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Jacques Pépin’s Poulet a la Crème (Chicken in Cream Sauce)

Jacques Pépin’s Poulet a la Crème (Chicken in Cream Sauce)
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I have expressed my affection for Jacques Pépin and his cookbook “Heart and Soul in the Kitchen” (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt 2015). Click here and you can order your copy. https://amzn.to/3vSbP3N This book is filled with recipes that are more “at home ” than they are in restaurants.  One of his dishes is such a favorite of mine that I’ve made it several times now: It’s his recipe for Chicken in Cream Sauce.  It is the best of French country food, an amazingly satisfying dish combining heavy cream and mushrooms and wine with fork-tender chicken.  It’s a triumph of simple cooking requiring nothing more than browning the chicken and making the sauce all in one pan and in all of about 30 minutes. Its genesis was in Chef Pépin’s mother’s kitchen in the town of Bourg-en-Bresse. And if you know anything about French chickens that name should ring a bell.

        

Poulet de Bresse

Poulet de Bresse is France’s most highly prized Chicken. It actually has its own Appellation d’Origine Controlée status meaning it can only be produced from the White Chickens of the Bresse breed and they can only be raised in this legally defined area in Eastern France. It is of course the area Pépin grew up in. It is about 43 miles from France’s capital of Gastronomy, Lyon. So Jacques Pépin knows his way around a chicken, hailing as he does from its center, 
Bourg-en-Bresse.

       
“The Physiology of Taste” in Print since 1825
The chicken’s reputation was sealed by Jean Anthelme Brillat-Savarin, the French  epicure and gastronome whose 1825 book “The Physiology of Taste” is one of the bibles of French cuisine.  (Unfortunately two months after its publication, Brillat Savarin died. But his book is still in print to this day.)  Brillat Savarin described Poulet de Bresse as being “the Queen of Poultry, the poultry of Kings”.  Its reputation has never diminished and even today it is said to be the best quality table chicken in the world.  And well it should. While 90 percent of the birds remain in France, 10 percent of them are exported.  I was able to find a British importer who sells the imported chicken for 32 British pounds (45 US dollars) a kilo. A single bird could easily run 64 pounds (90 dollars)! 

 

         Fortunately, you will not have to spend that for Chef Pépin’s recipe.  In fact, you can’t. Due to strict import regulations, Poulet de Bresse isn’t sold in the States.  For today’s recipe, I would suggest getting the best chicken you can find and taking it from there.  Kosher chickens are always a good bet because Koshering is essential a brining technique which gives you a beautifully moist bird. While Chef Pépin’s mother used a whole cut up chicken, the Chef himself relies on Chicken thighs, which he describes as being ‘the best part of the chicken’.  As a major fan of Chicken Thighs, I was only to happy to oblige Chef Pépin. 
         The cooking process is easy and the fact that it uses a single pot is an added bonus.  You remove the skin from the chicken, then sauté it.  The rest of the ingredients are added to the same pot. At the end of the 25-minute cooking time, Chef Pépin sprinkles chopped tarragon over the dish, which adds another layer of flavor.  I have done the same thing with chives.  The point here is you have a monochromatic dish that needs some color as much as it does flavor.  The Chef used 6 thighs. I used only 4 to give us two a piece. I think it depends on the size of the thighs themselves which varies widely.  The chef’s mother served the dish with rice pilaf.  Here is the recipe: 
 


7 thoughts on “Jacques Pépin’s Poulet a la Crème (Chicken in Cream Sauce)”

  • Saw the show with Jacques Pepin and he made the Chicken a la Creme. Serving it with Rice Soubise. Wish you had also given the recipe for his rice pairing. Looks beautiful with the Spinach as the vegetable and of course the chopped herbs.

    • Dear Lois, Thank you so much for taking the time to write. As you could see in my post, I did not serve M. Pepin’s superb Chicken a la Creme with his Rice Soubise so that ruled out my including a recipe I did not cook. Bon Appetit!

  • Does it take bone-in or boneless thighs? I have bone-in and am considering removing the bones to cook it faster.

    • Dear Rosie, I must be honest. How much time are you going to gain? This recipe, as written, takes 30 minutes to cook. And if you de-bone the thighs you have, that will take time. Finally the bones add immeasurably to the flavor of the dish so I really would suggest cooking the dish as instructed. I know you will love the results…in 30 just 30 minutes. Bon Appetit! Monte

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