You can find Julia Child’s “Coq au vin” recipe in “Mastering the Art of French Cooking.” Although you can also find variations of her recipe online, you should own a copy of this book. Be warned, the book has dark side: the recipes are, yes, time consuming. The recipe layout is nice to cook from, but hard to distill into a shopping list. Many of the dishes involve serious amounts of fat, like Coq au vin, for instance, which calls for browning skin-on chicken in bacon fat and butter, and then adding all that fat to the braise (which you do eventually skim off). But the book also has a light side: it’s an incredible reference. Each recipe is a learning experience. The results are masterful.
I’m giving you an ingredient list and an extremely brief version of the instructions. Get the book.
Ingredients:
3-4 oz. lean bacon[1]
2 Tbs butter
2½-3 lbs cut-up frying chicken
½ tsp salt[2]
⅛ tsp pepper
¼ cup cognac
3 cups young, full-bodied red wine
1 to 2 cups brown chicken stock
½ Tbs tomato paste
2 cloves mashed garlic
¼ tsp thyme
1 bay leaf
12 to 24 brown-braised onions
½ lb sautéed mushrooms
3 Tbs flour
2 Tbs softened butter
Springs of fresh parsley
Directions:
- Lightly brown the bacon. Add the butter. Brown the chicken.[3] Burn off the cognac. Add ingredients: wine through bay.[4]
- Brown the onions and mushrooms.
- Reduce the liquid, thicken it with roux.
Notes:
Although this dish is traditionally accompanied by potatoes, it pairs nicely with quinoa. Carrots would be a fantastic addition to the onions and mushrooms.
This would be an excellent reason to buy a whole chicken and cut it up into parts; and that would be a great way to save money, right? Wrong! Here’s a whole chicken, cut up into parts, including the giblets:
And here’s a close-up of the pricing label:
$1.18 a pound. Now check out this whole chicken, same producer:
$1.19! It’s a penny more to have them not cut it up for you!
This kind of bums me out, because I love hacking a whole chicken to pieces, but now I have to pay 6¢ to do it! Damnit! The cut-up version even came with giblets. But getting back to the recipe, this Serious Eats article is pretty informative, and I when I make this dish, I like to take a few of its tips and add them to Julia’s masterful work. One of them is to let the chicken marinate in the wine while you’re prepping and cooking the bacon. (Three cups of wine, by the way, is just shy of a full bottle. Don’t fret over this; just use the whole bottle.) Place the chicken into a fairly large bowl, breasts on bottom, and pour the whole bottle of wine over it. When it comes time to brown the chicken, make sure to pat it dry with paper towels, diligently, so that you really get the chicken dry. Don’t discard the wine; use it for the braise.
If you have any leftover, let me suggest removing the meat from the bones and storing it separately from the veggies and sauce. The next day, or in a few days, place the chicken over some quinoa, rice, or couscous. Top it with the veggies and sauce, and nuke until hot.
Annotations:
Notes on Julia Child’s “Coq au vin”
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Looks like your dish came out nicely! Love your suggestion of adding carrots, too. I really need to get my hands on this book!
Thanks, Patricia. It did! And you should! I found mine at a 2nd hand store, years ago, and got it for just a couple of bucks. Cheers!
It should be on every cook’s shelf.