Photo by Jun Pang
I never used to like duck. I was never around it all that much growing up. Filipinos don’t normally cook with duck so I didn’t really discover it until I was cooking in a commercial kitchen. I assume that most people are the same. Most people I know haven’t really eaten a lot of duck in their lives unless of course it was in a restaurant.
Duck is a “some times” ingredient for many people, often classified to many home cooks in the “too hard” basket. What do you do with it? How do you prepare it? What other ingredients does it go with? So how do we as chefs expect home cooks to cook with it if they don’t know much about it?
Duck has a slightly “gamey” flavour, with a meat that can sustain a number of cooking methods. There are several breeds of ducks that are used for cooking, mainly the Muscovy and the Pekin duck in Australia. Pekin ducks are the most used, a little less gamier in flavour and the texture is a lot more tender. The meat on the Pekins are lighter in colour but can sustain and reacts well to most cooking styles. Bred primarily for domesticated use, Pekin ducks originated from the Mallard, anther breed of duck that is popular in most kitchens.
So how do you use it? The French love it confited, a type of cooking where the chef slowly cooks it in its own juices or rendered fat. From this they make several other foods like rillettes, a type of pate served with crispy bread. The French also make things like terrines, sausages, roulades amongst other things with the most popular dish arguably being, Duck a l’orange which is duck served with a deep, rich orange glaze.
In the East, duck is one of the most favoured ingredients to cook and eat. Emperors from many Chinese Dynasties have favoured and enjoyed duck. The most famous of all the dishes being the Peking Duck. Chinese red roasted duck with thin, crispy and crunchy skin served with thin pancakes and hoisin sauce.
For the home cook, if you want poultry with a difference then try duck. You can cook with it much like chicken but the duck skin carries a little more fat and the flavour can be a little over powering. Best way to get around that is to render it down by slowly sealing it on a dry pan, allowing to naturally render the fat down a little so it’s not too strong. After that, use duck as you would chicken recipes.
The best use of duck is with oranges or mandarins. Duck and citrus seem to be good friends. Spices like cinamon and star anise is another match made in heaven.
Try this recipe with a difference. Its served with a warm potato salad; seems simple, because it is!
The sweetness of the vincotto goes well with the duck flavour and the goats cheese has this natural way of leavening the palate, making the dish nice and smooth, allowing you to really enjoy the flavours of duck!
Seared Duck Breast Salad, Buttered Kipfler Potatoes, Dried Fig and Goats Cheese & Vincotto
Serves 4
300gr Castor Sugar
1 Litre Water
500ml Red Wine
4 Star Anise
2 Cinnamon Sticks
120gr Dried Figs
4 Duck Breast
500gr Kipfler Potatoes – boiled until soft
350gr Goats Cheese Curd
1 Bunch Red Butter Lettuce
100gr Butter
Vincotto
Sea Salt
Black Pepper
Method
Comments (5)
cookinginsens July 30, 2012
Good recipe! I love duck.
dnleslie July 30, 2012
Thank you and thanks for the comment
foodyrach July 30, 2012
First off, this looks like a great recipe for duck. I can see the bibb lettuce being a perfect canvas for a flavorful meat. I, myself, prefer the gamey flavor of duck. I grew up eating mallard and quail, as my dad hunted them. I find that they all taste best when seared, and then roasted off in the oven.
dnleslie July 30, 2012
Too under used but like I said, not a lot of people know about them. Thanks for the comments
Amanda August 2, 2012
Lovely recipe thanks Dennis. I like duck, but like many others don’t use it often enough. This dish seems simple but flavourful and the poached figs and goats curd are perfect together. This will be on our table soon, I think!