a recipe in French Acadian. Dumplings can be added to stew to thicken it.
Prep Time: | 15 mins |
Cook Time: | 55 mins |
Total Time: | 1 hr 10 mins |
Servings: | 4 |
Yield: | 4 servings |
Ingredients
- 1 tablespoon butter
- 1 (2 to 3 pound) whole chicken, cut into pieces
- 1 onion, chopped
- 5 carrots, chopped
- 6 potatoes, cubed
- 2 teaspoons dried savory
- salt to taste
- ground black pepper to taste
Instructions
- Melt butter in cooking pot, brown chicken with chopped onions. Add water to cover. Simmer for 30 minutes.
- Add carrots, potatoes, and savory. Simmer some more until vegetables are cooked. Salt and pepper to taste.
Nutrition Facts
Calories | 671 kcal |
Carbohydrate | 68 g |
Cholesterol | 132 mg |
Dietary Fiber | 10 g |
Protein | 47 g |
Saturated Fat | 8 g |
Sodium | 210 mg |
Sugars | 8 g |
Fat | 24 g |
Unsaturated Fat | 0 g |
Reviews
Excellent. Used thighs instead of a whole chicken, and also used chicken broth. Reminded my partner of his childhood in New Brunswick.
This recipe was absolutely delicious and amazing!!! Will make this again with the dumpling recipe.
I only add a small green pepper and a small amount of parsley. This is also the way Chicken stew is made in Québec. I am 71 and it’s the way my mom made it and I lived in Québec for 28 years.
Really good, used leftover turkey instead of chicken.
This is a pretty decent starting point for Acadian chicken stew. My family does it a little different, and i find it mire flavorful. Mom always used the leftover chicken carcass and simmered it to get the meat and broth necessary. If I don’t have leftover chicken, I just throw some chicken parts into my pressure cooker with water and onion and bay leaf to get the meat and broth. The biggest omission in this recipe is celery. I don’t even make fricot if I don’t have celery, it’s really that important to the flavor. I like to start by sauteeing the veggies in butter or bacon grease with a sprinkle of salt and pepper. Then add a sprinkle of flour, let it cook a minute, then stir in the stock and chicken and potatoes. Since my chicken was well cooked during the broth making process, it gets really soft and stringy in the stew which is what you want. We add summer savory and bells seasoning as well as bouillon cubes if necessary. Dropped flour-water dumplings are always added with a handful of frozen peas. And I stir in a splash of heavy cream before serving, but that’s not traditional. The best possible meal on a snowy winter day.
Delicious as is! Savory is the key to fricot (Acadian chicken stew), substituting it for anything else might be tasty, but no longer makes it fricot.
Still didn’t match the Fricot my Acadian in-laws but it would have been excellent if I didn’t have in-law’s for comparison.
I didn’t have savory… used rosemary, thyme and a little corriander. All my boys liked it! (husband, 11, 4, 2) I also did the garlic with the onion and chicken with some turkey stock I had and water. Added a little celery salt too. Will make again.
My whole family loves this. Even my 3 and 5 yr old. They eat their bowls clean to my surprise.
This was delicious!! I used boneless chicken breast, fresh parsly instead of the savory, I added 1 packet of goya chicken bouillon, half a packet of goya sazon w/azafran and a little garlic salt, along w/ reccomended vegetables. Simmered for a couple of hours. Excellent!! Thanks for sharing.
This is a great recipe. I’ve made it exactly as written, I’ve made it with the suggested modifications, and I’ve made it with my own modifications. I like it best with a few cloves of garlic minced and cooked in with the onions and chicken, using herbes de provence for the spice, cooking it with broth for 2 hours, and adding in a bit of flour at the end to thicken it. A rich, delicious stew that’s definitely greater than the sum of it’s parts!
I add a squeeze of lemon and white wine. Love it!
This chicken stew is amazing. Replace potatoes with dumplings for a delicious twist.
Great traditional Acadian stew. This recipe is very true to the old Northern New Brunswick ones I have seen. I like more spice so I did add a bit of this and that to liven it to my personal taste. Great meal on a cold winter’s night.
It was a very delicious recipe. I also added some chicken soup boulion and some lemon pepper and celery. Everyone loved it.
Great recipe. I followed the other reviewers and used chicken broth instead of water and additional seasonings (garlic powder & onion salt) to spice it up. I have made this recipe several times and sometimes also add sauteed kale to the mix which I LOVE.
This is much like my Mom and Grandmother’s (Memere’s) recipe (we are also Acadian!) We don’t brown the chicken, we add already cooked chicken (from the roast the night before) to the stock (from the night before). She also adds some celery, and if we don’t add dumplings we put a little flour & water to thicken it a bit (Though, who doesn’t add dumplings!? 🙂 ) Plus, we cook it even longer, until the chicken is falling apart and stringy. So, I give 4 stars for the recipe as-is, but 5 stars to my family recipe.
My family loved this meal!! My finiky 8 year old even ate this and asked for 2nds!!
What a simple yet wonderful recipe. I added several cups of V-8 juice to the stew to add more flavor which it did. As one of the reviewers suggested, I also found a recipe for dumplings on this website and added to the stew. I loved the result.
I cook my chicken with water onion and spices in water first. I remove chicken to cool while I prepare vegetables and add pearl barley. After I add vegetables I remove skin and bones from chicken and add chicken back in. I use an ingredient I consider my flavour booster. I add small amount of sugar, try it.
Very good. I skinned the chicken before browning, substituted seasoned garlic salt and dried parsley for summer savory, and chicken broth in place of water. Also thickened up the broth with a flour/water paste before serving. Tasty.