Coq au Vin is the well-known French chicken stew where pieces of meat are braised in a luscious, glossy red wine sauce with bacon, mushroom and onions. Like Beef Bourguignon, the beauty of this dish lies in its simplicity. There are remarkably few ingredients and it’s a simple process, but the results are fit for a king – or queen!
Coq au Vin – French chicken stew
Chicken stews are delightful and criminally underrated in my book. Too often they play second fiddle to the divas of the stew world like lamb shanks, braised short ribs and curries. Maybe it’s because chicken as a meat is considered somewhat “common”? As a result, delicious and hardworking dishes like this Everyday Chicken Stew (with crispy skin!) or this weeknight Fast Chicken Stew just don’t get their share of the love they deserve.
If there’s any dish that can rise above the image problem that most chicken stews suffer though, it’s got to be Coq au Vin. This French (naturally!) classic is all about succulent bone-in chicken pieces braised in a glossy, alluringly dark and rich red wine sauce. The sauce’s deeply savoury flavour perfumed with herbs and bacon is complex and seems to just linger forever. If I had to call it (and regular readers know I will!), I reckon Coq au Vin is hands down the greatest and certainly the most luxurious chicken stew in the world!
Yet there’s actually less ingredients than any of the stews mentioned earlier. The recipe is surprisingly straightforward. Making a great Coq au Vin instead is all about small additional steps and details that add up little by little to weave the magic into this magnificent stew. Trust me: Take the time to make this properly and I promise you’ll never look at chicken stew the same way again!
What you need to make Coq au Vin
1. Chicken and red wine marinade
Here’s what you need to marinate the chicken. The red wine is first used for marinating the meat and later reduced on the stove to make the sauce.
Chicken pieces – Coq au Vin literally means “rooster in wine”. Once upon a time older male chickens may have been the bird of choice for this traditional dish. I don’t know about you, but where I live roosters are hard to come by, so regular chicken it is!
Bone-in, skin-on thighs and drumsticks are the safest for the most tender, juicy results. Cutting up your own whole chicken would also be an option (and more traditional). Keep the chicken breast whole with the skin on and bone in. Marinate and sear per recipe but only put it in the pot for the last 20 minutes in the oven (else it will overcook and dry out)
Red wine – The key flavouring in this dish used to infuse chicken with flavour, and base for the sauce. The finished dish does taste mildly of red wine if served immediately which is exactly how it is supposed to taste. However, if you leave the finished dish overnight in the fridge (highly recommended), the flavour of the stew develops and the wine flavour mellows so you can barely taste it.
Pinot Noir is the traditional wine typically used in Coq au Vin, usually from Burgundy. In France different wine regions showcase their local wines to create variations of chicken-in-wine dishes (sometimes even champagne!).
Really though any red variety will do as long as it’s not too heavy and full-bodied – shiraz, cabernet sauvignon, merlot, malbec are all good.
Wine quality – Even though wine is the primary flavouring in this dish, there’s still no need to splurge on expensive wine. The old adage that you should “only cook with wine you’d drink” has largely been consigned to the dustbin of culinary myths thanks to modern wisdom, such as from authorities like the New York Times, who found from tests that “the wonderful wines and the awful ones produced equally tasty food, especially if the wine was cooked for more than a few minutes.”
The braising time and other flavours works wonders to transform even economical wine – just rummage through the discount bins at your local liquor store. The bottle I used was a $15 one, reduced to $6 (Dan Murphy’s!).
Pearl onions are very small onions and are irritatingly hard to find in Australia. The closest are pickling onions which are slightly bigger, so just peel an extra layer or two off to make them the right size – around 2.5cm/1″ in diameter. Soak them for 10/15min in cold water, which will soften the skin and make them easier to peel (use a small knife to assist). You can also just use 2 regular brown or yellow onions, halved then cut into 1cm / 2/5” wedges.
Thyme and bay leaves – Classic French stew-friendly herb aromatics.
2. For the Coq au Vin
In addition to above, here are the other ingredients that go into the Coq au Vin:
Beef stock is the stock of choice for this dish. That might sound strange for a chicken stew, but it’s what gives it the really rich, dark colour and deeper flavour. Cooked out with all the other ingredients it doesn’t taste beefy at all, because you get so much flavour from the chicken juices. Chicken stock will work fine but the sauce colour won’t be as deep, and the flavour will be a little lighter.
