First off, I do all the cooking around in our household. I enjoy cooking. I find it relaxing and I only prepare meals that I truly enjoy eating.
Cooking was one of those things Cindy, my wife, found attractive in me when we were dating. She doesn’t like cooking. Period.
I’m pretty sure it’s why she married me.
So, when I’m writing, food is an important ingredient (yes, pun intended) to particular scenes. The protagonist in my mystery series is Geneva Chase, a female reporter with a drinking problem who makes bad life decisions. In my first book, Random Road, the only time you caught Geneva in the kitchen was to get ice cubes and a glass and to pull a bottle of Absolute out of the freezer.
Thinking I’d tone that down a smidge, in the second book, Darkness Lane, I started the book with Geneva making a pot of chili. My editor (and rightly so) flatly told me, “What are you thinking? Geneva is boring. You’ve made her too suburban.”
So, no more cooking for Ms. Chase. Now the only food you see in her kitchen is take-out from a local restaurant.
But that doesn’t mean I can’t write some good meals into a storyline. For example, in Darkness Lane Geneva goes to the home of a well known actor and his writer wife where they’re having an emergency meeting with the key players of a Broadway play in development. A teenage actress is missing, feared kidnapped by her high school teacher.
The actor’s cook brings in a porcelain tureen of steaming coq au vin and warm bread fresh from the oven. I could have just given them BLTs on toasted whole wheat, but the day outside had a crisp October chill to it and Geneva savors the deliciously earthy scent.
Why coq au vin? It sounds snooty and how many of us actually have it for lunch…brought in by our live-in cook?
Oh, plus I had prepared it in my own kitchen for the first time just the weekend before. So true to the recipe challenge, here’s mine for coq au vin...oh, and Happy Thanksgiving.
INGREDIENTS
- 2 tablespoons vegetable oil, divided
- 5 skin-on, bone-in chicken legs (thigh and drumstick)
- Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper
- 12 ounces thick-cut bacon, cut crosswise into 1/3-inch slices
- 3 carrots, peeled, chopped
- 3 celery stalks, minced
- 1 onion, minced
- 4 cups dry red wine, such as Burgundy, divided
- 1/2 cup tomato paste
- 1 quart low-sodium chicken broth
- 12 sprigs thyme
- 6 sprigs rosemary
- 1 pound assorted wild mushrooms, such as oyster and maitake, cleaned, cut into bite-size pieces (about 8 cups)
RECIPE PREPARATION
- Preheat oven to 350°. Heat 1 tablespoon oil in an ovenproof pot over medium-high heat. Season chicken with salt and pepper. Cook chicken in batches until browned, 5-6 minutes per side. Transfer to a plate.
- Add bacon to pot; cook until rendered. Add carrots, celery, and onion; cook until onion is translucent, 7-8 minutes. Stir in 1 cup wine and tomato paste; simmer for 2-3 minutes. Add remaining 3 cups wine. Boil until wine is reduced by half, 15-20 minutes. Return chicken to pot.
- Add broth. Tie thyme and rosemary sprigs together; add to pot. Bring to a boil and cover pot. Transfer pot to oven and braise until chicken is tender, about 1 1/4 hours.
- Meanwhile, heat 1 tablespoon oil in a large pot over medium-high heat. Add mushrooms; sauté until browned, about 5 minutes.
- Transfer chicken from sauce to pot with mushrooms; keep warm. Simmer sauce over medium heat until reduced by 1/3, about 20 minutes. Season with salt and pepper.
- Add mushrooms and chicken to sauce. DO AHEAD Coq au vin can be made 3 days ahead. Chill uncovered until cold. Cover; keep chilled. Re-warm before serving.
Tom, this looks delicious! And yeah, because it's French, everyone thinks it's snooty, but the reality is this is "peasant cooking" (lucky peasants!).
ReplyDeleteCoq au vin is my favourite meal that my wife cooks for me. (Her recipe is pretty similar.) It would be an interesting experiment to make it with an actual coq since the original thought behind the dish was a good way to make use of the family rooster when he was past his prime -- hence the long cooking time if you look at the old recipes. Those older birds get pretty tough but they are way more flavourful.
Now to find someone willing to donate their soon-to-be former rooster…
Great contribution, Tom!