There is a class of dishes that teaches a region more directly than any description. Coq au Riesling is one of them.
The logic of the dish is simple: braise chicken in the wine of the region, with the aromatics of the region’s cooking — pancetta, leeks, mushrooms, cream. The wine’s acidity keeps the braise from becoming heavy. Its stone-fruit character deepens into the sauce as it cooks. At the table, you pour a glass of the same wine, and what you taste is continuity: the sauce and the wine echo each other, built from the same bottle.
This is the oldest logic in wine pairing. Not contrast, not complexity, not matching tannins to proteins. Just: cook with what grows there, drink what grows there. Alsace figured this out a long time ago.
About the Dish
Coq au Riesling is the Alsatian answer to Coq au Vin — lighter, silkier, and built around dry white wine rather than the red that defines the Burgundian version. The braising liquid is the wine itself, extended with a small amount of chicken stock. Pancetta replaces the lardons of southern France; leeks replace the pearl onions of Burgundy. The cream is added at the end, not cooked in, which keeps it fresh and prevents the sauce from reading as heavy.
The result is a braise that smells like the wine country it comes from — aromatic, clean, faintly mineral, with the savoury depth of reduced poultry stock underlying everything.
The Night This Dish Found Its Occasion
There is a version of this dish I make on a Tuesday evening with whatever Riesling is open on the counter. And then there is the version I made for Polly.
Polly had hired me to cater a birthday dinner for her dear friend Cathy — five women, a lakeside home in North Carolina, and a menu she had titled, with complete seriousness and real intention, “A Taste of Alsace.” The table was set in French blue and gold china, hydrangeas at the center, crystal glassware catching the late afternoon light off the water. It looked exactly like what it was: a celebration with real thought behind it.
The wine for the evening ran the full Alsatian arc. A Crémant d’Alsace Brut Rosé arrived with a lemon-thyme sorbet and a drizzle of Alsatian honey to clear the palate. A smoked trout mousse with dill crème and rye toast points followed alongside an Alsatian Pinot Blanc. Then the main course, and the dry Riesling that had been waiting for it. The evening closed with a Kougelhopf-inspired bread pudding — studded with golden raisins, almonds, and a Gewurztraminer glaze — alongside a Vendanges Tardives Gewurztraminer. It was truly a taste of Alsace. The progression was considered and divine.
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For the Coq au Riesling, I used a Kuentz-Bas Geisberg Grand Cru Riesling — the entire bottle, into the pot. Geisberg is one of Alsace’s 51 classified Grand Cru vineyards, situated in Ribeauvillé, known for a structured, mineral Riesling that holds its character even after an hour in a braise. It did. The sauce had a depth and a precision to it that a standard village-level Riesling would not have delivered in quite the same way. You could taste the decision.
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This recipe scales. It works on a Tuesday and it works for a lakeside birthday dinner in Grand Cru Riesling. What changes is the bottle and the occasion. The dish meets both equally.
We did ask the question. Does it matter whether you use an inexpensive wine in your cooking vs. a Grand Cru? Everyone agreed: it made a huge difference and it was COMPLETELY worth it!
The Pairing Logic
The rule here is the same one that produced the dish: serve what went into the pot.
An Alsatian Riesling at the table does the same work it did in the braise — the acidity cuts through the cream, refreshes the palate between bites of rich, pancetta-scented chicken, and keeps the dish tasting clean over the course of the meal. The stone-fruit and mineral notes in the wine resonate with the notes that cooked into the sauce. It is a pairing built on continuity rather than contrast, and it is nearly impossible to get wrong.
Our bottle this week is the a dry Alsatian Riesling. Dry, mineral, made by a biodynamic producer in Husseren-les-Châteaux. This is the wine in the pot and the wine in the glass.
Alsace Pinot Gris is the second choice — slightly richer and more textured, with spice notes that add complexity against the cream. If your bottle of Riesling went entirely into the braise, a Pinot Gris from Trimbach or Hugel in the $25–35 range is a worthy second.
Serve the wine slightly cool — around 10–12°C. It will warm to 12–14°C in the glass over the meal, which is where Alsatian whites show their full aromatic range. Too cold and the aromatics close down; too warm and the freshness that makes the pairing work is lost.
About the Pasta
We serve this over homemade wide noodles — a simple Rich Egg Yolk Pasta Dough rolled thick and cut wide, cooked until just tender. This is our pasta recipe go-to and it works really well here (Thank you, Michael Symon!) Egg noodles are the traditional Alsatian accompaniment; they absorb the sauce without competing with it.
If you’re not making pasta from scratch, a dried egg noodle or pappardelle from a good brand works well. Spaetzel is also a terrific choice.