Beef stock quality is the key variable here that will set apart a good homemade Coq au Vin from an exceptional restaurant-quality one. Homemade beef stock trumps any store bought. Good quality store-bought from butchers etc. are far better than mass-produced (like Campbell’s here in Australia).
Do not use powdered beef stock. It’s frankly inferior to even the packet liquid stock and has no place here amongst all this effort, I’m afraid!
Bacon – Get slab bacon from your butcher if you can, so you can cut it yourself into big, chunky lardons (batons). Biting into chunks of meaty bacon lardons as opposed to scrappy small shreds is part of what makes a great Coq au Vin so appealing!
If you can’t find slab bacon, try speck (which in Australia is smoked pork belly chunks). Failing that, normal bacon slices works just fine too from a flavour perspective but you’ll have more bacon “bits” in the sauce which is not quite as handsome!
Mushrooms – Just your everyday button mushrooms. Cut large ones into quarters, medium ones in half.
Swiss brown /cremini are also fine. White is more traditional and looks nicer because the paler colour stands out more against the dark brown sauce.
Garlic – For flavouring (it’s rare to see a savoury dish around here without it!).
Tomato paste – For a touch of brightness, to help thicken the sauce, flavour and colour.
Flour – This is what thickens the Coq au Vin sauce.
How to make Coq au Vin
For the most delicious and authentic Coq au Vin that truly stacks up to the best bistro and restaurant versions in France:
Rest the finished dish overnight to allow the flavours to develop further; and
Use homemade rather than store-bought beef stock.
1. Marinate chicken and sear
Don’t skip the overnight marination. This infuses the chicken with flavour all the way through to the bone.
Marinate chicken – Using a glass or ceramic bowl, marinate the chicken overnight in the red wine, onion and herbs. 12 hours is the minimum recommended, up to 24 hours. Beyond this is still fine but doesn’t really add anything more, I’ve found.
This step infuses the chicken with flavour and is an essential part of what makes Coq au Vin so great. So don’t skip it!
Reduce wine – Strain the red wine into a pot and reduce by half on the stove. This intensifies the flavour, cooks out most of the alcohol and reduces the amount of liquid down to the right amount so you end up with a lovely thickened stew sauce by the time the chicken is cooked instead of a dilute, watery soup.
Dry chicken – Separate the onion and herbs from the chicken (because we add them into the stew at different times). Place the chicken in a paper towel-lined tray, then user paper towels to pat the chicken dry. This ensures that the chicken browns nicely. Wet chicken just won’t get a nice golden crust.
Sear chicken – Using a large heavy based pot 26cm / 10.5″ or larger), heat oil over medium high heat. Sear the chicken thighs first, starting with the skin side down, until they become a deep, dark golden colour. It will be darker than usual because the chicken is stained by the red wine. Flip and repeat on the other side.
In this step, we are just searing the outside of the chicken for flavour. The inside will still be raw which is fine since we will cook it through when we braise it.
Once the thighs are browned, remove and add the drumsticks. Because of the shape of the drumsticks, it’s harder to brown them evenly. Just rotate them to do the best you can – I normally sear 3 or 4 sides, about 5 minutes in total.
2. Make the Coq au Vin stew
While Coq au Vin produces magnificently deep and rounded flavours that only slow-cooking can, it actually only calls for 45 minutes of braising because chicken cooks considerably faster than, say, beef. In contrast, Beef Bourguignon takes a good 2 1/2 hours!
Sautéing each of the ingredients separately is key for developing some nice golden colour thus flavour. Don’t try to shortcut it but throwing them all in at the same time – they will steam up and go watery instead of becoming golden!
An enamelled cast iron pot similar to that shown above (26cm / 10.5″) or a Dutch oven is the best pot for this job. It retains tons of heat and you’re also less likely to have problems with burnt bits caking your pot base.
Cook bacon – Cook the bacon lardons until golden. In this step, quite a bit of fat will be released by the bacon which we will use to sauté subsequent ingredients. Once the bacon is done, add it to the tray with the chicken.
