Duck

Slow Cooker Peking Duck

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Ingredients
4 to 5 pound duck, giblets removed
5 whole green onions
4 star anise
1 inch ginger, peeled
2 teaspoons Chinese five spice powder
1 teaspoon cinnamon
1/2 teaspoon nutmeg
1 teaspoon honey
2 teaspoons soy sauce
Plum or hoisin sauce, rice, sliced cucumbers, sliced green onions, and flour tortillas, for serving

Instructions
1. Place green onions in bottom of slow cooker.  Stuff ginger and star anise into cavity of duck.  In small bowl combine five spice, cinnamon, and nutmeg.  Rub spices all over duck, inside and out.  Place duck inside slow cooker, breast-side up.  Drizzle honey and soy sauce over duck and cook on HIGH for 4 hours. 

2. Carefully remove duck from slow cooker and serve with plum or hoisin sauce, rice, sliced cucumbers, sliced green onions, and warmed flour tortillas. 

Note: I remove skin before serving since it’s not very appetizing. 

Slow Cooker Peking Duck

Comments
This recipe is originally from A Year of Slow Cooking which is a grand resource for slow cooking recipes.  I’m still trying to work out the best way to get the skin crispy but, for now, this is just the basic non-crispy skin recipe.  I’ll tweak it a bit more next time and see what happens.  The duck turns out wonderfully tender and tasty.  If you’re feeling ambitious you can save the fat from the bottom of the slow cooker and use it to make popcorn.

 

Pan Seared Duck Breasts Attempt #1

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Ingredients
4 boneless duck breasts
Salt and freshly ground black pepper, to taste

Instructions
1. Preheat oven to 400*F. Score the duck fat with a sharp knife, being careful not to pierce the flesh.

2. Season well with salt and pepper and place into an oven safe skillet fat side down.

3. Turn heat under the skillet to low and cook until the fat is rendered. 20-30 minutes.

4. Turn the breasts over and place skillet into the oven. Cook until breasts are medium-rare to medium, about 5-10 minutes and 165*F on an instant-read thermometer.

5. Let rest 5 minutes before serving. Save fat for future use if desired.  

Duck

Comments
This represents my first attempt at cooking duck breasts.  I picked them up after dinner at BRABO and then scoured the internet and my cookbooks for the best way to prepare them.  The skin didn’t crisp up the way I was hoping that it would, hopefully that’s something I’ll be able to rectify in future attempts.  The duck was delicious, flavorful, and perfectly medium-rare.  

Shown here with Red Pepper Risotto.

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