This is my take on the classic "hunters chicken" recipe from Tuscany. Since I am a fan of cooking chicken on the bone, but not fighting with the bones once it's cooked, have added a couple of extra steps to the classic recipe for Chicken Cacciatore.
A little more time, but you don't want your guests fighting with their food, do you?
For the chicken:
4-6 Split, bone-in, skin on, chicken breasts
2-4 Bone-in, skin on, chicken thighs
1 cup flour
1 tps salt
½ tps ground pepper
Olive Oil for Browning
¼ lb thick cut smoked bacon, diced
For the vegetables:
4 cloves garlic, minced
4 sweet onions, diced
4 red or green frying peppers, cut in ½ inch pieces
1 lb fresh mushrooms, thickly sliced (optional)
For the seasoning:
1 tsp kosher salt and ½ tsp fresh ground pepper
1 Tbs each Dried Italian Seasoning (oregano, basil, marjoram, rosemary, savory)
Pinch crushed red pepper flakes
For the Braising Liquid:
2 cups Hearty Burgundy Red Wine
2 28 oz cans crushed tomatoes (not with added puree)
(I use fresh crushed when I can get them at the farmers market)
2 Bay Leaves
Brown the chicken:
- Combine the flour, salt & pepper in a large flat dish.
- Heat a large Dutch oven with the Olive Oil.
- Dredge the chicken, shake off excess, and brown, meat side down, until very golden.
- Turn, brown again, and set the browned chicken aside in a bowl while you finish browning the other pieces. (Chicken will not be cooked through)
Caramelize the vegetables:
- Add the bacon to the pan and cook until just starting to crisp.
- Add the garlic and the red pepper, and sauté for one minute, then immediately add the onions and stir to get the garlic off the bottom of the pan.
- Cook the onions until they soften and start to brown, and then add the peppers.
- Cook the vegetables until they begin to caramelize.
Season:
- When the vegetables start to stick, season with salt & pepper, and the dried herbs.
- Let the herbs salute with the vegetables for a minute or two.
Add the braising liquid:
- Add the wine, and let it cook in the vegetables for a few minutes, until it starts to bubble.
- Then add the tomatoes and stir together.
- Once the tomatoes start to bubble, add the chicken, and turn the heat down to a simmer.
- It should just bubble slowly
- Check to see that the chicken gets turned carefully in the sauce to keep it covered. This will take about 1 to 1-1/2.
Prepare for storage/serving
- In about 1 hour, check the chicken to see if it is starting to falling off the bone.
- Remove the chicken from the pot.
- When it is cool enough to handle pull the chicken meat off the bones and set aside.
- At this point, you can allow the sauce to cook down a little more by turning up the heat and letting it boil.
- You can also refrigerate the sauce and the meat separately overnight.
Serving:
- When you want to serve, skim the fat off of the sauce, return the meat to the sauce, and allow it to simmer another 15-30 minutes, depending on how tender you want your chicken.
- Serve over angel hair pasta or with a great loaf of Italian bread and a generous sprinkle of parmesan cheese.
- Enjoy with a glass of Chianti, which is the classic wine of Tuscany.
Article originally appeared on Better ingredients, better technique, better results (https://www.themessinthekitchen.com/).
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