Coq au Vin Blanc Recipe (2024)

By Florence Fabricant

Coq au Vin Blanc Recipe (1)

Total Time
1 hour 20 minutes
Rating
5(450)
Notes
Read community notes

Just as Oregon borrows from Burgundy in vineyards planted with pinot noirs and chardonnays, that region also inspires dinner. The iconic boeuf bourguignon would not be the best choice with chardonnay, but this version of coq au vin, replacing Chambertin with chardonnay, couldn’t be better. I went light with it, omitting the bacon lardons. And I gave a nod to Oregon’s truffle crop by finishing the sauce with a gloss of black truffle butter. It’s a modest investment that elevates the dish. A generous slab of unsalted butter (especially if it’s high-fat European-style) could also bolster the sauce, though with less foxy intrigue.

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Ingredients

Yield:4 servings.

  • 1tablespoon grape-seed oil
  • 13½-pound chicken, in 10 pieces without backbone, dried
  • Salt and ground white pepper
  • 8ounces white pearl onions, blanched 3 minutes and peeled
  • 1medium onion, finely chopped
  • ¼cup finely chopped celery
  • 4cloves garlic, sliced
  • 9ounces oyster mushrooms, trimmed, clumps separated
  • ¾cup chardonnay
  • 1tablespoon lemon juice
  • 2tablespoons butter (unsalted or black truffle)
  • 1tablespoon minced tarragon

Ingredient Substitution Guide

Nutritional analysis per serving (4 servings)

761 calories; 50 grams fat; 16 grams saturated fat; 0 grams trans fat; 19 grams monounsaturated fat; 11 grams polyunsaturated fat; 14 grams carbohydrates; 3 grams dietary fiber; 5 grams sugars; 54 grams protein; 1426 milligrams sodium

Note: The information shown is Edamam’s estimate based on available ingredients and preparation. It should not be considered a substitute for a professional nutritionist’s advice.

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Coq au Vin Blanc Recipe (2)

Preparation

  1. Step

    1

    Heat the oil on medium-high in a 4-quart stovetop casserole or sauté pan. Add the chicken, skin side down, as many pieces as fit comfortably. Cook until lightly browned, season with salt and pepper and turn to brown other side. Remove to a platter when done and repeat with the remaining chicken.

  2. Step

    2

    Add the pearl onions to casserole and toss in fat until lightly browned. Remove to a dish. Reduce heat to low. Add the chopped onion, celery and garlic, cook until softened, and stir in the mushrooms. When they wilt, add the wine, bring to a simmer and season with salt, pepper and lemon juice. Return chicken to casserole with any accumulated juices, baste, cover and cook 30 minutes, basting a few more times. Remove the chicken to a platter.

  3. Step

    3

    Increase heat to medium-high and cook the sauce and mushrooms about 5 minutes, until sauce thickens slightly. Lower heat, add the pearl onions and butter. When butter melts, check seasonings, return chicken to casserole, baste and simmer a few minutes. Serve from casserole or transfer to a deep platter. Scatter the tarragon on top before serving.

Ratings

5

out of 5

450

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Private Notes

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Cooking Notes

John B.

Very good but definitely a weekend dish time-wise. Adding in the prep time brought it closer to 2 hours start to finish. We rendered some chopped pancetta initially to add depth (in lieu of the grapeseed oil) but left the cooked pancetta out of the dish

Aviatrixkim

I needed a great campfire recipe to feed a cabin-raising crew, and this was a wild success. If you have a spare autumn afternoon in the woods, a cast-iron Dutch oven, a stack of dry wood, and lots more wine than the recipe calls for, this dish is your go-to. You get accolades from the grateful framing crew, when all you really did was sip wine and tend a fire for 3 hrs. Win-win. Pairs well w/ arugula salad (use Sam Sifton's buttermilk blue cheese dressing) & Pierre Franey's sauteed potatoes.

Michele

@Sacranento Fan - The purpose of browning the chicken is to create a fond - the carmelized brown bits and fat left in the pot when you brown chicken that is then deglazed with the wine and stock. The fond adds a tremendous amount of flavor.

Paul M

Made 3 times. Great summer dish. Prefer the lardons over grapeseed oil. Made it both ways.

