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Menu suggestions for a three-course French meal please ma cheries?

20 replies

AnotherFineMess · 21/10/2008 20:12

I'm cooking for some lovely friends on Saturday as a thank you for their very generous gift which allowed us to go to Paris for an anniversary weekend - so, I want to make it special.

Seafood & anything too fancy is out, as their two teenaged DDs will be eating with us, as will my two pre-schoolers.

Got to cook in advance and transport from Birmingham to Cardiff (and here's you thinking it would be simple). Their girls love crepes so dessert is sorted - I was thinking crepes with limoncello icecream and raspberries.

As both girls like chicken I was thinking of doing coq au vin with lovely crusty bread - any nice recipes please?

And what starter would go with those dishes?

Sacre bleu!!!

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Cremolatorium · 21/10/2008 20:19

gotta have a cheese board avec baguette

or perhaps a goats cheese souffle as a starter
or a plate of crudites: salami, jambon etc
or a few moules mariniere
or a meaty pate from ardennes

what about a cassoulet as a main course

fave french puds are crepes suzette
creme brulee
or mont blanc with sweet chestnut puree

drool

Blandmum · 21/10/2008 20:21

french onion soup with the crusty bread and good grated cheese melted on top

AnotherFineMess · 21/10/2008 20:24

Cheers Crem.

Pate as a starter is a good plan - easy to transport Sooo, what main course to follow that then? Would you serve pate with baguette or something else?

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Boyswillbeboys · 21/10/2008 20:24

french onion soup - maybe not good for kids?

steak-frites!

crepes - savoury or sweet

if kids are fussy they could have croque monsieur (toasted cheese and ham sandwich!)

AnotherFineMess · 21/10/2008 20:25

I thought about French Onion soup, how do you tihnk it goes with Coq Au Vin? Is it too similar?

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Cremolatorium · 21/10/2008 20:26

this is nigel slaters recipefor coq au Vin. it is delicious:
The recipe

Serves 4.

a large chicken, jointed into 6 or 8 pieces, giblets and carcass saved
an onion, a carrot and a few peppercorns for the stock
150g pancetta or unsmoked bacon in the piece
30g butter
2 medium onions
a large carrot
2 ribs of celery
2 cloves of garlic
2 tbsps flour
2 tbsps cognac
a bottle of red wine
4 or 5 small sprigs of thyme
3 bay leaves
40g butter
12 small onions, peeled
200g small mushrooms
boiled or steamed potatoes, to serve

Put the chicken carcass, its giblets and any bits and bobs of bone and flesh into a deep pan, cover with water, add an onion and a carrot, half a dozen whole peppercorns and bring to the boil. Turn the heat down and let it simmer until you need it.

Cut the pancetta into short strips; they need to be thicker than a match but not quite as thick as your little finger. Put them, together with the butter, into a thick-bottomed casserole - one of enamelled cast iron would be perfect - and let them cook over a moderate heat. Stir the pancetta from time to time - it mustn't burn - then, when it is golden, lift it out into a bowl, leaving behind the fat in the pan.

Season the chicken pieces with salt and pepper and place them in the hot fat in the casserole, so that they fit snugly yet have room to colour. Turn them when the underside is pale gold. The skin should be honey coloured rather than brown - it is this colouring of the skin, rather than what wine or herbs you might add later, that is crucial to the flavour of the dish. Lift the chicken out and into the bowl with the pancetta. By now you should have a thin film of goo starting to stick to the pan. This is where much of your flavour will come from.

While the chicken is colouring in the pan, peel and roughly chop the onions and carrot, and wash and chop the celery. With the chicken out, add the onions and carrot to the pan and cook slowly, stirring from time to time, until the onion is translucent and it has gone some way to dissolving some of the pan stickings. Add the garlic, peeled and thinly sliced, as you go. Return the chicken and pancetta to the pan, stir in the flour and let everything cook for a minute or two before pouring in the cognac, wine and tucking in the herbs. Spoon in ladles of the simmering chicken stock until the entire chicken is covered. Bring to the boil, then, just as it gets there, turn the heat down so that the sauce bubbles gently. Cover partially with a lid.

