Thursday, September 7, 2023

Wendell's Steamed and Roasted Duck

The recipe for this is from the Food Network site and is courtesy of Tyler Florence.  It sure looks humbug to make, but Wendell said that it wasn't.  😳

It was really good.

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The is how I ate it.
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Ingredients

Directions

  1. Duck is notoriously a fatty bird, to diminish the fat and produce a crispy skin, begin by trimming the excess fat from the neck and body. Rinse the duck, inside and out, and pat dry thoroughly with paper towels. Combine the Chinese five-spice, sugar, and salt in a small bowl. Rub the spice mixture all over the duck, inside and out. Salt and five-spice powder makes a fragrant dry marinade, which draws some of the moisture from the duck so that the spices penetrate. Stuff the duck cavity with the aromatics: the ginger, garlic, green onions, and tangerine peel. Fold the wing tips back under the duck and tie the legs together with kitchen string. Poke the duck breast a few times, piercing the skin.
  2. Place a roasting pan on the stovetop over 2 burners and fill with 2-inches of water, turn the heat to medium. Set a V-rack insert inside the pan and lay the duck on the rack, breast-side up. Cover tightly with aluminum foil. Steam the duck for 45 minutes, checking the water level periodically. Steaming the duck first melts away some of the fat and shrinks the skin.
  3. In a small saucepan combine the vinegar, honey, and soy sauce over low heat. Cook and stir for 5 minutes until thick. The duck will be lacquered with the sweet glaze, which caramelizes during roasting, making the skin crisp and brown.
  4. Preheat the oven to 375 degrees F.
  5. Take the foil off the duck, remove the rack with the duck, and pour out the water and all the fat that has rendered out (this is great to use in other dishes like fried rice.) Put the rack with the duck back inside the roasting pan. Baste the duck with the vinegar mixture, until all the skin is completely coated in the glaze. Stick the whole thing in the oven. Roast the duck for 1 hour, basting periodically with any remaining glaze to set in a deep mahogany color. Tent the breast with some foil if it gets too dark. The legs will wiggle easily when it's done. Carve and serve.

4 comments:

Honolulu Aunty said...

OMG. LOVE duck!

K and S said...

looks delicious

Anonymous said...

Looks so delicious! I love duck…but looks like a lot of work. LOL speaking of duck, did you hear that Nam Fong in Chinatown is closing this month. They have really good duck, roast pork,, char siu and shoyu chicken. So sad.


Izsmom

jalna said...

Aunty, remember back in the day when people would bring back duck from San Francisco?

Kat, was juicy.

Izsmom, oh no. That is sad.