Sauté mushrooms – Next, cook the mushrooms in the bacon fat, still on medium-high heat. Again, just cook them until you get blush of golden on the surface because they will finish cooking in the stew. When the mushrooms are done, remove them and add to the chicken pile.
What to do if your pot base is blackening! If at any stage the base of the pot starts to get a thick layer of black and burnt “stuff” on it (tends to happen if you skimped on the fat!), remove it from the heat and use a flat paddle wooden spoon to scrape the layer off as best you can. If you don’t, that burnt layer will end up dissolving in your stew and make it bitter.
Onions – Now, in go the onions! Just stir regularly until you get nice golden patches on them. We do onions last because they hold up best when adding in the tomato paste and flour in the next steps.
Tomato paste and flour – Next, add butter and let it melt. Add garlic and cook it for 1 minute until the garlic is golden and it smells ridiculously good.
Then add the tomato paste and cook it for 2 minutes. This mellows the sourness of tomato paste as well as bringing out and concentrating the flavour.
Now add the flour and cook it for a further 2 minutes. We want to cook out the raw flavour of the flour so there won’t be even the smallest hint of flouriness in the final sauce. The mixture will be a bit pasty or sometimes, if you have less oil, possibly a bit crumbly. That’s ok – what’s important here is using the 7 tablespoons of flour specified in the recipe as this is what is required to ensure the sauce thickens to the right consistency by the time the chicken is cooked.
Add liquids – While stirring, slowly pour in the beef stock. Incorporating the stock little by little helps the flour dissolve lump-free into the liquids. But don’t worry if you do (or think you do!) have small lumps, they will easily dissolve during the braising time.
Once the beef stock is added, keep stirring to completely dissolve the flour into the liquid. Then mix in the reduced red wine.
Add chicken and everything else – Add the chicken, cooked mushrooms, bacon, and reserved bay leaf and thyme (from marinating the chicken) to the pot. Give it a good stir, then allow it to come to a simmer.
Oven 45 minutes – Cover with a lid then transfer it to a 180°C / 350°F (160°C fan) oven for 45 minutes.
Why oven instead of simmering on the stove? It’s just easier and lower maintenance. For example there’s no need to stir to ensure the base doesn’t catch, which is harder to do when you’ve got big pieces of chicken in a pot that’s relatively full!
The oven temperature may seem a little high to you for a slow-cooked recipe. Actually though this temperature is the equivalent of low heat on a small stove burner so the stew is barely bubbling inside the pot.
Can I use a slow cooker? This can work but you’ll need to reduce on the stove at the end to thicken the sauce. Slow-cook for 6 hours on low. Transfer to pot then simmer (no lid) for 15 – 20 minutes until sauce reduces. I really think it’s just easier to use the oven, to be honest!
Sauce adjustments – Once the Coq au Vin comes out of the oven, the sauce should have reduced slightly and thickened into a thinnish gravy. If it’s still very thin, or too thin for your liking, just pop it on a low stove without the lid until it thickens to your taste. Things like the heat retention of your pot and oven strength will affect exactly how much the sauce reduces and thickens.
Pro tip: Keep the sauce slightly thinner than you would like to see it once served. This is because roux–thickened sauces like this will thicken further as they cool slightly and once served.
Adjust salt – Also, taste the sauce and add more salt if needed. I start with what I think is a conservative amount of salt because the saltiness of the finished dish will be affected by the saltiness of the bacon used – something I cannot control!
What to serve with Coq au Vin
Starchy vehicles to soak up that sauce!
While mashed potato is the clear and obvious starchy vehicle of choice here for scooping up all that luscious sauce, the other popular side in France is (surprisingly!) tagliatelle pasta. This is a flat noodle pasta that is 6mm / 0.236″ wide (to be accurate! 😉). Fresh is best, but dried is still perfectly good.
And while perhaps not traditional, I can confirm that a hunk of warm homemade brioche is a dreamy way to mop your bowl clean. Emphasis on DREAMY!!!
Side salad for Coq au Vin
Serve Coq au Vin with a nice crisp green salad lightly dressed with French Dressing or a classic French Bistro Salad. Made with leafy greens, a handful of herbs, and a pretty pink tangles of pickled eschalots this is a refreshing, lemon vinaigrette-dressed salad served in bistros all over France with the exact intended purpose of teaming up with rich mains like 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:
French Desserts to finish!
