Slow Cooker Chicken Cassoulet

Slow Cooker Chicken Cassoulet. On a recent trip to France, I savored Cassoulet, a quintessential French dish at La Brasserie Bordelaise on Rue Saint-Remi, Bordeaux Old Town. The dish has medieval origins and was nothing short of fabulous. At its heart, Cassoulet is a slow-cooked stew of Toulouse pork sausage and duck with white beans, and dry white wine or vermouth, topped with breadcrumbs and baked.  
The importance of the strong flavors in Cassoulet like pork and duck is that they also flavor the beans which have no flavor themselves. But back in New Zealand, duck and Toulouse sausage aren't readily available in supermarkets, expensive if they are, and artisan butcheries are few and far between these days. What's one to do when not in France but want to cook and enjoy a Cassoulet?  Adapt, of course.

Adaptations include swapping chicken for duck, using a strong fresh pork sausage instead of Toulouse Sausage, and/or pork bones or pork strips (**note pork bones may break down on cooking into smaller pieces which may be a choking hazard and not suitable for children or elderly people**). If readers happen to have duck fat or pork lard on hand, that could be used to brown sausage or chicken before adding to the slow cooker to add extra flavor.


Cassoulet ready to be cooked with chicken drumsticks, pork bones, butter beans, tomatoes, and rosemary


Recipe - for 4

Utensils

Slow cooker

Measuring jug


Ingredients

1-2 chicken drumsticks per person, skin on to add flavor

Oil or pork lard to brown meat

1 sausage per person

250gm streaky bacon, sliced into thin strips about thumb width, or 2-3 pork bones

1 brown onion, thinly sliced

1 can cheapest white beans undrained (lima, butter, cannellini beans) 

1 can cheapest plain tomatoes (whole, diced, chopped, it doesn't matter)

1 tbsp tomato paste

1 carrot per person, peeled and sliced into rounds 

1 tsp instant chicken stock granules or one stock cube dissolved

1 cup warm water

1/2 cup vermouth or dry white wine 

2-3 sprigs of Rosemary 

Panko crumbs


Method

If you have time, brown the onion, bacon (if using),chicken and sausages in batches in a frying pan on high. If you have duck, goose or pork fat/lard, use that to cook the meat with.  Otherwise, just use a small amount of whatever oil you have.  The objective is to brown, not deep fry or cook through completely.  If you don't have time to brown the meat, then don't.

Place meat into the slow cooker dish.  Add the can of undrained beans and liquid, the can of tomatoes and carrot. If you have celery, leeks or parsnips lurking in the fridge vege bin, don't be shy adding those too.

In a jug mix the water and dissolve the stock.  Add tomato paste, and vermouth or dry white wine to the jug then pour over the meat and vegetable mix.  Add sprigs of rosemary or other green woody herbs if you have them and push into the liquid. The liquid coverage should ideally be about 3/4 of the meat and vegetable mixture.

Turn your slow cooker onto low if you're cooking all day, or high if you're only cooking for 5-6 hours. If you can, stir once or twice during the day.  Note the mixture will be quite 'liquidy' when cooked - don't panic - it will thicken up with the next step.

Heat the oven on to 180 c.  Remove the lid and take slow-cooker ceramic dish out of the heating unit, sprinkle a thick layer of Panko crumbs over the top and bake uncovered for 40 minutes or until the sauce thickens.

Slow Cooker Chicken Cassoulet


Serving

Remove any rosemary or herb stalks.  Serve using a large serving spoon onto large plates with slices of baguette and a green side vegetable if you wish.

Bon appetit!