Get the Recipe:Red Wine Braised Chicken and Dumplings
Boneless chicken breasts braised with red wine, bacon, onion and carrot, then topped with herb dumplings. A lovely and flavourful dinner for the cooler days.
2lbsboneless skinless chicken breasts, cut into bite-sized chunks (about 3 large chicken breasts) *see Note 1 below
3Tablespoonsall-purpose flour
2Tablespoonscooking oil
1smallonion, sliced (about 1 cup)
2carrots, peeled, halved and thinly sliced
2-3slicesbacon, diced
1bay leaf
3-4sprigsfresh thyme, or 1/2 teaspoon dried thyme leaves
1cupchicken broth
1cupred wine, *see Note 2 below
3Tablespoonstomato paste
Salt and freshly ground pepper
For the dumplings:
1 1/2cupsall-purpose flour, spooned and levelled
2teaspoonsbaking powder
3/4teaspoonsalt
3Tablespoonsshortening or butter
2-3Tablespoonsfresh parsley, chopped (optional)
3/4cupmilk
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Instructions
Preheat the oven to 350F (non-convection/not fan assisted).
Cut the chicken breasts into bite-sized chunks and place them into a bowl. Season with a bit of salt and pepper, then add the flour to the bowl and stir to coat the chicken in the flour. Heat the cooking oil in a Dutch oven or Braiser over medium heat on the stovetop. Add the chicken and cook, stirring to cook on all sides, until the chicken is no longer pink. Remove the chicken to a plate.
Add a splash more oil to the pan if needed, then add the bacon, onion and carrots. Cook over medium heat, stirring occasionally, for about 8-10 minutes until the bacon is cooked and the vegetables are softened.
Return the chicken to the pot along with any juices on the plate. Add the chicken broth, red wine and tomato paste to the pot and stir together. Add the bay leaf, the thyme and a bit of salt and pepper. Bring to a simmer, then cover the pot and place into the oven COVERED, for 20 minutes. Remove the lid from the pan after 20 minutes and cook UNCOVERED, for 10 minutes more.
During the last 10 minutes of cooking, make the dumplings. Whisk the flour, baking powder, and salt together in a medium bowl. Cut in shortening or butter with a pastry blender or two knives until the mixture resembles fine crumbs. Add half the milk into the flour mixture and stir in. Add the chopped parsley to the batter and stir in. Begin adding the last half of the milk a bit at a time, stirring between additions, adding milk just until the flour is all moistened. You may not need all the milk.
Remove the chicken from the oven, leaving the oven on. Have a quick taste of the stew and add salt and pepper to the pot, as needed. Fish out and discard the bay leaf and the thyme sprigs. Drop the dumpling dough in large spoonfuls onto the stew. Return to the oven UNCOVERED for 10 minutes, then put the cover on the pot and cook another 10 minutes.
Check to make sure that the dumplings are cooked through (a toothpick works well), then remove the pot from the oven. Remove the lid from the pot and let stand a few minutes before spooning into serving bowls or onto plates. Garnish with additional chopped fresh parsley.
Notes
Note 1: You could also use boneless, skinless chicken thighs. Use about 6-7 chicken thighs.Note 2: Use a red wine that you enjoy drinking, as the flavour will be present in the finished dish. You can also tweak the ratio of red wine to chicken broth if you would like less wine flavour in the finished dish. Reduce the red wine and increase the chicken broth accordingly.Tips!
Making dumplings is a lot like making biscuits. You want to add enough milk to moisten the flour mixture, but you may not need quite all of the milk to get to that point. Add it slowly and stir between additions.
I debated whether this was a little dumpling-heavy, but I love dumplings, so I'm going with it as is. If you are less dumpling-loving, feel free to hold back some of the batter and add fewer dumplings.
Salt! Seasoning this dish well with salt is the difference between an ok dish and a fabulous dish. Taste and season as needed and if is still under-seasoned, sprinkle a bit more on the plate. (You'll know when a dish is under-seasoned when you taste it and it tastes flat or you find yourself thinking "it needs something". What it needs is salt :)
Be sure to read the notes above this Recipe Card, for more tips on making this recipe. You'll also find step-by-step photos and a recipe video that you might find helpful.