southern spin on this classic. My fried chicken cordon bleu recipe includes chicken breast coated in crushed Ritz crackers, fried, and then stuffed with pimento cheese. It’s simultaneously crunchy, tender, and ooey-gooey goodness!
Now, let me first just say I KNOW this isn’t a traditional chicken cordon bleu as there’s no ham or swiss cheese in sight. However, this is chicken cordon bleu with a Southern twist, and let me tell y’all, it’s so good!
Instead of coating our chicken breast with breadcrumbs, we use crushed Ritz crackers (if this sounds delicious, check out my Ritz cracker chicken recipe). Then instead of stuffing it with deli ham and swiss cheese, we’re going to use the one and only Southern favorite… pimento cheese. I could eat this stuff all day every day.
Now, instead of baking, we’re making fried chicken cordon bleu, because this is a Southern take on classic chicken cordon bleu, after all. Frying the chicken makes the Ritz cracker coating so deliciously crunchy that you’re going to fall in love at first bite! The flavor and texture combination of the crunchy coating and ooey-gooey cheese is just irresistible.
This fried chicken cordon bleu recipe is very easy to follow and will be ready in no time at all. I’ve included some serving suggestions below, but I hope you make this for a weeknight supper sometime soon. I have a feeling your family will love it!
Recipe Ingredients
- Ritz crackers (generic are fine)
- Oil for frying
- Eggs
- Boneless skinless chicken breast
- Pimento cheese
How to Make Fried Chicken Cordon Bleu, Southern-Style
Before you get started, pour oil to a depth of 1/2 an inch in a large skillet and put it over medium-high heat.
Set up a little breading station with a bowl of crushed Ritz crackers, a bowl of beaten eggs, your chicken, and a plate to put it on.
Dip each piece of chicken into the beaten egg on both sides.
Then press it into the cracker crumbs.
Reduce the heat under your skillet to medium and carefully add your chicken to it.
Cook until golden brown (about 7 to 9 minutes), then turn and cook until golden brown on the other side and the chicken is no longer pink in the center.
Like this.
Remove to a paper towel-lined plate.
Using a fork to hold the chicken rather than your hands, cut a nice slice into the side of each piece of chicken to form a pocket.
Like so.
Carefully stuff that pocket with a few tablespoons of pimento cheese. This puppy right here is holding about four tablespoons.
I just put a big old spoonful in there one at a time until I feel like I have all I can get in there.
Prop stuffed chicken pieces up on their sides in a small baking pan or an 8×8 baking dish.
Put this in a 350-degree oven for about 5 minutes or until the cheese melts a bit on the outside. Since the chicken is hot, you know it will be nicely melted on the inside, too.
Enjoy this wonderful fried chicken cordon bleu, Southern-style.
I’ve included serving suggestions below, but this time I just did simple green beans and potatoes.
Storage
- Store leftovers in an airtight container in the fridge for up to 4 days. Reheat in the oven or air fryer at 350 degrees until heated through.
Recipe Notes
- You can make your cheese from scratch using your own recipe, my spicy pimento cheese recipe, my grandmama’s recipe, or you can just go buy some.
- This recipe is for two boneless skinless breasts so double it if you want to make four. Now keep in mind that you don’t have to stuff all of your chicken, you can just fry some and leave it be. I say this because my daughter loves fried chicken but she is at that point in her life where, if it looks funny, she won’t eat it. So I just stuff enough for me and the hubs and leave the kids as is.
- I won’t tell anyone if you want to be traditional and add a slice of ham to each pocket before loading it with pimento cheese. I also won’t tell anyone if you want to substitute the pimento cheese for swiss cheese or even mozzarella cheese.
Recipe FAQs
What’s the best oil for frying?
Vegetable oil, peanut oil, and canola oil are all great oils for deep frying due to their high smoke points.
What do you serve with chicken cordon bleu?
You can serve your fried chicken cordon bleu with so many different sides:
- Something filling like rice, quinoa, or your favorite pasta.
- Potatoes, whether that’s mashed potato, cheesy garlic mashed potatoes, or fried potatoes.
- Fries, like roasted sweet potato wedges, baked zucchini fries, or parmesan fries.
- Salad. I recommend my recipe for the best German potato salad or something fresh like my summer corn salad.
- Steamed or roasted vegetables. This could be something as simple as steamed broccoli florets, my simple zucchini and squash recipe, or grilled asparagus.
What’s in classic chicken cordon bleu sauce?
The classic chicken cordon bleu sauce is a creamy dijon sauce made from butter, minced garlic or garlic powder, flour or cornstarch for thickening, dijon mustard, milk for creaminess, salt and pepper for seasoning, and shredded parmesan cheese (which is totally optional).
What’s the difference between chicken kiev and chicken cordon bleu?
The two recipes are actually very similar and both included breaded chicken breast that’s either baked or fried. However, while chicken kiev is stuffed with chilled butter, chicken cordon bleu is traditionally stuffed with ham and cheese.
How do you make baked chicken cordon bleu?
