Braise, Cook

Coq au Vin

Beginnings

Pioneered in France, popularized in mid-20th century America by the legend Julia Child, and now destined for your dinner table and guests, Coq au Vin is a timeless French classic that I’m honored to share with you today. My take on it seeks to marry traditional ingredients with a few modern twists to make preparation palatable to the modern chef. Follow along, give it a shot, and you’ll be sure to impress your guests at the next gathering you host.

Coq au Vin ingredients

The Ultimate Coq au Vin

This saucy classic is sure to impress, and can turn even the toughest old farm rooster into a fork tender treat.
Prep Time 1 d
Cook Time 5 hrs
Course Main Course, Soup
Cuisine French
Servings 4

Equipment

  • Large pot (preferably cast iron) with lid
  • Large bowl
  • Tongs
  • Wooden spatula

Ingredients
  

  • 1 tough old rooster (or any chicken) butchered into thighs, drums, wings and breasts
  • 4 oz lardons (raw weight)
  • 3 cups cabernet sauvignon wine not super fancy, but not hobo wine either
  • 1 onion large, diced
  • 1 carrot chopped
  • 8 ounces baby portabello mushrooms chopped
  • 1 tbsp pre-minced garlic hate all you want but it's amazingly convenient
  • 1 tbsp tomato paste
  • 8 oz pearl onions OR shallots peeled
  • 2 tsp kosher salt
  • 1 tbsp thyme leaves freshly harvested and chopped, no thick stems
  • 1 tsp black pepper fresh ground
  • 1 bay leaf from the nearest bay

Instructions
 

Butcher and marinade (day before you plan to serve)

  • Find that one rooster at your farm that has really been pissing you off. Liberate its head from its neck, then pluck the bird. Break the old roo down to boneless breasts, thighs, drums, and wings.
  • Put the pieces in a large bowl, then add wine, thyme, and the bay leaf. Cover and marinate overnight.

Preparation (day of serving)

  • Using a large pot with a lid (cast iron preferred, but any will do), cook the lardons until they are crispy, and all the fat has been rendered. Transfer them to a paper towel covered plate with tongs, and them them cool. Do not remove the rendered bacon fat from the pot.
    Bacon lardons
  • Remove chicken from the marinade, drying it thoroughly with paper towels, or even better – a couple old (but clean!) terry cloth rags. Heat the bacon fat until you see the first wisps of smoke, then brown each side of each piece of chicken in the fat. It may take a few rounds depending on the size of your pot, which is perfectly fine.
    If in this process you start to run low on bacon fat in the pot, feel free to add some more you may have stored on your countertop (if you live in The South) or any other flavorful fat/oil you might have laying around. If not more bacon fat, I'd recommend either beef tallow or olive oil. Using your tongs, remove each finished piece of chicken, and place it on a plate.
  • Add chopped onion, carrot and half of the mushrooms to the pot, and let them have a turn browning in the bacon fat. The heat should be medium – enough to brown the veg, but not so much that everything is smoking and setting off your smoke detectors. It should take 5-10 minutes to get the veg where you want, and be sure to use a wooden spoon to scrape all of the brown and black charred bits free from the bottom of the pot while you're doing this. These dark bits are the foundation of how incredibly savory and robust your broth will be by the time this dish is completed.
    Carrots, onions, mushrooms
  • Add garlic, tomato paste, all of the marinade, chicken, and half of the cooked lardons into the pot, and – in the words of a certain maiden from Arendelle – LET IT GOOOO, LET IT GOOOO….but really, just let it go.
    The idea here is that we want to retain our moisture level such that the chicken is mostly covered by liquid and can braise for as long as it needed to become fork tender. If you bought your chicken from the grocery, or say you used a meat bird you raised on your farm and slaughtered at nine weeks, this won't take too long – perhaps an hour or two. However, if you're using old Foghorn Leghorn, get comfy. An old rooster's act of defiance against you will be refusing to get tender until the universe ages, and you might need to braise for 3-4 hours. Your mileage may vary, and don't let a food blog paint you into a corner where you feel you need to end up serving Tractor Tire au Vin instead of Coq au Vin. Just let it go until when you test tenderness in the pot with a knife or fork, you're pleased with what you observe.
  • While the chicken is braising, get a medium sized skillet, add butter, melt, and sauté pearl onions (or shallots), along with the other half of the mushrooms low and slow, for a good 10-15 minutes. The goal here is we want some of the veg to retain a nice chew and body to it. If we put everything in at the same time, all of the veg would be too soft and lacking in mouthfeel. What does in first contributes most to flavor, and what goes in last contributes most to appearance and chew.
  • (optional) If you desire a thicker broth than what you have in the pot, feel fee to braise without the lid on the pot until your volume of liquid decreases, or simply add some corn starch that's been pre-mixed with water in a small measuring cup. If you do this, please remember that the thickening effect of corn starch takes a little time to manifest, so be patient.
  • When you're ready to serve, dump the remaining ingredients in your skillet into the pot, along with the second half of the lardons you set aside earlier. Using a ladle, start a bowl off with a good scoop of the broth and goodies, and then place a piece of two of the chicken along with it. Garnish with parsley or more thyme if you wish, and enjoy!