Allison

"Definitely a weekend dish timewise (2h+)"

helen

Carmalize the onions well!Brown the chicken skin side down well to crispy

Lydia

I seriously doubt this is an 80 min recipe. 5 min to chop chicken, 10 min to blanch & prep onions, 7*2 min minimum to brown the chicken, plus a few extra mins for transferring. The time is unstated for cooking the onions, but we all know that never happens as quickly at home as a recipe says - I say 10 min minimum to cook the chopped onions, celery, the mushrooms, add wine & cook down before the chicken goes back. Few braises take just 30 min, Then five plus a few…. Not a recipe for weeknights.

Briana

This produced a delicious dinner, with the most heavenly, savory, well-balanced sauce. My only gripe is I wish there was more, so I think next time I will add some chicken stock in with the wine, or maybe just more wine. I used olive oil instead of grapeseed, turned out just fine. I think the taste is light and reminiscent of a piccata without the addition of lardons.

larrybb

Truly delicious and inspired. While the preparation took 3-4 hours, the end result was satisfying. We used lardons and added carrots and doubled the mushrooms. It was well cooked and seasoned and. I would make it again and again

K.W.

This was delicious! Cooked per the recipe, with a few small exceptions. I blanched the pearl onions and then peeled them, browned them in the pan, and added a small amount of salted butter when I set them aside. Also added salt and pepper to the vegetables as I was cooking, not just where indicated in the recipe. It was seasoned perfectly. I was able to find truffle butter at a local grocery store, and it made the dish.

Sarah

Excellent dish, decided to carmelize pearl onions and add at the end of the dish. Tarragon is a bit strong, added time as well.

Hannah

Amazing. Restaurant quality. Used Cornish game hens, boiler onions, and was liberal with seasonings. Prep to finish 3 hrs. Definitely will be on regular meal rotation. Added a few red potatoes on onion step.

Sharon de Cook

Next time, I will follow this recipe more closely. I relied on comments and other recipes, and did not quite get the point here. My bad. Still, the good: get rid of chicken skin if making ahead and reheating. Use frozen pearl onions.The uncertain: Not sure that this works for make-ahead. Texture of oyster mushrooms weird. Only use one kind of mushroom. The bad: Do not use lardon to keep it light. Do not use tomato paste (wrong color)!It has potential. I overworked it.

Bob

Made this now 4 or 5 times. Love this recipe, last time I added some shiitakes from the fridge. I also now brown the pearl onions in oil and butter Julia style, then add them at the end after adding butter to the sauce. We love this recipe and it is now one of our staples.

Aviatrixkim

I needed a great campfire recipe to feed a cabin-raising crew, and this was a wild success. If you have a spare autumn afternoon in the woods, a cast-iron Dutch oven, a stack of dry wood, and lots more wine than the recipe calls for, this dish is your go-to. You get accolades from the grateful framing crew, when all you really did was sip wine and tend a fire for 3 hrs. Win-win. Pairs well w/ arugula salad (use Sam Sifton's buttermilk blue cheese dressing) & Pierre Franey's sauteed potatoes.

Michele

@Sacranento Fan - The purpose of browning the chicken is to create a fond - the carmelized brown bits and fat left in the pot when you brown chicken that is then deglazed with the wine and stock. The fond adds a tremendous amount of flavor.

Sacramento Fan

Not sure why bother browning and crisping the chicken skin if it is going to be steamed (covered casserole) and basted? Skin will be soggy with all that moisture, even if it is a bit browner. What's the thinking here please?

Paul M

Made 3 times. Great summer dish. Prefer the lardons over grapeseed oil. Made it both ways.

Bogdan

I’ve also started cooking by rendering the fat off some Kaiser (smoked East-European style pork belly) and adding them back on at simmer time. They add another layer of flavour to this already excellent dish. It was really worth the time spent in the kitchen.

Allison

"Definitely a weekend dish timewise (2h+)"

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Coq au Vin Blanc Recipe (2024)

FAQs

Is coq au vin better with red or white wine? ›

What wine to drink with coq au vin? Most often, regional dishes go very well with wines from the same terroir or from nearby lands. To keep all the flavors, prefer a dry red wine from the same region as the question. Lean on a dry red Bordeaux wine to consume your dish.

How do you thicken coq au vin sauce? ›

Use 1 tbsp flour and 1 tbsp butter to start and whisk it in bit by bit, then make more if you need to. Make sure you boil the liquid for a couple of minutes to cook out any raw flour. Use this method in our coq au vin recipe.

