
This is a
favorite dish of French bistro heritage and typically requires several long hours
of watchful cooking throughout the day. Some recipes even insist on preparing
it in multiple steps, allowing for an overnight rest period. If you use a pressure
cooker instead of the usual method, you can convert your chicken of choice into a delightful dish
that can be served on its own or with your favorite starch. This dish makes
plenty of gravy and you might want to have some fresh French bread to enjoy the
rich sauce that will be left on the plate.
Traditional
recipes call for a whole chicken, cut into eight pieces and skinned. If
you make it with fresh, boneless and skinless chicken found on your
store shelves, the time and effort you would normally spend breaking
down the whole chicken can be spent enjoying the finished
meal. You can also incorporate fresh vegetables in the recipe if
wished.
The recipe traditionally calls
for fresh herbs, which are my first choice in any recipe, but dried
herbs are more likely to be your only choice in the fall and winter months.
4-5 slices of bacon
4-6 pounds of boneless, skinned chicken
1-2 Tbsp of olive oil
2 cloves of garlic, finely minced
2 cups of thinly sliced leeks If you will be using fresh leeks, be sure that they are thoroughly cleaned
2 Tbsp of dehydrated crosscut celery
1.5 cups of dry, red wine, red cooking wine, or sherry cooking wine
1 cup of water combined with 1 teaspoon of dried chicken bouillon OR 1 cup of canned chicken broth
1 large bay leaf
1/2 Tsp of thyme leaves
1/3 to 1/2 cup of freeze-dried mushrooms
1/3 cup of dehydrated minced onion or 1 pound of small white onions, peeled
2 Tbsp of dried, minced parsley
2 Tbsp of all-purpose flour combined with 2 Tbsp of room-temperature butter
Salt and freshly ground pepper to taste