Have you really had a proper French dinner if you don’t have dessert?? NO! 😂 Some suggestions:
It’s always hard to choose favourites, but for Coq au Vin, these are my top picks:
Creme Brûlée – A classic French bistro favourite that’s bafflingly simple to make at home.
Lemon Tart (Tarte au Citron) – My dessert of choice for its zesty and fresh flavour which makes for a perfect palette cleanser after a rather rich main.
Madeleines – This was dessert for we made for the last French dinner party I hosted. For something bite-size and a little different, freshly made Madeleines are a delightful way to finish off a meal. Make the batter beforehand and leave it in the fridge. It takes 90 seconds to fill the baking pan, and 10 minutes to bake. Pile on a plate and watch as they disappear in seconds!
Enjoy! – Nagi x
Watch how to make it
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Coq au Vin
Ingredients
Red Wine Chicken Marinade:
- 4 chicken thighs , bone-in, skin on (~220g / 7 oz each) (Note 1)
- 4 chicken drumsticks (Note 1)
- 16 pearl onions or picking onions (Note 2)
- 1 bay leaf , fresh (dry also ok)
- 3 thyme sprigs (sub 1 tsp dried thyme)
- 750 ml / 3 cups pinot noir red wine , or other dry red wine (Note 3)
Browning Chicken:
- 3 – 4 tbsp vegetable oil (or canola oil)
- 3/4 tsp salt (cooking/kosher salt, or 1/2 tsp table salt)
- 1/2 tsp pepper
Coq au Vin Stew:
- 400g / 14oz white mushrooms , halved (quartered if large) (Note 4)
- 150g / 5oz bacon piece , (speck) cut into 1 x 2.5cm / 0.4 x 1″ batons (Note 5)
- 60g / 4 tbsp unsalted butter
- 3 garlic cloves , finely minced (with knife)
- 2 tbsp tomato paste
- 7 tbsp flour , plain / all purpose
- 750 ml / 3 cups beef stock , low sodium, preferably homemade (Note 6)
- 1/4 tsp salt (cooking/kosher salt, or 1/8 tsp table salt) (Note 7)
- 1/4 tsp black pepper
Garnish and serving:
- 2 tbsp parsley , chopped
- Mashed potato (or tagliatelle)
Instructions
Marinate chicken:
- Marinate chicken: Place the Chicken Marinade ingredients in a large glass or ceramic bowl or dish. Marinate overnight in the fridge (minimum 12 hours, maximum 24 hours).
- Strain wine into a bowl. Reserve herbs and wine. Separate the chicken and onion.
- Dry chicken: Spread chicken out on a try lined with paper towels, then pat dry with paper towels.
- Reduce wine: Pour red wine into a saucepan and bring to a boil over medium high heat. Simmer vigorously, skimming off any impurities that rise to the surface, until reduced by half. Set aside.
Brown chicken and vegetables:
- Preheat oven to 180°C / 350°F (160°C fan).
- Season chicken: Sprinkle chicken with 3/4 tsp salt and 1/2 tsp black pepper.
- Brown chicken: Heat 3 tbsp oil in a large, heavy-based, oven-proof pot over medium-high heat. Add chicken thighs skin side down and cook for 2 – 3 minutes until nicely browned (it will be darker than usual because of the red wine). Flip thighs and cook the other side for another minute to kiss it with a little colour. Remove to a tray. Pull at skin of drumsticks to cover flesh as best as possible, then brown (I do 3 to 4 sides, ~5 minutes in total). Remove and set aside.
- Fry bacon: Remove any loose black burnt bits. Add a bit of extra oil if needed, then cook bacon for 3 minutes until golden. Add to tray with chicken.
- Sauté mushrooms: Add mushrooms and cook for 5 minutes, or until golden. Remove into a separate bowl.
- Sauté onion: Add a bit of extra oil if needed, then cook onions for 5 minutes or until there are nice golden patches.
- Butter and flour: Add butter into pot. Once melted, add garlic and cook for a further 1 minute. Add tomato paste and cook for 2 minutes. Add flour and cook for 2 minutes.
- Add wine and stock: While stirring, slowly pour in beef stock – this helps the flour dissolve lump-free into the stock. Then add the reduced wine and mix until flour mixture is dissolved and mostly lump-free. (Note 8)
- Add everything back in: Add chicken, bacon, mushroom, thyme, bay leaf, salt and pepper into the pot, then stir.
