What is Traditional Coq au Vin Recipe

A classic French chicken stew braised in red wine with bacon, mushrooms, and pearl onions. Deep, savory flavors, silky red wine sauce, tender chicken. Comfort food with bistro charm.


 

Quick Facts

  • Dish: Chicken coq au vin (chicken braised in red wine)
  • Wine: Dry red; pinot noir is the traditional choice
  • Best Cuts: Bone-in chicken thighs and legs
  • Texture Goal: Browned chicken, tender meat, velvety red wine sauce
  • Core Flavors: Bacon or pancetta, mushroom, pearl onions, garlic, thyme, bay leaf
  • Primary Pot: Dutch oven (heavy, enamel cast iron preferred)

 


Traditional Chicken Coq au Vin Recipe - Chef Jean-Pierre
 

Traditional Coq au Vin Recipe

 

Hello friends, today weโ€™re going full French classic with a dish Iโ€™ve been making for nearly half a century. Thatโ€™s rightโ€”Traditional Coq au Vin, or Chicken Braised in Red Wine. Itโ€™s warm, rich, aromatic, and just fancy enough to impress the in-laws without sending you into a culinary panic. Whether youโ€™re cooking for a date or making a weeknight feel like a bistro in Burgundy, this authentic coq au vin recipe is the answer.

Now, if youโ€™re new hereโ€”welcome! This isnโ€™t one of those 45-second TikTok โ€œdump-and-stirโ€ videos where you blink and miss everything. No, no, my friends. In the recioe video below, we cook together, step-by-step. So pour a glass of wine (after you prep your mise en place), grab your Dutch oven, and letโ€™s make this classic French chicken stew the right wayโ€”with passion, laughter, and a whole lot of bacon.


 

What Is Chicken Coq au Vin?

 

Letโ€™s start with the basics. Chicken Coq au Vinโ€”literally โ€œrooster in wineโ€โ€”is a classic French dish thatโ€™s all about slow braising chicken pieces in a rich red wine sauce, usually accompanied by mushrooms, pearl onions, garlic, andโ€”you guessed itโ€”plenty of bacon.

In its most traditional form, this was how the French countryside folk made the most out of tougher birds, like old roosters. Braising made them tender. These days, you and I? We donโ€™t need a roosterโ€”we just need good dark meat chicken, some patience, and a dry red wine youโ€™re proud to drink. Donโ€™t cook with something you wouldnโ€™t serve in a glass!

What makes my coq au vin recipe special? Iโ€™ll tell you: we donโ€™t skimp on flavor. We build layer upon layer with slab bacon, deeply caramelized onions, quartered mushrooms, and a little clarified butter magic. And yes, Iโ€™ll even show you how to thicken your sauce without any lumps. Stick with me and youโ€™ll never look at chicken the same way again.


 

The French Roots of a Comforting Classic

 

Coq au Vin is not just foodโ€”itโ€™s French culinary heritage. A dish once born of frugality and necessity has become a celebrated classic French stew. It hails from the Burgundy region, where pinot noir is the traditional wine of choice. In fact, Julia Childโ€™s coq au vin helped make it famous in American kitchens. Merci, Julia.

But hereโ€™s the truth: au vin is a classic, but itโ€™s also adaptable. While vin is a classic French technique, itโ€™s your kitchenโ€”weโ€™ll make it taste like your own signature by the end of this article. So letโ€™s do this the right way, friends.


 

Essential Tools to Make Coq au Vin

 

Staub Dutch Oven 1. Dutch Oven

A Dutch oven is your coq au vin best friend. I use an enameled cast iron model that retains heat like a dream. Why? Because it lets you sear the chicken, caramelize onions, and then braise everything low and slow in one pot. This multitasker gives you depth of flavor and helps keep your kitchen from looking like a battlefield.

 

Instant Read Thermometer 2. Digital Thermometer

You want browned chicken, not overcooked or soggy. A thermometer lets you track that golden sear at just the right temperatureโ€”about 350ยฐF to 375ยฐF. Too cold and you wonโ€™t brown the flour properly; too hot and youโ€™ll scorch everything. Thatโ€™s not fancyโ€”just smart cooking.

 

double mesh strainer 3. Fine Mesh Strainer

You know when I add flour to thicken the sauce? No lumps, ever. Thatโ€™s because I use a mesh strainer to dust it in like a snowfall over the Alps. This keeps your velvety red wine sauce smooth as silk, even if you’re not whisking like a madman.

