Easy coq au vin

Holiday-at-home recipe for 4 - 8 people, takes only 50 mins; recipe has chicken, plain flour, olive oil, streaky bacon, onion, carrot, leek, shallot, rosemary, thyme, bay leaf, cognac, red wine, chicken stock and mushroom.

Easy coq au vin

Easy coq au vin

Recipe by Chef Soomro Course: Holiday-at-home
Servings

4 - 8

servings
Prep time

35 mins

Ingredients

  • Red Wine: 1 bottle red wine, preferably from Burgundy
  • Olive Oil: 75ml olive oil
  • Streaky Bacon: 250g smoked streaky bacon, cut in pieces
  • Onion: 1 onion, chopped
  • Carrot: 2 carrots, peeled and roughly chopped
  • Chicken: 1 x 1.3kg organic chicken, jointed into 8 (see steps and method)
  • Bay Leaf: 2 bay leaves
  • Thyme: 2 sprigs fresh thyme
  • Shallot: 250g shallot, peeled, but left whole
  • Chicken Stock: 100ml chicken stock (preferably homemade (see Know-how below)
  • Rosemary: 2 sprigs fresh rosemary
  • Leek: 2 leeks, trimmed, washed and roughly chopped
  • Plain Flour: 5 tbsp plain flour
  • Mushroom: 250g fresh cep mushroom or large chestnut mushrooms, trimmed and thickly sliced
  • Cognac: 100ml cognac

Directions

  1. Joint the chicken (for pictures of jointing, click on step by step link above or read the instructions below. Alternatively, ask the butcher to do it for you).
  2. JOINTING THE CHICKEN: Pull out the wing joints and cut off the wing tip. Using a small knife, cut around the skin and flesh on the lower wing joint through to the bone, then scrape back the flesh. Using a heavier large knife, smash through the bone halfway along and detach. Repeat on the other side.
  3. Detach the scaly leg bone at the drumstick with a hefty thump of the large knife. Slash through skin where the thigh joins the body and pull leg firmly from socket to dislocate the thigh bone. Press down and pull to expose the 'oyster' muscle underneath the bird. Slice the thigh away from the back of the body.
  4. Lay the whole leg joint out on the board, find the mid-point socket joint and simply cut straight through it for neat thigh and leg joints. Repeat on the other side.
  5. Cut through the skin and flesh halfway along to the drumstick and scrape back the flesh, then smash through the bone.
  6. Using poultry scissors or heavy kitchen scissors, cut away the back half of the breast carcass, to leave a 'crown' of chicken breast and wing joint. Cut through the top of the crown to divide in half for two chicken breasts.
  7. Lay each breast joint on the board, then cut in half again at right angles so you have one portion with a wing joint and one without. You should now have eight neat, joints of chicken.
  8. Put the flour into a bowl with some salt and pepper, then toss in the chicken, shaking off the excess. Place the chicken on a plate and season again.
  9. Heat 4 tbsp of oil in a large shallow pan and brown the chicken joints. (Do this in batches if your pan is not large enough, adding extra oil if necessary.) Tip the bacon into the pan along with the chicken, stirring until lightly browned and crisp. Using tongs, remove the chicken to a plate.
  10. Add all the vegetables and herbs to the bacon with a splash more oil, if necessary, then cook for about 5 mins, stirring once or twice. Pour in the Cognac and bubble up, scraping the pan to deglaze, for 2-3 mins. Then pour in all the wine and bring to the boil.
  11. Tip in the chicken joints; press into the pan so they are immersed in liquid and cook, uncovered, for 10 mins, until the wine has reduced by half. Pour in the stock, return to a simmer, season and cook, uncovered, for 1 hr until the liquid has reduced by half and the chicken is tender. Set aside for 10 mins before serving.
  12. Heat another 4 tbsp oil in a large frying pan and, when hot, fry the mushrooms for about 8 mins, seasoning well and stirring frequently until nicely browned. Remove and drain on kitchen paper. Serve the chicken in bowls with vegetables and sauce spooned over, and top with the mushrooms.