Melt the butter in a small pan, add the small peeled onions and then the mushrooms, halving or quartering them if they are too big. Let them cook until they are golden, then add them to the chicken with a seasoning of salt and pepper.

Check the chicken after 40 minutes to see how tender it is. It should be soft but not falling from its bones. It will probably take about an hour, depending on the type of chicken you are using. Lift the chicken out and into a bowl.

Turn the heat up under the sauce and let it bubble enthusiastically until it has reduced a little. As it bubbles down it will become thicker - though not thick - and will become quite glossy.

Return the chicken to the pan and serve with the potatoes.

AnotherFineMess · 21/10/2008 20:26

Forgot to add, their girls love chicken, hence the chickeny main course ideas from me But am open to any and all suggestions.

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AnotherFineMess · 21/10/2008 20:30

Wow, thanks Crem, how kind. That does sound special enough, I was wondering if it was a bit old-hat for a thank you meal but that recipe looks lovely.

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Quattrocento · 21/10/2008 20:31

Mes cheries, btw

You could make a gratin dauphinois to go with the coq au vin. Tis very easy (also the second time tonight I've mentioned it, bizarrely)

As for a starter, I would do something easy:

Goat's cheese salad (not souffle)
Terrine/foie gras
Mussels (easy peasy but you said no to seafood)
Savoury tart (quiche type things)
Salade nicoise

Alternatively you could do a savoury crepe starter and have something like a creme brulee for dessert?

Cremolatorium · 21/10/2008 20:32

you could do a salade aux noix( walnuts, crunchy bacon,curly endive lettuce and a sharp vinaigrette)or a chevre chaud salade(grilled gots cheese on french bread toasts with green salad)

yousaidit · 21/10/2008 20:33

French nion soup is fab but you MUST make the large croutn from french bread and ensure it is smothered in the gruyere cheese and then grilled to an inch of its life so every one has effectively stringy cheesey gravy for starters!

yousaidit · 21/10/2008 20:34

Nion? Onion!!

AnotherFineMess · 21/10/2008 20:37

More great ideas, thanks. How well would pate & baguette go with a main of coq au vin & gratin dauphinois do you think?

I knew I should have googled for mes cheries, I dropped French to do Drama instead

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Cremolatorium · 21/10/2008 20:41

sounds yum- but there's a lot of eating in that! i wouldn't serve a crepe after all that or no-one will be able to get up!However if you are eating at French pace_ over a period of 4-5 hours it might be ok! I would put a green salad in there between the chicken and the crepe to cleanse the palette.

AnotherFineMess · 21/10/2008 20:44

Right, votes then please:

  1. French Onion soup with Gruyere crouton a la yousaidit followed by coq au vin with gratin dauphinois then crepe suzettes,

or,

  1. Ardennes pate & baguette, coq au vin & gratin, crepes.
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Cremolatorium · 21/10/2008 20:49

2 as the offspring won't eat the nion soup

MadMazza · 21/10/2008 20:50

Having just returned from Nice, in the south of France, may I suggest a Nicoise salad? Green leaves, tomato, cucumber, sweet peppers, onion, sliced hard boiled eggs, tuna, and topped with thinly sliced anchovies - finished off with a sprinkling of olive oil and some grated herbs. Simply delicious!

yousaidit · 21/10/2008 20:51

1!! Nion soup!!

and as many crepes as you can make a jar of nutella stretch!!!!

Quattrocento · 21/10/2008 20:51

I'm voting for (2) as well. My DCs would look with horror at the onion soup, because they are ridiculous overindulged faddy eaters ...

AnotherFineMess · 21/10/2008 21:15

I shall go with 2 as it is one less sloppy course to transport down the motorway.

Thanks again lovely people, I'm excited now.

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