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- `Wild Duck and Andouille Sauce Piquant
-
-
- 1 c Olive oil (for roux)
- 3 c Plain flour (for roux)
- 3 c Onions; chopped
- 1 c Bell pepper; chopped
- 3 c green onions; chopped
- 2 c Parsley; chopped
- 1 x Water
- 2 T Garlic; finely chopped
- 3 c Chablis wine
- 1/2 t Dried mint; crushed
- 11 c Tomato sauce
- 3 T Lea & Perrins
- 6 t Louisiana hot sauce
- 5 t Salt
- 1 lb Andouille; sliced 1/4" thick
- 2 1/2 lb Wild duck breasts
-
- Servings: 12
- -
- Brown off duck breasts in some olive oil.
- Make a roux with oil and flour (see Justin's recipe posted earlier).
- Add onions; bell pepper; green onions; and parsley to roux. Stir
- and cook. Add one cup water and garlic. Cook. Add wine and some
- more water. Add other seasonings and tomato sauce. Mix well.
- Add andouille (or smoked sausage) and duck breasts. Stir.
- Simmer on low heat for 3 to 4 hours. Stir occasionally. Add more
- salt and cayenne to your taste.
- Makes about 3 gallons; so this is for a lot of people. Serve over
- spaghetti or rice.
-
- From Justin Wilson's "Outdoor Cooking With Inside Help"
- ~
-
- `Roast Bush Duck
-
- 1 medium bush duck
- 1 tomato - diced
- 1 small onion -diced
- 1 clove garlic
- 1 tsp salt
- 1 tsp pepper
- 1 tbsp butter
- 1 cup strong black coffee
- 1 tbsp favorite pepper sauce
- 1 green pepper
- 1 6 oz. can whole mushrooms
- 3 tbsp worcestershire sauce
- 6" two by four (untreated timber)
- -
- Soak untreated two by four timber in worcestershire and pepper sauce for 8
- hours, turning every 2-3 hours.
-
- Preheat oven to 400.
-
- In a saucepan, combine all spices and ingredients, except for tomato and
- onion. Add coffee slowly and bring to a boil.
-
- Place untreated timber in roasting pan. Place duck on top of timber and
- pour marinade over the duck. Roast for one hour.
-
- Pour 3/4 of coffee broth over duck, and use remainder to baste duck with as
- it cooks. Roast for about four hours.
-
- Check readiness by inserting a fork into the wood beneath the duck. When
- you can insert a fork into the wood easily, remove the dish from the oven,
- pour a glass of Lowenbrau, throw duck away and eat the two by four.
- ~
-
- `Caneton Montmorency
-
- 1 4-5 lb. duck, quartered
- duckling giblets & neck
- 16-17 oz. can pitted, dark sweet cherries
- 3/4 C port wine
- 1 C raw wild rice
- 1/4 C butter or marg.
- 1/4 C minced onion
- 3 Tablespoons flour
- 1 Tablespoon meat-extract paste
- 3 Tablespoons currant jelly
- -
- Start heating oven to 325. Wash & dry duckling; remove any pinfeathers. In
- shallow open roasting pan, on a rack, roast duckling, skin side up, 2.5 to 3
- hours or until tender (this seemed to me to be a long time, but it turned out
- ok!).
-
- Make duckling broth by simmering giblets (omitting liver) and neck with 2 cups
- water, covered, about 1.5 hr. Also let cherries stand in 1/4 C port wine.
-
- About 1 hr. before serving, wash rice well in 3 changes of cold water. Then
- add slowly to 4 C boiling water. Boil, covered, stirring occasionally with
- fork, about 45 min., or till rice is tender & water is absorbed. Add 2
- Tablespoons butter. Keep warm.
-
- When done, remove duckling from roasting pan to serving platter. Pour
- drippings from pan; in pan, melt 2 Tablespoons butter, stirring to dissolve
- browned bits in pan. Add onion; cook, stirring, until tender. Remove from
- heat. Stir in flour, meat-extract paste, currant jelly, 1.5 Cup strained
- duckling broth, 1/2 C wine. Cook, stirring, over medium heat until thickened.
- Add cherries in wine.
-
- Serve duckling on wild rice, with sauce poured over. Makes 4 servings.
-
- I served this to company and got good reviews.
-
-
- Susan,
- You mentioned that your hubby wanted to try duck, so you bought one and now
- don't know what to do with it ... the following recipe is from the Good
- Housekeeping Cookbook (sorry, it went to my ex so I don't know what year it
- was published, but must have been before 1970).
-
- Note: The recipe calls for 'meat-extract paste'. I have no idea what this
- is so probably used a bouillon cube instead.
