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Cop au Vin (French: Poulet au vinaigre) is a 1985 French crime film directed by Claude Chabrol. It was entered into the 1985 Cannes Film Festival . [ 2 ] The original French title is a pun: it literally means "vinegar chicken," but "poulet" is also French slang for "cop."
Coq au vin (/ ˌ k ɒ k oʊ ˈ v æ̃ /; [1] French: [kɔk o vɛ̃], "rooster/cock with wine") is a French dish of chicken braised with wine, lardons, mushrooms, and optionally garlic.A red Burgundy wine is typically used, [2] though many regions of France make variants using local wines, such as coq au vin jaune (), coq au riesling (), coq au pourpre or coq au violet (Beaujolais nouveau), and ...
1 package (10 ounces) sliced mushroom (about 3 3/4 cups); 1 bag (16 ounces) frozen whole small white onion; 1 sprig fresh rosemary; 2 lb skinless, boneless chicken breast half and/or thighs, cut into 1-inch strips
Coq au vin is a French chicken dish that may be prepared using wine sauce prepared from red or white wine. [1] Wine sauce is used in various beef dishes. Swiss steak is sometimes prepared with wine sauce. [10] Pork dishes may also be prepared with it, such as those prepared from boneless pork loin or pork tenderloin. [11]
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Place the mushrooms, onions, rosemary and chicken into a 3 1/2-quart slow cooker. Stir the cornstarch, soup and wine in a small bowl. Pour over the chicken and vegetables.
Traditional dishes [1] include baeckeoffe, flammekueche, choucroute, cordon bleu, Vol-au-vent, spaetzle, fleischnacka, bretzel, and Zewelwaï The region's version of coq au vin is coq au Riesling. Southern Alsace, also called the Sundgau, is characterized by carpe frite (that also exists in Yiddish tradition).
Peche Island (French pronunciation anglicized to / ˈ p iː tʃ /, therefore occasionally misspelled "Peach"), is an uninhabited, currently 86-acre (35 ha) (reduced by erosion from a 1965 measurement of 109 acres / 43.7 ha) Canadian island in the Detroit River, at its opening into Lake Saint Clair.