Chicken Veronique
One of my very early efforts in the kitchen many
years ago was a classic dish, Chicken Veronique. The term Veronique
refers to a dish garnished with grapes and my set of Cordon Bleu
cooking course books (which came in weekly parts over about 20
months) suggested the dish as something to serve when the in-laws
came for dinner. I didn't have in-laws at the time, but the dish
was a great dinner party success when presented to friends.
I think it would make a nice Easter dinner dish.
1 large chicken
1 onion
3 tablespoons butter
sprig French tarragon
350ml chicken stock
250ml white wine (a buttery chardonnay would be ideal)
125ml cream
2 cups grapes
1 tablespoon flour
Thaw the bird and use the giblets, neck etc to
make the chicken stock.
Wipe out the inside of the bird and sprinkle with
salt. Peel and cut the onion in quarters and place inside the
chicken with the tarragon and a tablespoon of butter.
Truss the bird and melt the remaining butter, spooning
it over the chicken.
Put half the stock and half the wine in a roasting
pan or large casserole. Lie the bird on its side and covered with
buttered paper.
Preheat the oven to 175C and let the bird cook
for 15 minutes. Turn it on its other side and cook a further quarter
hour then place it on its back and cook a another hour. Run a
skewer into the flashy part of the leg and if the fluid comes
out bloody, give the bird an extra 10 or 15 minutes' cooking.
Throughout, baste from time to time with the wine/stock/butter
mix. Remove the paper for the last 10 minutes of cooking.
Remove the bird to a carving dish and allow to
rest for 10 minutes.
Add the remaining stock and wine to the roasting
dish (or pour it into a pot) and let it boil until it reduces
down to about half the volume. Stir in the flour which has been
mixed to a cream with a .little water.
While the chicken is cooking you should peel and
de-pip the grapes (a sterilised paperclip loop works for this).
Add the grapes to the sauce and let them warm through, then add
the cream and bring to a simmer - but don't let it boil.
This chicken dish is great with new potatoes, or
with fluffy white rice or wild rice. Some carrots and while green
beans would be a good accompaniment - nothing to overpower the
delicate flavour of the chicken and grape sauce.
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