-
- ---
- From Judy Haight to Susan Fox 14-Jan-9
- ~
-
- `ROAST DUCK
-
- a 3 to 5 pound duck 2 sprigs fresh parsley
- Salt and freshly ground 1/4 t. dried thyme
- black pepper to taste 1 bay leaf
- 1 small onion, peeled 1 clove garlic, peeled
- -
- 1. Preheat oven to 450 degrees.
- 2. Open the cavity of the duck and remove the neck, gizzard, liver, and heart.
- With the fingers, remove and discard the chuncks of fat inside the duck (if
- there are any). Sprinkle both the inside and outside of the duck with salt and
- pepper. Put onion, garlic, parsley, thyme, and bay leaf inside the duck. Lay
- the duck on its side in an open roasting pan (a pan whose sides are only 2 to
- 3 inches deep with enough room for heat to circulate around the duck).
- 3. Scatter the neck, the gizzard, and the heart around the duck. You may add
- the liver or not as desired. Many people discard it. Carefully place the
- roasting pan in the oven and bake for 20 min if it is a 3 lb duck; 25 min if
- its a 4 lb duck; and 30 min if its a 5 lb duck. Now, remove the roasting pan
- from the oven. Holding a large 2 pronged fork inside the duck to keep it from
- falling out of the pan, pour the duck fat down the drain or in a receptacle.
- Now using the fork, turn the duck onto its other side and place the pan back
- into the oven. Continue baking for the same length of time as you did for the
- first side. Once more, pour off the fat and this time turn the duck on its
- back.
- 4. When a 3 lb duck has cooked for a total of 40 min or a 4 lb duck has cooked
- for 50 min or a 5 lb duck has cooked for 1 hr, turn the oven down to 350
- degrees. Continue roasting the duck, pouring off fat as it accumulates. The
- total cooking time for a 3 lb duck is about 1 1/4 hrs; for a 4 lb duck - 1 1/2
- hrs; for a 5 lb duck - about 2 hrs. When cooked, the duck should be golden
- brown and crisp. There are 2 ways to tell when the duck is done. Lift it up
- with the large fork and if the liquids inside the duck run clear (not redish)
- it is done. Or prick the duck between the thigh and the leg. If the liquid
- runs clear, the duck is done.
- 5. Cut the duck in half or quarter it and serve hot. Leftover cold duck is
- also delicious served on a plate or in sandwiches.
-
- YIELD: two or three servings.
-
- Later,
-
- Rich
-
- From Rich Hyatt to Can't remember, sorry. 14-Jan-9
- ~
-
- `ROAST DUCK (simple)
-
- Preheat oven to moderate (350 F).
- Rub the skin of the duck with half a lemon. Sprinkle the inside
- of the duck with salt and pepper. Place duck on a rack in a roasting
- pan. Roast, wiothout basting, about 12 to 15 minutes per pound. Fifteen
- minutes before the duck is done, sprinkle the outside with salt and pepper.
-
- That is all this recipe says, but most cookbooks recommend pricking the
- duck all over with a fork before roasting so the fat can come out. That
- is a very good suggestion since ducks do have an awful lot of fat.
-
- We usually have rice with duck, and sometimes sweet potatoes.
-
- Happy cookin' and happier eatin'
-
- From Fred Peters to Susan Fox 14-Jan-9
- ~
-
- `Peach Glazed Duck
-
- Glaze:
- 1/2 cup peach jam
- 1/4 cup honey
- 1/8 cup orange juice
- 1 T Brandy (or sherry)
- -
-
- Clean a duck inside and out with running water. Stuff cavity, if desired
- with a sausage and apple stuffing.) Towel dry the bird, and sprinkle with
- paprika and garlic powder, rolling the duck to get at all surfaces. Put the
- duck in a deep roasting pan on a rack, so that the bird will not stew in the
- oil that comes from the bird during cooking. Put in oven heated to 230C
- (450F) and reduce the heat to 175C (350F) right away. Cook 44 minutes per
- kilo (20 minutes per pound) including the stuffing in the total weight. At
- regular intervals baste the bird with the drippings, and remove excess fat
- from the pan. For the last 15 minutes of the cooking time, remove the bird,
- coat with glaze.
-
- Mix together to form a paste, and brush over the bird. Return duck to
- oven for final 15 minutes. Make a gravy from the drippings by adding flour
- to the roasting pan, and adding stock, sherry, pepper, sage, margoram, and
- anything else that your heart desires. Serve with couscous (cracked wheat)
- or a bed of rice.
-
- Domestic Duck is very different from wild Duck, in taste and in cooking
- technique. Wild duck is very lean, dom duck is very fatty. A good wild
- Mallard tastes akin to beef tartare, and is a similar colour, while dom duck
- is more like fowl, and much, much lighter in colour.