Afterword

  • Remember, cooking is art more often than it is science. Don't get too lost in the details that you don't enjoy yourself. Most importantly, don't be afraid to improvise! These instructions are guidelines, not hard rules that will result in ruin and sorrow if not perfectly followed.
    Take notes! If you decide you want the next batch to be easier on the bacon (perish the thought), more on the salt, less on the thyme, etc. – write this down! Taking an iterative approach to your dishes and building upon your notes will help you perfect the dish, and make it become YOUR recipe, and not one you simply followed off of the internet – which should be the goal!
    Enjoy!
Keyword Braise, Chicken, Coq au Vin, Rooster
Braise, Cook

Braised Aoudad Shanks

Braised Aoudad Shank over orzo

Who has ever heard about how nasty and inedible Aoudad sheep are? That didn’t scare off my gorgeous girlfriend from making her first ever kill on our hunt this past weekend! She made a perfect 120yd shot with my 7mm mag and this gorgeous Aoudad ewe was toast! I can’t wait to post about her first bow kill in the months to come.

Anywho, I’m here to dispel the rumors – Aoudad is delicious! However, like all things, the devil is in the details. Some animals – like nilgai – can go straight to the plate after being killed, and be both tender and delicious. Others require more nuanced preparation.

Like all quadrupeds, the shanks of an Aoudad are extremely tough, and so we must braise them in a flavorful cocktail of delicious spices and liquids to melt the gristle between the muscles and thusly infuse the meat with gelatin and flavor packed goodness that will rival any $50 lamb shank plate at a high end restaurant.

Braised Aoudad Shank

Braised Aoudad Shanks

Costa
Prep Time 20 mins
Cook Time 5 hrs
Resting Time 20 mins
Total Time 5 hrs 20 mins
Course Main Course
Cuisine American, Wild Game
Servings 2 people

Ingredients
  

Shanks

  • 2 Aoudad hindshanks
  • 4 tbsp Olive Oil (or other healthy fat)
  • 1 Red Onion
  • 4 Bay Leaves dry
  • 1 tbsp Minced Garlic
  • 2 tbsp Rosemary Leaves dry
  • 2 tbsp Thyme Leaves
  • 1 tbsp Salt or to taste
  • 2 tbsp Coarse Ground Pepper or to taste
  • 4 tbsp Soy Sauce
  • 6 tbsp Worcestershire Sauce
  • 2 cups Stock (Chicken/Beef/Homemade)
  • 1 cup Cabernet Sauvignon
  • 12 Kalamata Olives
  • 2 tbsp Kalamata Olive Brine
  • 1 box Corn Starch (see instructions)

