Chicken and Leek Pie

User Reviews

5.0

108 reviews
Excellent
  • Prep Time

    25 mins

  • Cook Time

    1 hr

  • Cool filling

    1 hr

  • Total Time

    2 hrs 25 mins

  • Servings

    5

  • Calories

    662 kcal

  • Course

    Main Course

  • Cuisine

    American

Chicken and Leek Pie

Recipe video above. Tender bites of chicken and slippery pieces of sweet leek smothered in a creamy white-wine thyme infused sauce, bubbling under a golden puff pastry crust. Chicken and Leek Pie is comfort food we dream about!I cut my leeks in a specific way. I like larger pieces rather than thinly sliced rings which get too soggy-stringy for my taste. Also, if you don't like / can't get puff pastry, cover this pie in mash (like Cottage Pie!) or use a homemade shortcrust pastry.Make one big pie like I've done, or ramekins (makes 4 large, 5 regular). For a pie with a base, replace the filling in my Family Meat Pie (there will be leftover filling) or individual meat pies. See the FAQ above for the gluten-free option.

I Made This!

81 people made this

Save this

64 people saved this

Ingredients

Servings
  • 50g/ 3 1/2 tbsp unsalted butter , divided
  • 750g/ 1.5lb chicken thighs , skinless, boneless, cut into 1.8 cm / 3/4" bite size pieces (Note 1)
  • 1/4 tsp each black pepper and cooking salt (kosher salt)

Pie filling:

  • 80g / 3 oz streaky bacon , chopped into 1cm / 0.4" squares (Note 2)
  • 2 leeks (Note 3)
  • 2 celery stems , sliced 4 mm / 0.2" thick (cut thick end in half lengthways first)
  • 2 garlic cloves , finely minced
  • 1/3 cup chardonnay or other dry white wine (Note 4)
  • 1/4 cup flour (plain / all-purpose)
  • 1 tbsp Dijon mustard (Note 5)
  • 2 thyme sprigs (or 1/2 tsp dried thyme)
  • 2 bay leaves (preferably fresh, else dried)
  • 1 cup chicken stock / broth , low sodium
  • 1 cup thickened / heavy cream (or any full-fat cream, or sub milk for lower fat)
  • 1/2 tsp cooking salt / kosher salt
  • 1/4 tsp black pepper

Pie:

  • 2 x 20cm / 8" frozen butter puff pastry sheets , or single sheet large enough to cover baking dish, 360g / 12 oz (Note 6)
  • 1 egg , yolk and whites separated, lightly whisked
Add to Shopping List

Instructions

ABBREVIATED:

  1. Sear surface of chicken in half butter, remove. Cook bacon 1 minute, then leek, celery and garlic 5 minutes. Deglaze with wine, melt remaining butter, then cook flour 1 minute. Add stock, then remaining Filling ingredients. Add chicken, thicken sauce (~5 minutes).
  2. Cool filling 1 hour, assemble pie with double layer puff on rim, brush lid with yolk, bake 45 minutes 200°C/375°F (180°C fan).

FULL RECIPE:

Cut leek (step photos above helpful):

  1. Trim the reedy dark green ends and root off, then cut in half. Cut each piece in half lengthways. Remove the outer 5 to 6 layers (keep them together), lay them flat, cut in half lengthways then into 1.8cm / 3/4" squares. Cut the inner core into 2cm / 0.8" pieces.

Filling:

  1. Chicken - Melt half the butter in a large pan over high heat. Add the chicken, salt and pepper. Cook until the surface changes from pink to white (inside still raw), then remove into a bowl using a slotted spoon. Leave residual butter and chicken juices in the pan.
  2. Sauté - In the same pan, cook the bacon for 1 minute. Add the leek, celery and garlic. Cook for 5 minutes until the celery is softened. Don't let the leek brown - lower the heat if needed.
  3. Deglaze - Add the wine and simmer rapidly on high heat, stirring, until it is mostly evaporated.
  4. Roux - Lower the heat to medium. Add the remaining butter. Once it melts, sprinkle the flour across the surface (don't dump in one place) and stir for 1 minute.
  5. Creamy sauce - While stirring, slowly pour the stock in. The mixture will thicken into a thick sauce once combined. Then add the mustard, cream, thyme, bay leaves, salt and pepper. Stir to combine, then add the chicken including all the juices accumulated in the bowl.
  6. Simmer - Increase the heat, stir to combine. Once it comes to a simmer, reduce the heat to medium high. Simmer for 5 minutes, stirring regularly, or until the sauce is a thick creamy consistency you want in the finished pie (ie sauce thickness now = thickness in the baked pie, see Note 7).
  7. Cool - Remove the pan from the stove and cool for 1 hour. (You can also store in fridge for 3 - 4 days).

Assembling and baking:

  1. Preheat the oven to 200°C/375°F (180°C fan-forced). Use a 1.5 litre / 1.5 quart baking pan (Note 9) or 4 to 5 x ~350ml / 12 oz ramekins.
  2. Connect puff pastry sheets (if needed) - Semi-thaw the puff pastry (Note 6). Brush the edge of one sheet with egg white, then overlap 0.5cm / 0.2" with the other sheet to connect them. Use the back of a spoon to "smear" the pastry to hide the seam and firmly connect.
  3. Cut out the pie lid (I use the dish as a cutting guide).
  4. Optional strips for extra puffy edges (Note 8): Cut strips using the residual pastry to line the rim of the dish (if your dish has a thick rim, like mine) and place on the rim of the dish.
  5. Fill the pie dish with the cooled filling and smooth the surface. Brush the pastry strips on the rim with egg white (if not using strips, don't do this step) then cover with the puff pastry lid.
  6. Brush the lid with egg yolk. Cut a small X in the middle.
  7. Bake 45 minutes or until the surface is a deep golden brown. Rest 5 minutes then serve!