SLOW-COOK:
- Oven 45 minutes: Bring to a simmer, then cover and transfer to oven for 45 minutes. Chicken will be very tender – but not "falling apart". (Note 9)
- Adjust salt: Remove from oven, taste sauce and add salt if needed.
- Leave overnight (recommended, Note 11): If time permits, leave the stew overnight before serving because as with all stews, it gets better with time! Reheat gently on a low stove in a covered pot, ensuring that chicken is fully heated through. Add water if needed to loosen sauce.
- Serve over mashed potato or tagliatelle, sprinkled with fresh parsley! For the ultimate experience, mop the plate clean with homemade brioche (surprisingly straight forward to make). See in post for side salad and dessert options.
Recipe Notes:
Nutrition Information:
Originally published September 2016, a recipe adapted from a cookbook by a celebrity chef. Coq au Vin was republished in September 2020 using a recipe taught to me by Chef Jean-Baptiste Alexandre, culinary contributor of all things French. His recipe is much (much!) better!
Life of Dozer
Yes Dozer. I made this ENTIRE cake for YOU…… not! 😂
PS It’s called a Fraisier which is a French strawberry cake which is filled with a custard buttercream called Mousseline cream. It’s work in progress!
And from the original publication date in September 2016:
Can someone remind me why I didn’t get a lap dog? Once, he spilled a whole bowl of meatballs when he lifted his head from under this very same table.
Roxi says
Hi, I saw the photo seems to have carrots in the stew. Did I miss the part about when to add the carrots ? I didn’t see them in the ingredients. Hoping for a reply. Thanks Nagi. Twas great even without the carrots, but wouldl like with carrots next time
sharon George says
I also want carrots, so I will saute them with the other veges in 1″ chunks, then add them to simmering pot the last 10-15 minutes of cook time. You probably already figured this out.
Jason says
That is the bacon
Stuart says
Hi Roxi, I’m making this at the moment. I think the picture might show generous lardons rather than carrots.
alexandra says
This is the best recipe for coq au vin that I’ve ever made! I made it for my boyfriend and his daughter using chicken leg quarters and it was perfect. I think I added extra wine and aromatics to ensure there would be plenty of gravy. I never use pearl onions because they are hard to find and expensive, so I just used a regular yellow onion sliced. It was delicious and the gravy was amazing.
Shabs says
Hi I want ask, instead of flour can i use cornflour to thicken the sauce? Want to make it but one of my guests is gluten intolerant , what quantity should I use? Thanks
Tim says
Hello! This looks absolutely delicious. Can you replace the wine with Red Grape juice? I want to cook this for my girlfriend! Thank you!!
Ann says
Hi Nagi, we are keen to try your Coq Au Vin recipe but unfortunately I can’t have tomato paste. We have tried other recipes that don’t have it in, but I would like to try yours. Do you have any substitute suggestions or should we just leave the paste out altogether? Thank you, Ann. ps we love your Celeriac soup.
DeidreD from the States says
First time ever making Coq au Vin, it was absolutely delicious!
Had to use thick cut bacon, couldnt find pork belly, otherwise followed the recipe exactly. My men folk, 56, 16 & 14 devoured 2 helpings each over mashed potatoes. Even our super picky 12 year old daughter ate a piece of chicken! Barely enough for lunches tomorrow, next time I’ll double the recipe and try the overnight re-heat method. Thank you for another amazing recipe Nagi!
Anna says
Hi Nagi, I feel like something went terribly wrong. 7 tbsp of flour turned this into a really thick gravy. Not at all like the picture of your dish (or like what I’ve had before). I don’t understand how this recipe (with that much flour) could produce a dish like the one you’ve pictured. What I’ve made is pretty stodgy and disappointing! Nice flavour though.
Nagi says
Hi Anna – did you use all the liquid in the recipe? 3 cups stock and a whole bottle of wine? That is loads of liquid to thicken which is why you need 7 tbsp flour. 🙂 N x
Barbara Owen says
Would I be able to use the meat from a stew hen for this recipe? How would you suggest I do it?
