Coq Au Riesling
- 1 cup bacon lardons
- 1 leek, finely sliced
- 12 skinless chicken thighs or 2 3/4 pounds thigh fillets
- 3 bay leaves
- 10 ounces oyster mushrooms torn into strips (4 cups)
- 1 bottle Riesling
- Salt and freshly ground black pepper
- 1 to 2 tablespoons freshly chopped dill leaves
- Buttered noodles, optional
- I have always loved the Alsatian version of coq au vin and this is it in a stunningly streamlined version.
- I replace the onion with leek, buy lardons ready cubed and buy chicken thighs.
- The brown meat is always best in a stew.
- In fact, nearly always best full stop.
- I don't bother to sear the meat, which really means you need skinless portions; unbrowned chicken skin is not pretty.
- If you're not buying thighs, but thigh fillets then it is probably more helpful to think in terms of boned weight, rather than number of portions: go, here, for about a kilo and a quarter/ two and three quarter pounds.
- 2 tablespoons garlic oil
- Heat the oil in a casserole or large wide pan and fry the lardons until crisp.
- Add the sliced leeks and soften them with the lardons for a minute or so.
- Tip in the chicken thighs, bay leaves, torn mushrooms and wine.
- Season with salt and pepper and bring to the boil, cover the pan and simmer gently for an hour.
- Like all stews this tastes its mellowest best if you let it get cold and then reheat the next day.
- But it's no hardship to eat straight off.
- Whichever, serve sprinkled with dill and with some buttered noodles, if using.
bacon lardons, chicken, bay leaves, mushrooms, salt, freshly chopped, buttered noodles
Taken from www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/coq-au-riesling-recipe.html (may not work)