Coq Au Riesling Over Noodles
- 4 tablespoons butter
- 2 tablespoons oil
- Flour
- 8 chicken drumsticks and thighs
- 1/4 pound salt pork, diced small
- 1 pound mushrooms
- 8 shallots, chopped fine
- 24 small white onions, peeled
- 3 carrots, cleaned and cut in rounds
- 1/2 cup Cognac
- Salt and freshly ground black pepper
- 2 cloves garlic, minced
- 2 cups white wine
- 1 pound fine noodles
- Chopped parsley
- Heat the butter and oil in a heavy skillet.
- Lightly flour the chicken pieces and brown them over medium-high heat, a few at a time, removing them to a large casserole as they are browned.
- In the fat remaining in the skillet, render the salt pork by cooking it until the fat has melted and the pieces of pork are brown and crisp.
- Add the mushrooms, shallots, onions, and carrots and toss them in the fat until they are lightly browned.
- Add them to the chicken pieces in the casserole.
- In a small saucepan, heat the Cognac.
- Pour it over the chicken and vegetables and set it afire.
- Baste the chicken with the blazing Cognac until the flames have died down, and season with salt, pepper, and garlic.
- Add the wine and simmer, covered, for 20 minutes.
- If the sauce seems too thin, thicken it with a beurre manie made of equal parts of butter and flour worked together with a fork and then dropped, bit by bit, into the simmering sauce.
- Cook and drain the noodles.
- Make a bed of the cooked noodles on a heated platter.
- Arrange the chicken and vegetables on them, spoon on the sauce, and sprinkle everything with chopped parsley.
- VARIATIONS:
- If they are available in your part of the country, cut up 2 guinea hens.
- Test for tenderness.
- Follow the rule for the chicken.
- Several kinds of game hens may be prepared the same way.
- Game hens should, if they are large, be cut in half.
- You will need 1/2 game hen per person.
- They will cook in approximately the same time after browning in the skillet.
- Quail will take less time but they are most satisfactory in flavor.
- Gauge at least 2 per person.
- Watch them very carefully lest they overcook.
butter, oil, flour, chicken, salt pork, mushrooms, shallots, white onions, carrots, cognac, salt, garlic, white wine, noodles, parsley
Taken from www.cookstr.com/recipes/coq-au-riesling-over-noodles (may not work)