Coq Au Vin – Rock Out with Your Coq Out

Some recipes just shouldn't be translated to English. It's not that telling your guests they're having "Cock with Wine," sounds so bad, it's just that after dinner I want them tweeting about how great the dish tasted, not how funny/inappropriate the name was.

The other issue would be one of false advertising, since I have no idea where you get an old rooster these days. I like to use bone-in, skin-on chicken thighs instead, which I think work perfectly here. Like all braised dishes, tougher cuts with lots of connective tissue work best, and on a chicken that would be the thigh/leg section.

Of course, someone will ask if they can use chicken breasts, and technically you can, but please don't. They just will not add that sticky goodness to the braising liquid that the thighs will.

This really is a simple recipe, and all gets done in one pan, but there are several steps, as you build up fond after fond. Before any wine or stock hits the pan, we want a thick, gorgeous layer of caramelization, which is where much of this recipe's flavor comes from.

I don't want to sound cocky, but this really was delicious, and as I say in the video, the mushroom, bacon, and onion mixture alone is worth making this for. I hope you give it a try soon. And please, use the French name. Enjoy!

Ingredients for 2 large portions:

  • 8 oz sliced bacon
  • 6 bone-in, skin-on chicken thighs
  • salt and pepper to taste
  • *note: after cooking bacon and browning chicken, discard all but 1 tbsp of the fat before cooking the vegetables
  • 2 shallots, sliced
  • 1/2 large yellow onion, diced (traditionally they use pearl onions)
  • 10 large button mushrooms, quartered
  • 2 tsp butter
  • 2 tsp flour
  • 1 1/2 cups red wine
  • 1 cup chicken broth
  • 6 springs thyme
  • - Braise for about 1 hour 375, or until the thighs are tender
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