What is a good starter for coq au vin? ›

Here are a few more side salad options that I think will go well with a hearty main like Coq au Vin:
  • Pomegranate Salad & Holiday Salad Marathon!
  • Bitter Leaf and Orange Salad.
  • Everyday Salad Dressing.
  • All Vegetable & Salad Sides.
  • French Salad Dressing (French Vinaigrette)
  • French Bistro Salad.
  • The Garden Salad.
  • Spring Salad!
Sep 1, 2021

What is coq au vin called in English? ›

Coq au vin (/ˌkɒk oʊ ˈvæ̃/; French: [kɔk o vɛ̃], "rooster/co*ck with wine") is a French dish of chicken braised with wine, lardons, mushrooms, and optionally garlic.

Why does my coq au vin taste bitter? ›

If your Coq au Vin tastes bitter, it could be due to over-reducing the wine or burning the garlic. Ensure you're using good quality wine and adjust the cooking time and temperature accordingly to prevent bitterness.

What kind of wine is best for coq au vin? ›

The traditional recipe involves preparing this dish with red wine (even though variants using white wine and yellow wine exist). So aim for a lively red wine with silky tannins and spicy hints, such as a full-bodied Beaujolais or a southern wine from Provence or Languedoc.

Is there any alcohol left in coq au vin? ›

If you want to minimize alcohol content, choose a recipe such as coq au vin, which is chicken braised in red wine sauce, rather than a flamed dish. These dishes contain as much as 75 percent of the original alcohol after the flames go out.

Do you leave the skin on chicken for coq au vin? ›

Chicken – Coq au Vin is traditionally made with a whole bird, and more modernly with bone-in, skin-on chicken thighs and drumsticks. If you prefer, you can use skinless/boneless thighs, but cooking time will change. Boneless chicken thighs braise faster, about half the time it takes to cook bone-in.

What do you eat with coq au vin? ›

The sauce is packed with flavor and begs for a starchy vehicle to soak it up. Classically, boiled or mashed potatoes are served with it, but I think spätzle, noodles, or a creamy potato gratin work better. In the old days, an old rooster was used. I like using a younger chicken and only braising for 45 minutes or so.

What did Julia Child serve with coq au vin? ›

Coq au vin is traditionally made with mushrooms, lardons (or bacon), and pearl onions. I've also added carrots to the recipe below. Julia Child suggested serving coq au vin with a side of potatoes or salad.

What does coq au vin taste like? ›

Coq au vin is rich with flavors

Kitchn describes Child's coq au vin as "saucy...with that dark tang that comes from red wine." Coq au vin can also be described as rich, complex, layered, earthy, aromatic (thanks to herbs like thyme and parsley), and of course, chicken-y.

Can children eat coq au vin? ›

Cooking boils off most if not all of the alcohol. What's left is flavour. They might like it and it won't harm them. But it's a fairly adult taste so they may baulk at Coq au Vin or Boeuf Bourgignon.

Can you use cabernet sauvignon for coq au vin? ›

An authentic coq au vin is made with a red Burgundy wine, such as Pinot Noir. You can also use Cabernet Sauvignon, Malbec, Shiraz or Merlot. Most importantly, pick a high-quality wine that you would actually like to drink, since the wine that you cook with will impact the taste of your meal.

What does coq mean? ›

Cost of quality (COQ) is defined as a methodology that allows an organization to determine the extent to which its resources are used for activities that prevent poor quality, that appraise the quality of the organization's products or services, and that result from internal and external failures.

Is white or red wine better with chicken? ›

White Meat vs. Dark Meat – As a general rule, white meat such as chicken or turkey breast pairs well with white wines like Sauvignon Blanc or Chardonnay, while dark meat like duck and other game go well with medium-bodied red wines such as Pinot Noir or Zinfandel.

What goes best with coq au vin? ›

The sauce is packed with flavor and begs for a starchy vehicle to soak it up. Classically, boiled or mashed potatoes are served with it, but I think spätzle, noodles, or a creamy potato gratin work better.

Does chocolate go with red or white wine? ›

Fresh and effervescent, white wines classically pair best with white and milk chocolate. Yet there's always room for experimenting. Sauvignon Blanc can be an ideal match for rich, creamy, and buttery chocolate. It refreshes the palate and provides some relief to the creaminess.

Does white wine go with chicken or red? ›

WINES TO GO WITH CHICKEN

For a simple roast, an unoaked Chardonnay or Pinot Noir makes a lovely match as neither will overpower the flavour. Go for bolder reds or aromatic whites if the herbs and spices are strong. Thai curries go well with Rieslings, and spicier ones suit an Aussie Shiraz.

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