Caroline Wilson says
Another amazing recipe. Made a pie from leftover. Just shredded chicken from bones, heated up sauce … put into a pie crust.. and super yum!! Thanks, Nagi 😘
Robin says
I’ve made this 4 or 5 times now, and every time has been an absolute winner. It requires a bit of foresight so that you can prepare it a day in advance of when you want to serve it, but it’s actually very easy to make. It gets an enthusiastic reception every time and it’s really quite a foolproof recipe. I’ve just taken one out of the oven, and this time I’ve added in a couple of carrots and a turnip to increase the vegetable to meat ratio; I haven’t tasted it but it looks as delicious as ever.
Helen ORourke says
This dish is amazing but tonight I only have Shiraz so used two cups Shiraz and one cup sauvignon Blanc …please tel me this will work….will let you know 🥴🥴🥴🥴🥴
Tessa says
Hello, absolute beginner here and I’ve got to say, this was amazing! I was intimidated but followed your directions and it was absolutely delicious. The only thing I did differently was cut the recipe in half because I’m only cooking for myself these days. But it was so good I might just go with the full recipe next time and freeze some. Thank you!
Nagi says
That’s amazing Tessa! With all of my recipes if you follow the instructions closely, you should get a good result!! Enjoy! N x
Daniel says
Hey I’m in the middle of cooking the dish right now and I wanted to ask about you leaving it in the fridge overnight for more flavor.
So are you saying that after I turn off the heat just leave it in the fridge and it will get better?
I don’t like to eat cold cold food so do I just reheat it over the stove again tomorrow?
Please and thank you
Esther says
Hi Nagi, going to cook this one this weekend but with white wine. Tried a recipe years ago with red wine and found the flavour too strong. Would I still use beef stock? Thanks!
I do love your clarity and explanations, along with the vids, so helpful.
Wong Siew Peng says
Hi. Am planning to make this recipe for 8 persons. How would you scale the recipe to accommodate this. (And definitely going to make own beef broth)
Nagi says
There is a sliding scale at the top of the recipe that you can use to adjust it Wong! N x
Wong Siew Peng says
☺️
Boxell says
In France we don’t use flour to thicken the sauce for Coq au Vin, it’s actually a red wine reduction, and that’s what turns the sauce a very dark red, almost black sauce
Nagi says
Merci Boxell! I developed mine with my classically trained French chef from Burgundy. He says that the buerre manié is often used in this dish in France and I note that Larousse Gastronomique also includes that butter/flour mixture in the recipe. No doubt there are many variations on the recipe – perhaps yours is just a bit different to mine! I’m sure they are both delicious! N x
Ronald Geerligs says
Hi, I tried your recepy and it did not taste nice at all.
I adapted it to a one pan (cast iron) recepy and instead of Beef stock I used Chicken stock. (should be obvious right?) No oven needed at all.
I started out with the bacon, then the chicken, and then the onions and a bit later the mushrooms. Added 2 spoons of flower, then the stock and last the wine. This was ok, but not right yet. Will try again.
Obvious right says
Ronald try the actual recipe before you review it
Das says
Looks complicated! The results were great! Not hard at all. Nice to cook something delicious in advance.
Guy says
First try, came out great!
Dan Eustance says
This is a truly excellent recipe and one that I would recommend following closely as the techniques involved bring about a perfect result. The use of beef stock is inspired. In fact I do the same with Irish Stew with a similar result.
Nagi says
I am happy that you enjoyed it Dan! N x
Sussan says
Is there a non alcoholic substitute for the chicken?
Nagi says
Not really on this one Sussan – it’s literally named “Chicken in Wine” – you could try an alcohol free wine and see how it works. N x
Lee Ann Carr says
I made this for V-day (Valentine’s Day) I only had 1 extra day, so the chicken marinated for 12 hours + in wine but the stew missed the “hangout” time. Also I didn’t have beef stock, so I had to use chicken stock. Here are my changes. Definitely more salt and make sure to have the beef stock. I think this would give the stew a “French Onion” kind of background. We LOVE cooked carrots, so I am adding them. I used pork belly so next time, I’m trying thick bacon, fried in my dutch oven to keep that flavor in the stew, bacon removed and crumbled over the top-cause I want to “feel” that bacon flavor. This is a lovely recipe – thanks for sharing!