- Due to the high fat content, it is important to take off this hot oil at
- regular intervals during the cooking process. Here is one way that I
- prepare duck that people tell me is good:
-
- From Mark Kaye to Susan Fox 16-Jan-90
- ~
-
- `TWICE-COOKED HERBED DUCKS
-
- 2 ducks, about 4 1/2 pounds each
- Handful each, fresh lemon, thyme, Italian parsley, rosemary, sage
- (1 teaspoon each if dried)
- 4 tablespoons kosher salt
- Coarsely ground pepper to taste
- -
-
- Remove heads, feet, giblets and excess fat from ducks. Using
- poultry shears or strong kitchen scissors, remove tails and
- backbones; cut each bird in half through breastbone, then in
- quarters. Rinse and pat dry. Prick all over with the tines of a
- fork.
-
- Combine herbs with salt and pepper and rub all over duck
- pieces, pressing well into skin. Place quarters on a rack in a
- roasting pan, skin side up, and cook in a 300 degree oven for
- about 1 hour, until the fat has rendered into the pan - up to 2
- or 3 cups. Remove from oven but leave on rack to continue drip-
- ping for about 45 minutes.
-
- Start a charcoal fire (a covered grill is most efficient for
- this) and when coals are ready and spread, place duck quarters on
- rack, skin side down. Cover grill and cook 10 minutes. Turn duck,
- cover grill and cook 15 minutes. Reverse and cook skin side up
- for about 5 minutes more, covered; serve immediately. Serves 6 to
- 8.
-
- From Stephen Ceideburg to All 01-Feb-9
- ~
-
-
- `STEAM-ROASTED DUCK
-
- Pull all loose fat out of the cavity of the duck. Rinse the
- duck and wipe it dry. Wipe all over the outside and inside with a cut
- lemon. Salt inside the cavity lightly and add a sprinkling of sage or
- thyme. Place the duck breast up on a rack in a cevered casserole
- roasting pan. Add one inch of water and bring to a boil on top of the
- stove. Cover tightly, reduce the heat, and let steam 30 minutes.
- Preheat the oven to 325 F. Remove the steamed duck from the casserole,
- pour out the liquid, and drain the duck. Place a duoble layer of foil
- over the rack and return the duck, breast side down. Strew 1/2 cup each
- chopped onion, carrot, and celery around the duck; pour in 1 1/2 cups of
- wine (red or white) or water. Bring to a simmer on top of the stove then
- cover the casserole and place in the oven for 30 minutes.
- Place the duck on a rack in a shallow roasting pan. Roast uncovered to
- brown and crisp the duck for 30 to 40 minutes at 375 F. The duck is done
- when the legs feel reasonably tender.
- The cooking liquid and vegetables may be used to make a sauce. Degrease
- the liquid and bring to a simmer. Mash down the vegetables in the liquid
- and boil until it is reduced almost to a syrup. Strain and use to moisten
- each serving of duck.
-
- Ducks and geese are by nature very fatty. They have enough fat
- to be self-basting without any help (there are no Butterball ducks).
- Sometimes I will split a duck and roast it on a rack in a roasting pan
- with a little water in the bottom. Splitting helps to get rid of the
- excess fat. In her new book (The Way To Cook) Julia Child has a recipe
- for Steam-roasted duck. Here is a condensed version:
-
- From Fred Peters to Mary Julius 01-Feb-90
- ~
-
- `GRILLED PEKING DUCK
- Categories: Duck Chinese
- Servings: 4
-
- 4 c Water 3 ea Garlic cloves; crushed
- 1/2 c Soy sauce 1 t Ginger, ground
- 1/4 c Honey 1 ea Duck (5 lb)
- 2 T Turmeric
- -
- In a wide shallow pan or large deep skillet, combine all ingredients
- except the duck. Bring to a boil, then reduce heat to low and simmer five
- minutes. Meanwhile, rinse the duck; remove giblets and neck, reserving
- for soup.
- Truss the duck, making a handle of the string. Place the pan with the hot
- soy mixture in the sink. Holding the duck by the handle over the pan,
- ladle hot soy mixture on all sides until the skin has a "cooked" look.
- Hang duck in a cool, airy, breezy place for 4 to 6 hours to dry the skin.
- Or, place duck on a wire rack over a pan and refrigerate overnight. Pour
- leftover mixture in an oven-proof saucepan. Place duck, breast side down,
- in a roast holder inside a deep aluminum foil drip pan.
- Place pan in the center of grill; cover and grill for 1-1/2 to 1-3/4 hours
- using over deep drip pan containing 1/2" water. Place soy mixture over
- direct coals and boil to reduce by half. Strain soy mixture through a
- fine sieve and serve with duckling.
-
- From Sam Waring to Ellen Cleary 14-Feb-90
- ~
-