Orzo

  • 1 tbsp Sea Salt
  • 1 tbsp Fine Ground Black Pepper
  • 4 tbsp Unsalted Butter

Instructions
 

  • Start out with a pair of Aoudad hindshanks, cleaned and patted dry. Brown the shanks thoroughly in a skillet and hot oil (tallow, olive, or whatever else you prefer – I used olive this time)
    Browned shanks
  • Chop one whole red onion and add it to your clean, empty braising pot.
  • Place the browned shanks atop the onions on the braising pot, and add four bay leaves, one large tablespoon of minced garlic (seriously, this stuff beats the hell out of mincing your own garlic), two tablespoons of rosemary leaves and two tablespoons of thyme leaves.
  • Add four tablespoons of soy sauce, six of Worcestershire sauce, two cups of chicken/beef stock, and one cup of Cabernet Sauvignon. Also add a dozen kalamata olives and two tablespoons of brine from the olive jar!
  • Bring pot to a boil, then lower heat and braise (basically just simmer it) for five hours.
  • Use tongs to remove shanks from pot, and set them aside for a moment. Using a measuring cup, add a third of a cup of water into the measuring cup and start adding/whisking corn starch to the water until the two look like very thick syrup – almost like Elmer’s Glue.
  • Slowly start whisking this glue-like starch solution into your braising pot. Remember that the thickening effect of both starch and flour takes a little time to fully manifest, so don’t expect the results to be instant. After about five minutes of whisking and slowly adding more and more, you will see your liquids in the pot start to take on a beautiful gravy consistency. Return shanks to the pot and allow to rest for ten minutes before plating.
  • I used orzo seasoned with butter, sea salt, cracked pepper and garlic powder for my bed, but feel free to use polenta, risotto or any of your other favorite carbs. 🙂
    When preparing the orzo, simply follow the instructions on the packaging, then season as noted above, or go your own direction with it.
    Enjoy your five star meal made out of an “inedible” animal, and please let me know any questions you might have in the comments below!
Keyword Aoudad, Braise, Wild Game
Braise, Cook

Rustic Jackrabbit Bourguignon

Rustic Jackrabbit Bourguignon

When channeling one’s inner Julia Child, one must never forget that nothing quite has the affect of a hearty, savory, warms-your-soul-on-a-winter-day bowl of slow cooked goodness.

With this in mind, we are going to put a wild game spin on a mainstay of French cuisine, the beautiful beef bourguignon. In place of the beef though, we are going to dispel the prevalent myth that jackrabbits aren’t worth a damn on the dinner plate. While it may be true that they are not as naturally tender as a cottontail, jackrabbits (they’re actually hares) hold immense potential to be worthy of the finest occasion, provided you know what you’re going.

With that said, let’s jump right into making a spectacular jackrabbit bourguignon that will be sure to convert even the most stalwart nonbelievers!

Jackrabbit Bourguignon

Rustic Jackrabbit Bourguignon

Costa
Prep Time 25 mins
Cook Time 5 hrs
Resting Time 20 mins
Total Time 5 hrs 25 mins
Course Main Course
Cuisine American, French, Wild Game
Servings 2 people

Ingredients
  

  • 2 Jackrabbit Legs
  • 3 oz Bourbon
  • 2 cups Stock (or bone broth)
  • 1 cup Cabernet Sauvignon
  • 4 tbsp Worcestershire Sauce
  • 4 tbsp Olive Oil/Tallow
  • 3 Bay Leaves
  • 3 sprigs Fresh Thyme
  • 2 tbsp Rosemary
  • 3 tbsp Oregano
  • 1 bunch Carrots
  • 4 Shallots
  • 12 Small Potatoes (any variant)
  • 1 lb Baby Bella Mushrooms

Instructions
 

  • Take your rabbit legs, dry them thoroughly, and hit them with your favorite dry rub.
  • Brown in a skillet using your favorite oil/fat until you’ve got great color on them. Deglaze with bourbon!
  • Place the browned legs and skillet scrapings into your braising pan.
  • Add stock (I used wild hog bone broth), cabernet and worcestershire.
  • Add three bay leaves, three sprigs of fresh thyme, and rosemary.
    Ready to braise
  • Braise at 300 degrees (covered) for 4 hours, or until meat is soft and a fork passes through it with little to no effort.
  • While braising, chop carrots, shallots and potatoes, and place in a cookie sheet with baby bellas, and coat them all in olive oil, coarse sea salt, fresh cracked black pepper, and oregano.
  • Roast veggies while meat braises, until veggies are cooked well but not dry.
    Veggies
  • Once meat is done, remove meat from braising pan and whisk in flour sparingly until broth thickens. Place meat back in, and add veggies.
    Ready to thicken
  • Place back in oven (covered) until it returns to a steady simmer.
  • Remove from oven, uncover, allow to rest for five minutes, and serve with a bold red wine!
Keyword Bourguignon, Braise, Jackrabbit, Rabbit