Coq Au Vin
Coq Au Vin

Hey everyone, it’s me, Dave, welcome to our recipe site. Today, we’re going to prepare a special dish, coq au vin. One of my favorites food recipes. For mine, I am going to make it a bit unique. This will be really delicious.

Coq au vin is a French dish of chicken braised with wine, lardons, mushrooms, and optionally garlic. A red Burgundy wine is typically used, though many regions of France make variants using local wines, such as coq au vin jaune (Jura), coq au Riesling (Alsace), coq au pourpre or coq au violet. Ina Garten makes Coq au Vin, a French chicken and wine dish with mushrooms and bacon.

Coq Au Vin is one of the most favored of recent trending meals on earth. It is easy, it is fast, it tastes delicious. It’s enjoyed by millions every day. They’re nice and they look fantastic. Coq Au Vin is something that I have loved my whole life.

To get started with this particular recipe, we have to prepare a few components. You can cook coq au vin using 15 ingredients and 16 steps. Here is how you cook it.

The ingredients needed to make Coq Au Vin:
  1. Get 500 ml Red Wine
  2. Get 25 ml Brandy (optional)
  3. Take 1 Carrot
  4. Make ready 2 Red Onions
  5. Get 6 Chicken thighs
  6. Get 3 rashers Thick Cut Streaky Bacon
  7. Make ready Butter
  8. Take 250 ml Chicken Stock
  9. Get 250 grams Button Mushrooms
  10. Take 2 cloves Garlic
  11. Make ready 3 sprigs Thyme
  12. Make ready 2 Bay Leaves
  13. Take Parsley
  14. Take 3 Large Potatoes (for the mash)
  15. Get Flour/Corn Starch (to thicken the sauce)

I love coq au vin with buttered egg noodles, mashed potatoes, or a good crusty bread — basically anything to soak up the full-flavored sauce. If you like my Beef Bourguignon, you'll love this recipe, too. Coq Au Vin or rooster with wine is a classic French dish that isn't as complicated as it sounds. Chicken is braised in a silky wine sauce and finished off with butter for the most perfect sauce.

Instructions to make Coq Au Vin:
  1. Cook some diced bacon (or lardons) in a Dutch oven on the hub with a bit of butter and oil (the oil helps stop the butter from burning).
  2. Once cooked remove the bacon with a slotted spoon so the fat stays in the pan.
  3. Next cook some chicken (thighs are best with this), skin down in the same pan/dutch oven.
  4. Once the chicken has a bit of colour to it, remove it.
  5. Next add mushrooms (as many as you like halved), carrots (1 diced), red onions (2 quartered) and a couple of cloves of garlic (minced) to the same pan.
  6. Cook until the onions have caramelized and the mushrooms have a bit of colour to them then add a shot of brandy (optional).
  7. Next add about 500ml of red wine to it with about 250ml of chicken stock (modify measurements as needed. Its 2/3 wine to 1/3 chicken stock)
  8. Once it starts to simmer add back the chicken and bacon. Then add a few sprigs of thyme, couple of bay leaves and season to taste.
  9. Next place the Dutch oven (with the lid on) in the oven at gas mark 4 (180°C/350°F) and cook for about two hours. (Remove the lid for the last 30 minutes).
  10. Once the two hours are up remove the Dutch oven from the oven and place back onto the hub and remove the chicken. If the liquid still needs a bit more reducing, do that now.
  11. Next skim off any fat, remove the thyme and bay leaves and add some corn starch to thicken the sauce. Ideally you should use Beurre manié, but corn starch will be fine.
  12. Once the sauce is at the desired thickness add the chicken back to warm it though with some chopped parsley.
  13. Serve with mashed potatoes.
  14. Tip#
  15. I used a baked potato to make the mash. Just place the potato/s in the top of the oven with the Coq au vin. 2hrs at gas mark 4 (180°C/350°F) will give you a nice fluffy potato.
  16. Once the potato is cooked, cut it in half and scrape out the innards with a spoon and place into a bowl. Next add a splash of milk and a knob of butter and mash with a fork. I also like adding a small amount of english mustard to my mash.

This classic peasant stew hails from the French region of Burgundy. Just because Coq Au Vin is French and it takes time (it really does), that doesn't mean it's out of reach. Add mushrooms and chicken to sauce. Learn how to make traditional Coq Au Vin (chicken in red wine) with this delicious French recipe. It's surprisingly easy to make, and slow-simmered in the most heavenly, rich, and flavorful red wine sauce.

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