 

Wooden Spoon 4. Wooden Spoon

Old faithful. Use it to scrape the browned bits (the โ€œfondโ€) from the bottom of the potโ€”those little nuggets of flavor from the bacon and mushrooms are what make this dish sing. Just make sure your spoonโ€™s edges are rounded and it wonโ€™t damage your Dutch oven.


 

3 Common Mistakes to Avoid

 

Mistake 1: Not Patting the Chicken Dry

Listen to me carefully: pat the chicken dry with paper towels before flouring it. If your chicken is wet, you wonโ€™t get that perfect searโ€”itโ€™ll steam like a sauna and come out pale and sad. We want deep caramelization on the outside and tender chicken inside. Moisture is the enemy here.

 

Mistake 2: Using Cheap Cooking Wine

If you wouldnโ€™t drink it, donโ€™t cook with it. A dry red wine like pinot noir, cabernet sauvignon, or even shiraz works beautifully. Skip the โ€œcooking wineโ€ aisle and grab something youโ€™d serve with dinner. Remember, chicken in wine means the wine is the sauce.

 

Mistake 3: Adding the Chicken Too Early

After you pour in the reserved wine, you must reduce the wine to cook off the alcohol. Otherwise, your dish will taste like it just failed a breathalyzer. Wait for that gentle simmer, then add the chicken back into the pot.


 

How to Best Serve Chicken Coq au Vin

Coq au vin begs for something comforting to soak up all that red wine with bacon goodness. Iโ€™m talking soft, fluffy mashed potatoes, a crusty French bread, or even buttered egg noodles. Anything to act as a sponge for that tender chicken in a rich red wine sauce.

Hereโ€™s a little surprise twist I love: a splash of cognac at the very end. Itโ€™s traditional in some parts of France and adds a subtle warmth that hugs your tongue. Oh, and if you want a little extra decadence? Stir in a pat of butter right before serving. No one will complain. Not even your diet.


 

Side Dish Pairings from ChefJeanPierre.com

 

Easy Garlic Mashed Potatoes Recipe Creamy Mashed Potatoes

Letโ€™s be honestโ€”coq au vin and mashed potatoes is a match made in heaven. The potatoes absorb that silky, chicken stock and wine gravy, creating mouthfuls of pure comfort. My version has butter, cream, and just the right texture to hold up under chicken braised in red wine. Youโ€™ll never look at instant mash the same again.

 

Garlic Bread Easy Homemade Garlic Bread

Crusty on the outside, soft on the inside, this garlic bread is perfect for sopping up the last drops of sauce from your plate. The aroma of toasted garlic and herbs blends perfectly with the flavors of mushroom, bacon, and thyme. Plus, who doesnโ€™t love tearing warm bread at the table?

 

How to Make a Provencal Ratatouille Recipe - Chef Jean-Pierre Authentic Ratatouille

For a light, green contrast, broccolini sautรฉed with garlic brings just the right pop of freshness. It cuts through the richness of the classic French dish, while the garlic echoes the deep base flavors in the stew. Plus, it looks lovely on the plate beside that bone-in chicken.


 

Storage and Reheating Tips

  • Refrigerator: Store coq au vin in an airtight container for up to 3 days. The flavors will deepen, and the chicken will become even more tender.
  • Freezer: Technically yes, but I donโ€™t recommend it. The sauce may break, and the mushrooms turn mushy. This dish is best enjoyed fresh or from the fridge.
  • Reheating: Gently reheat on the stovetop over medium-low heat, stirring occasionally until warmed through. Add a splash of chicken broth or wine if the sauce gets too thick. Microwave only if youโ€™re in a rushโ€”but be gentle.

 

So there you have it, friendsโ€”a traditional coq au vin recipe thatโ€™s stood the test of time (and a few hilarious restaurant mishaps). With the right wine, proper sear, and a little patience, youโ€™ll have a dish that brings people to the table and keeps them there. Whether you serve it on a rainy evening or for a celebration, one thingโ€™s for sure: this is French comfort food at its best.

 
So, what are we waiting for? Letโ€™s get cooking!
 