Rich Egg Yolk Pasta Dough
Ingredients
Group 1: The Dough
- 2 cups '00' flour or all-purpose flour, plus more for dusting
- 10 large egg yolks
- 1 tablespoon extra virgin olive oil
- Water as needed
Group 2: To Finish
- 1 tablespoon unsalted butter
- Flaky sea salt
- Fresh flat-leaf parsley roughly chopped — optional
Instructions
Make the Dough
- Combine the flour and egg yolks in the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment. Add the olive oil.
- Mix on low speed until the dough begins to come together. If the mixture looks too dry and crumbly, add water one teaspoon at a time until the dough begins to form.
- Once the dough has come together, switch to the dough hook. Mix on medium speed until the dough is smooth, elastic, and clears the sides of the bowl — about 4–5 minutes. If it is still sticking to the sides, add a small amount of flour; if it seems stiff and dry, add water a teaspoon at a time.
- Remove the dough from the bowl, shape into a ball, and wrap tightly in plastic wrap. Rest at room temperature for at least 30 minutes. The dough will relax and become noticeably easier to roll.
Roll, Cut & Cook
- Divide the rested dough into thirds. Keep the pieces you are not working with wrapped so they do not dry out.
- Flatten one piece with your palm and run it through a pasta machine on the widest setting. Fold the sheet in thirds and run it through again. Repeat 2–3 times until the sheet is smooth.
- Continue passing the dough through progressively narrower settings until you reach the desired thickness — setting 4 or 5 on a standard machine for wide noodles suited to a braise. The sheet should be thin but not translucent.
- Cut the sheets into wide noodles approximately 2 cm (¾ inch) wide, using a knife or pizza wheel. Drape the cut noodles over a dowel or lay flat on a lightly floured tray.
- To cook: bring a large pot of generously salted water to a rolling boil. Add the noodles and cook for 2–3 minutes, tasting at 2 minutes — they should be tender with a slight resistance at the center. Drain, reserving a cup of pasta water.
- Toss the drained noodles immediately with a tablespoon of butter and a splash of pasta water if needed to prevent sticking. Season with flaky salt. Serve at once alongside the Coq au Riesling.
Notes
The Recipe

Coq au Riesling
Ingredients
Group 1: The Chicken & Pancetta
- 3 lbs 1.3–1.5 kg bone-in, skin-on chicken thighs and drumsticks — thighs preferred
- 4 oz 115g pancetta, cut into small cubes (or thick-cut lardons)
- 2 tablespoons unsalted butter
- 1 tablespoon olive oil
- Salt and freshly ground black pepper
Group 2: The Aromatics
- 2 medium leeks — white and pale green parts only halved lengthwise, sliced thin, washed well
- 2 garlic cloves finely minced
- 8 oz 225g cremini mushrooms, sliced — or a mix of cremini and shiitake
Group 3: The Braising Liquid
- 1½ cups 375ml dry Alsatian Riesling — use one you would drink alongside the dish
- 1 cup 240ml good-quality chicken stock — low-sodium preferred
- 1 teaspoon fresh thyme leaves or ½ teaspoon dried
- 1 bay leaf
Group 4: The Cream Finish
- ¾ cup 180ml heavy cream
- 1 teaspoon Dijon mustard
- Salt and white pepper to taste
- Small squeeze of lemon juice to brighten at the end — optional
Group 5: To ServeR
- Rich Egg Yolk Pasta Dough see separate recipe — or dried egg noodles, cooked to package instructions
- Creme Fraiche or sour cream
- Fresh flat-leaf parsley roughly chopped
- Flaky sea salt for finishing
Instructions
Render the Pancetta
- Set a large Dutch oven or heavy braising pot over medium heat. Add the olive oil and pancetta cubes.
- Cook for 6–8 minutes, stirring occasionally, until the fat has rendered and the pancetta is golden at the edges. It should be tender-crisp, not hard. Remove with a slotted spoon and set aside, leaving the fat in the pan.
Sear the Chicken
- Pat the chicken pieces completely dry with paper towels — moisture is the enemy of a good sear. Season generously all over with salt and pepper.
- Raise the heat to medium-high. Add the butter to the pancetta fat. When the butter foam subsides, add the chicken skin-side down. Do not crowd the pan — work in batches if needed.
- Sear without moving for 6–7 minutes until the skin is deep golden brown. Flip and sear the other side for 4 minutes. Remove the chicken and set aside with the pancetta.
Build the Braise
- Reduce the heat to medium. Add the sliced leeks to the fat in the pan. Cook for 5–6 minutes, stirring occasionally, until softened and just beginning to turn translucent. Season lightly with salt.
- Add the garlic and mushrooms. Cook for another 5–6 minutes until the mushrooms have released their liquid and the pan is mostly dry again.
- Pour in the Riesling and scrape up any brown bits from the bottom of the pan — that fond is flavor. Add the chicken stock, thyme, and bay leaf.
- Return the chicken pieces and pancetta to the pan. The liquid should come about halfway up the chicken; add a splash more stock if needed. Bring to a gentle simmer.
- Cover and cook over low heat for 35–40 minutes, until the chicken is completely tender and pulls easily from the bone. Avoid a rolling boil — you want a quiet, steady simmer.
Finish and Serve
- Lift the chicken out and set aside on a warm plate. Remove the bay leaf. Raise the heat to medium and let the braising liquid reduce for 5–6 minutes until slightly thickened.
- Reduce the heat to low. Stir in the heavy cream and Dijon mustard. Simmer gently for 3–4 minutes until the sauce is silky and coats the back of a spoon. Taste and adjust with salt, white pepper, and lemon juice.
- Return the chicken to the pan and spoon the sauce over to coat. Allow to rest for 5 minutes before serving — the sauce will thicken slightly as it cools.
- Serve directly from the Dutch oven if possible, over homemade wide noodles. Finish with fresh parsley and a pinch of flaky salt. Optional: serve (as I do) with a dollop of creme fraiche or sour cream, if desired.
Notes
This dish belongs to the Alsace week — the same wine that teaches you dry Riesling as a concept is the wine you cook with and drink at dinner. That continuity is part of the lesson.
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Post Created: May 7, 2026













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