If you’d prefer to make baked chicken cordon bleu, preheat the oven to 450 degrees and lightly grease a 9×13 baking dish or a baking sheet. Then place the breaded chicken onto the pan, spray lightly with cooking spray, and cook for 25 to 30 minutes until golden brown. Then follow the directions above for adding the stuffing.
You may also like these easy chicken recipes:
Broccoli and Cheese Stuffed Chicken Breast
Chicken Planks (Like Chicken Fingers, Only Better)
Southern Fried Chicken Recipe (Fuss-Free)
Ingredients
- 2 boneless skinless chicken breasts about 1 pound of chicken
- 1 sleeve crushed Ritz crackers
- 2 beaten eggs
- 1/2 cup pimento cheese
- oil for frying
Instructions
- Pour oil to a depth of about 1/2 an inch into a large frying pan and place over medium-high heat while you prepare the chicken.oil for frying
- Crush the crackers and pour them into a pie plate or shallow bowl.1 sleeve crushed Ritz crackers
- Beat the eggs and pour them into a separate pie plate or shallow bowl.2 beaten eggs
- Dip each piece of chicken into eggs and then press into crushed crackers on both sides.2 boneless skinless chicken breasts
- Reduce temperature to medium and carefully add chicken pieces to the skillet. Cook until golden brown (7-9 minutes) and then carefully flip and cook until the other side is browned and the chicken is no longer pink in the center.
- Remove to a paper towel-lined plate. Using a fork to hold the hot chicken, carefully slice a pocket in the side of each chicken breast with a serrated knife. Stuff each pocket with a few tablespoons of pimento cheese. Prop pieces up on their sides, cheese stuffed side up, in an 8x8 baking dish. Place in a 350-degree oven for 5 minutes to slightly melt the cheese.1/2 cup pimento cheese
- Remove from oven and serve warm. Enjoy!
Nutrition
“Courage is what it takes to stand up and speak. Courage is also what it takes to sit down and listen.”
~Winston Churchill
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I not only love your recipes but love your writings. This made me think of my Dad which I do every day I think, he told me that it didn’t matter if someone was a king or a ditch digger that you didn’t have to set on the throne with them or get down in the ditch with them that as long as they treated you nice you treat them nice. I have told my children this and have tried to treat everyone with respect and caring. He came from a very large family, 13 children plus raising 2 nephews, he did not finish school but was one of the smartest men I have known.
Thank you so much for sharing. God Bless.
He was a smart man indeed Charlotte! I like his way of thinking!!
Oh, my word! She did not just stuff a chicken breast with pimento cheese! lol That’s funny and pretty cool at the same time. I loves me some fried chicken, and I loves me some pimento cheese (and does anyone actually read that “pih-men-ttoe”? Nah, we know how it’s pronounced 🙂 ) Well, I’ll probably never have gumption to try it, but it sounds great. And, hats off, God bless them rednecks!! Best folks around, hands down! Thanks for another great post, Christy!
THIS LOOKS SO GOOD.THANKS FOR YOUR WISDOM,WAITING FOR YOUR BOOK.WE LOVE YOU
Love this recipe. I’m a NYC Yankee by birth, but southern (SC) by the grace of God. I put my own spin on this years ago. I love pimento cheese but not cream cheese. I make my own with Cheeze-Whiz, mayo, pimentos and spices. I also dice 4 strips of medium thick bacon and render that in the pan first. With a slotted spoon, remove the cooked bacon and reserve for later use. I then add Crisco to the pan for frying the chicken. When all is said and done, I mix the bacon and some diced ham to a few tbsp’s of the cheese mixture. Then stuff the chicken. I like to put it in a 400 deg. oven for a few minutes, to let everything come together. Then it’s time to give thanks and enjoy. God bless.
I’m not a huge fan of pimento cheese. I’m told I make some of the BEST around. But one day needed a cheese spread so I turned to my dill pickle relish, and I will make em with that n some smoked ham! Love this idea. Thank you!
Christy: I made this for dinner Wed. night, baking the chicken breats, standing
on their sides, like we mentioned before. Just delicious! I was intimidated about slicing the pockets in the hot chicken. NO PROBLEM at all, I just watched you and learned.
I made the pimiento cheese, shredding about 4 oz of Cheddar, mixing with a drained, 2 oz jar of pimientos and oh, maybe about 1/3 cup of real mayo.
I’d like to add that I recently got a tip to spray cooking spray on your grater before using it for cheese. As promised, it went smoother with no clumping at all.
Thanks again for all the good stuff, Christy.
I am so glad to hear it turned out great!!!
Christy….I always give you credit for your recipes, of course. I love turning folks onto the website and I trust you don’t mind that I start all my posts off with the words…”my friend, Christy Jordan has this wonderful recipe you have to try”. I feel you are MY friend as well as all these fabulous fans of yours and I hope the familiarity doesn’t offend. I don’t think that will be the case! Love the whole experience of having Christy as my friend. Love ya girlfriend….Carol
Oh my goodness, we are definitely friends Carol and I am so proud to call you MY friend. I think I would be more offended if you didn’t consider me your friend. ~HUGS~