Notes

  • Chicken - Thighs are best as they remain juicy after the double-cook time for pie.
  • For chicken breast, it's better to shred as you can't avoid overcooking it in this recipe as written and nobody wants dry, miserably chunks of chicken in their pie! Split in half horizontally to form 2 thin steaks. Sprinkle with the salt and pepper, sear in the butter being careful not to overcook (even under cooked is fine). Cool slightly, shred. Proceed with recipe but only stir the shredded chicken in at the very end once sauce is simmered and thickened.
  • Bacon - Use bacon streaked with fat as we need the fat for sautéing. If using lean bacon, add an extra dab of butter.
  • Leek - Leek brings a specific flavour into this pie (and it's the namesake!) but you can absolutely make this using onions instead. Use 2 large onions (regular brown / yellow ones, or white onions).
  • Wine - Substitute with non alcoholic white wine, or chicken stock/broth.
  • Mustard - Brings a hint of flavour into the sauce but it can be omitted or substituted with wholegrain mustard (ie seeded).
  • Puff pastry tips:
  • Sauce thickness - Make it the thickness you want in the pie when it comes out of the oven as it will not thicken any further in the oven. I like mine oozy-thick.
  • Strips - This gives the pie an extra thick flaky edge! But you can only do it if your baking dish has a rim like mine.
  • Baking pan size - Use a pan that is around 1.5L / 1.5 Qt (filling will just about reach the surface which is ideal). My pan is a Falcon enamel which is 26 x 20 x 4 cm (inside of top rim) and 16 x 22cm base (pan has sloping edges so base is smaller). The filling will fit in a 4cm / 1.6" deep 20cm/8" square pan. Else, use a larger pan and drape the pastry down the walls into the pan, then onto the filling surface. Looks dramatic and you get so much pastry which everybody loves!
  • Leftovers will keep for 3 - 4 days in the fridge but the lid will go soft. To resurrect, reheat in lid in the oven on a tray and the filling in the microwave.
  • Make ahead - Assemble pie per recipe and refrigerate overnight or freeze (note it will take 48 hours to thaw in the fridge). Filling can also be made ahead 3 - 4 days. Note: Puff pastry puffs best when cooked immediately upon thawing, but still puffs pretty well if thawed > frozen > thawed again and baked. 
  • Nutrition per serving assuming 5 servings.
  • Standard grocery store puff pastry in Australia comes in 20cm/8" squares so we need to connect 2 pieces so it's large enough to cover the baking dish. If you get a premium brand like Careme which is larger sheets, you won't need to do this.
  • BUTTER puff pastry (labelled as such on the packet) is tastier and puffs better. It's a little pricier than non-butter puff.
  • Semi-thawed puff pastry is easier to handle than full thawed, and puffs better because it won't accidentally stretch when handled. I let it thaw just enough so I can cut it.

Nutrition Information

Show Details
Calories 662cal (33%) Carbohydrates 29g (10%) Protein 35g (70%) Fat 47g (72%) Saturated Fat 26g (130%) Polyunsaturated Fat 4g Monounsaturated Fat 12g Trans Fat 0.4g Cholesterol 248mg (83%) Sodium 888mg (37%) Potassium 575mg (16%) Fiber 1g (4%) Sugar 4g (8%) Vitamin A 1726IU (35%) Vitamin C 6mg (7%) Calcium 95mg (10%) Iron 4mg (22%)

Nutrition Facts

Serving: 5Serving

Amount Per Serving

Calories 662 kcal

% Daily Value*

Calories 662cal 33%
Carbohydrates 29g 10%
Protein 35g 70%
Fat 47g 72%
Saturated Fat 26g 130%
Polyunsaturated Fat 4g 24%
Monounsaturated Fat 12g 60%
Trans Fat 0.4g 20%
Cholesterol 248mg 83%
Sodium 888mg 37%
Potassium 575mg 12%
Fiber 1g 4%
Sugar 4g 8%
Vitamin A 1726IU 35%
Vitamin C 6mg 7%
Calcium 95mg 10%
Iron 4mg 22%

* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet.

Genuine Reviews

User Reviews

Overall Rating

5.0

108 reviews
Excellent

Write a Review

Drag & drop files here or click to upload
Other Recipes

You'll Also Love

Vegetarian Leek Quiche Pie

American
5.0 (3 reviews)

One Pot Leek And Chicken Rice

American
5.0 (21 reviews)

Healthy Chicken Leek and Potato Bake

American
4.9 (84 reviews)

Creamy Mushroom and Leek Pasta

American
5.0 (174 reviews)

Bacon and Leek Pasta

American
4.9 (30 reviews)

Potato and Leek Soup

American
5.0 (6 reviews)

Shrimp and Leek Pasta

American
5.0 (63 reviews)

Portobello and Leek Carbonara

American
4.8 (12 reviews)

The Best Cream of Potato and Leek Soup

American
5.0 (33 reviews)

Potato and Leek Gratin

American
0.0 (0 reviews)

Leek and potato Soup

French, Italian, American
0.0 (0 reviews)

Sausage and Leek Pasta

American
4.8 (36 reviews)

Mushroom and Leek Tart

American
5.0 (33 reviews)