How to Cut an Airline Chicken Breast

A chicken breast with the first joint of the wing still attached boosts your presentation while also delivering juicier meat.

By
J. Kenji López-Alt
Kenji Lopez Alt
Culinary Consultant
Kenji is the former culinary director for Serious Eats and a current culinary consultant for the site. He is also a New York Times food columnist and the author of The Food Lab: Better Home Cooking Through Science.
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Updated March 20, 2023
An airline-cut chicken breast resting on a cutting board.

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An airline chicken breast, also known as a Statler chicken breast or a chicken suprême, is a chicken breast with the first joint of the wing still attached. If I'm serving a whole chicken breast, I prefer airline breasts over regular boneless breasts, both for the presentation factor (that bone sticking out just looks so cool), and for the juicier meat it produces. Bones don't actually add flavor to meat, but they can moderate heat flow within the cooking breast, ensuring that the fattest part of the breast cooks more gently and evenly.

An airline chicken breast should work in any basic pan-seared chicken breast recipe. You just need to add a little bit of extra time to account for the extra mass when cooking it.

While most butchers should be able to prepare airline breasts for you, it's much more satisfying (not to mention cost-effective) to do it yourself. Start with a whole chicken and you'll end up with a couple of extra wings, a whole carcass, and two legs to use for future meals and stocks.

Here's how you do it.

Step 1: Prep Your Station

A whole chicken resting on a cutting board, with a pair of hands flanking it.

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Start with a whole chicken, a sharp boning knife or chef's knife, and a large, clean cutting board. That chicken's gonna need some space to move.

Step 2: Stretch the Wing

A hand lifting one wing of the entire chicken in preparation of cutting it.

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The first step in the process is to remove a portion of wings, leaving just the first joint and the meaty part of the drumette attached. Start by stretching out the wing to expose the skin around the drumette.

Step 3: Slice to the Bone

A boning knife slicing off the top part of a chicken wing, which is still attached to a whole chicken.

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Place the bottom of your boning knife near the center of the drumette and slice until it hits the bone. The goal here is to completely cut the meat, skin, and tendons surrounding that bone.

A boning knife being run across the bone connecting a chicken wing to the body of a chicken.

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The trick is to keep your knife in the same position and rotate the bird around in a circle. This is much easier than trying to shimmy your knife around in an awkward rotation.

Two hands gripping a whole chicken, with the cleaned bone of the chicken wing being shown. This technique, called Frenching, is done for presentation.

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Rotate the chicken by twisting it with the wing in your grip until you've completely cut through to the bone.

Step 4: Remove the Wing

Two hands gripping a whole chicken, in order to separate the Frenched wing from the body of the chicken.

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Grab the wing tip flat in your hand and bend it backwards firmly.

The top of the chicken wing pulled away from the Frenched bone.

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It should pop right off, exposing a clean bone. Here's a quick animated GIF of the process:

Easy, right?

Step 5: Separate the Breast From the Breast Bone

A boning knife inserted into a chicken along the breast bone, to remove the chicken breasts.

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Once both wing portions have been removed, turn the chicken onto its back and insert your boning knife into the breast on one side of the breast bone, trying to stay as close to the bone as possible.

A boning knife slicing off a chicken breast from the body of a whole chicken.

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Pull back on the chicken breast as you work your knife in until the sternum is exposed. As you continue removing the breast, you should use just the very tip of your knife with short, shallow strokes, letting your hand and gravity do most of the work of removing the breast.

A whole chicken breast being removed from a chicken.

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Keep the knife tip hugging the bones as closely as possible until the breast is fully released (you'll have to cut through the skin that connects it to the legs).

Step 6: Work Through the Joint

A boning knife cutting through a bone.

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Once you've removed the meat from the breast bone, your last goal is to separate the wing bone from the carcass. To do this, twist the wing around until you can locate the joint, then use the tip of your knife to cut through any tough tendons and other connective tissue holding it in place.

A hand holding part of a chicken as a boning knife slices into it.

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Lift the breast and the wing joint in one piece and slide your knife through, separating the entire cut from the rest of the chicken.

A whole, skin-on, bone-in airline chicken breast separated from the body of a chicken.

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Ready to Cook

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If you'd like, you can now remove the tenderloin (the small piece of meat underneath the breast) by pulling it away with your hands. I prefer to leave it attached to give a slightly larger full breast for serving. Your airline chicken breast is now ready to cook. Now is a good time to warn your guests about how awesome dinner is going to be.

April 2015

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