Equipment
Ingredients
Proteins
- 4 partridges, whole and dressed
- 150 g smoked bacon lardons, diced
Vegetables and Aromatics
- 15 ml olive oil
- 150 g pearl onions, peeled
- 200 g carrots, peeled and roughly chopped
- 100 g celery, roughly chopped
- 10 g garlic, minced
- 10 juniper berries, lightly crushed
- 3 fresh thyme, whole sprigs
- 1 fresh rosemary, whole sprig
- 1 bay leaf, whole
Sauce Components
- 15 g plain flour
- 300 ml dry red wine
- 400 ml chicken stock, warm
- fine sea salt
- black pepper, freshly ground
Nutrition (per serving)
Method
Preheat the Oven to 160°C (320°F).
Pat the partridges dry with paper towels and season them generously inside and out with fine sea salt and black pepper.
Heat the olive oil in a Dutch oven over medium heat and saute the smoked bacon lardons until the fat renders and they turn crisp, then use tongs to transfer them to a plate, leaving the rendered fat in the pot.
Place the seasoned partridges in the Dutch oven and sear them in the hot bacon fat until deeply browned on all sides, then remove and set aside on the plate with the bacon.
Add the pearl onions, chopped carrots, and celery to the pot and saute until they begin to soften and lightly caramelize around the edges.
Stir the minced garlic, lightly crushed juniper berries, and plain flour into the vegetables, cooking constantly with a wooden spoon for one minute to remove the raw flour taste.
Pour the dry red wine into the pot to deglaze, using the wooden spoon to scrape up all the browned bits from the bottom.
Simmer the wine over medium-high heat until the volume reduces by half, creating a thick, syrupy base.
Return the partridges and cooked bacon to the pot, then pour in the warm chicken stock and add the fresh thyme, fresh rosemary, and bay leaf.
Cover the Dutch oven with its lid, transfer to the preheated oven, and braise at 160°C (320°F) until the partridges are tender and a meat thermometer inserted into the thickest part of the thigh registers an internal temperature of at least 74°C (165°F).
Remove the pot from the oven, discard the woody herb stems and bay leaf, and let the dish rest for ten minutes to allow the meat to relax and the sauce to settle.
Serve the partridges hot, spooning the rich wine sauce and root vegetables generously over the meat.
Chef's Notes
- Partridge is a wonderfully flavorful but incredibly lean game bird. It pairs exceptionally well with fatty, smoky ingredients like bacon lardoons, which help keep the breast meat moist during the braising process.
- Crushing the juniper berries slightly with the flat side of a chef knife before adding them releases their volatile oils, imparting a distinct, piney aroma that cuts through the richness of the game meats perfectly.
- For the deepest flavor, choose a dry red wine that you would genuinely enjoy drinking. The reduction process concentrates its profile, so a tannic or overly acidic cooking wine will negatively impact the final sauce.
- If pearl onions prove difficult to peel, simply blanch them in boiling water for exactly one minute, then plunge them into a bowl of ice water. Pinch the root end and the skins will slip right off.
Storage
Refrigerator: 3 days — Store in an airtight container; the flavors will deepen and meld overnight.
Freezer: 3 months — Freeze in a sealed container. Thaw overnight in the refrigerator before reheating.
Reheating: Reheat gently in a covered saucepan over medium-low heat until bubbling and the meat reaches an internal temperature of 74 degrees Celsius (165 degrees Fahrenheit).