Classic Coq au Vin Recipe

Classic Coq au Vin Recipe (Chicken in Red Wine)

chef jean pierre 200x200 1Chef Jean-Pierre
This Coq au Vin recipe is a French classic, braised Chicken in red wine, and super easy to make. Chef Jean-Pierre has been preparing this recipe for more than 50 years! Served with mashed potatoes, Coq au Vin makes a truly delicious meal! Just amazing!!!
4.54 from 43 votes
Course Dinner, Main Course
Cuisine French
Servings 6
Calories 668.17 kcal

Recipe Video

Recipe Ingredients
  

  • ยฝ cup All-Purpose Seasoned Flour
  • 3 tablespoons Extra Virgin Olive Oil or Clarified Butter
  • 6 Chicken Legs and Thighs, bone-in and skinless
  • 6 Chicken Thighs, bone-in and skinless
  • ยฝ pound Bacon, cut into ยผโ€ cubes
  • 1 cup Pearl Onions or diced Onion, if you do not have pearl
  • ยผ pound small fresh Button Mushrooms, quatered if they are larger than 6 thโ€™s or 8 thโ€™s pieces
  • 1 tablespoons fresh Garlic chopped or pureed
  • 1 tablespoon fresh Thyme Leaves chopped
  • 2 cups dry Red Wine
  • 1 ยฝ cup Chicken Stock
  • 2 Bay Leaves
  • Salt and Pepper to taste
  • 2 tablespoons fresh Parsley, chopped
  • ยผ cup Cognac, optional

Recipe Instructions
 

  • Combine the flour, salt and pepper on a large lasagna pan.ย ย Dredge the chicken pieces in the flour.
  • In a large Dutch oven (with a lid), heat 2 tablespoons olive oil.ย ย Brown the chicken pieces until golden brown on all sides.ย ย Remove the chicken pieces and set aside.
  • In a large Dutch oven (with a lid),, heat 1-tablespoon olive oil, add the bacon, sautรฉ for a couple of minutes then add the pearl onions and sautรฉ until golden brown.ย ย Add the mushrooms salt and sautรฉ for 2 minutes or until the water has evaporated from the mushrooms.ย ย Add the garlic and, when fragrant, add the, red wine, let the wine and thyme and reduce for 5 minutes, add the chicken pieces and cover them with the stock, and bay leaves.ย ย Bring to a simmer cover and cook slowly for about 45 minutes or until chicken meat comes off the bone easily.
  • After 15/20 minutes be sure to check how thick the sauce is.ย ย If the sauce is too thin add a little flour like the chef did on YouTube and cook it for another 30 minutes or until the meat falls off the bones.
  • Remove the bay leaves.ย ย Add cognac and adjust seasoning with salt and pepper to taste.ย ย Sprinkle with finely chopped fresh parsley and serve with mashed potatoes or egg noodles.

Pro-Tips

 

Pro-Tip: Why I Remove the Chicken Skin

 
Let me tell you something. I remove the chicken skin before braising because it turns rubbery in liquid. Itโ€™s not like roasting or grilling where the skin gets crispy and delicious. In stewed dishes like this, the skin adds no textureโ€”just greasiness. But I always leave the bone inโ€”because thatโ€™s where the flavor lives. It also helps the chicken stay moist and fall-off-the-bone tender without becoming stringy.

 

Bonus Pro-Tip: Quarter Your Mushrooms

 
This oneโ€™s important. I often get asked why I quarter mushrooms instead of slicing them thin. Simple: they hold their shape better. When youโ€™re cooking them for 45 minutes, thin slices turn to mush. But quartered mushrooms? They stay hearty, meaty, and soak up the wine and bacon fat like little sponges of joy. Cut them into sixths or eighths if theyโ€™re huge, but never slice them paper-thin for this dish.

 
Please donโ€™t forget to rate this recipe โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜… and leave a comment below. Tell me how your chicken coq au vin turned out, what wine you used, and who you impressed. Letโ€™s keep cooking together, one delicious dish at a time.
Bon appรฉtit!

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Nutrition

Calories: 668.17kcalCarbohydrates: 17.77gProtein: 52.95gFat: 32.6gSaturated Fat: 8.64gPolyunsaturated Fat: 5.57gMonounsaturated Fat: 15.38gTrans Fat: 0.09gCholesterol: 240.88mgSodium: 554.53mgPotassium: 843.44mgFiber: 1.38gSugar: 3.05gVitamin A: 252.41IUVitamin C: 7.51mgCalcium: 46.28mgIron: 3.13mg

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