Showing posts with label Duck. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Duck. Show all posts

Friday, November 4, 2011

Simply and Perfectly Cooked Duck Breasts, for French Fridays with Dorie

I've only prepared duck a few times at home, but it's one of my favorites to order when I see it on a restaurant menu, especially when served with a cherry and/or port sauce. This week's French Fridays with Dorie recipe, Twenty-Minute Honey-Glazed Duck Breasts, was certainly one I didn't want to miss.


Dorie writes an entire page about the basics of the breasts from Moulard ducks, called Magret de Canard.  The Moulard Duck is a cross between a Muscovy drake and a Pekin hen. Magret refers to the breast of a Moulard duck that has been reared for foie gras, and it provides moist, red, meaty flesh with rich flavor. Since Gascony, France is the heart of foie gras country, the Moulard duck is common in the cooking of the region.

Moulard Duck

Muscovy duck, sometimes called Barbarie or Barbary duck, is thin-skinned, low in fat, and has deep red, mildly gamy meat which is sometimes compared to roast beef for its flavor, and veal for its tenderness.  The carcass of a Muscovy duck is heavier than most other domestic ducks, and has a larger breast that its Pekin counterpart, with up to 40% less fat than that breed. Europeans have been enjoying the Muscovy duck meat for a long time, and the popularity of this duck is growing in the United States.

Muscovy Duck

Dorie recommends Moulard duck breasts for this recipe, which are more "succulent."  One of San Diego's best meat markets, Iowa Meat Farms, carries both Moulard and Muscovy breasts.  A package containing two Moulard breasts, weighing about 1/2 pound each, runs about $15.00.  Quite a bit more than a couple of chicken breasts, but a nice treat once in a while.

Two Moulard Duck Breasts, about 1/2 lb. each

I absolutely loved Dorie's method in cooking the duck breasts to perfection.  However, I didn't love the sauce, which was balsamic vinegar, honey, juice of a lime, and the accumulated juices in the foil (all but a tablespoon of the rendered duck fat is removed from the pan before making the pan sauce).  

Perfectly Cooked Duck Breasts
Slightly adapted from Around My French Table

Preheat the oven to 250 degrees F.  To prepare duck breasts, trim away excess fat that extends beyond the edge of the meat if necessary. Then score the fat side, season with salt and pepper, and place skin side down in a hot cast iron pan. No fat or oil is needed. Cook for about 8 minutes. Lower the heat to medium and flip the breast over, cooking for about 3 minutes. Make sure the duck is not cooked beyond medium rare. Wrap the breasts loosely in foil and place in the warm oven to rest for about five minutes.  Slice into 1/2-inch thick slices and serve.


I served our duck with steamed asparagus and a gourmet rice blend of wild and white rice, dried cranberries, and slivered almonds.


Dorie's recipe is available on D'Artagnan, where you will find a few more duck recipes (including one with cherry sauce) and all kinds of gourmet food products and organic meats.

***

French Fridays with Dorie is an online cooking group, dedicated to Dorie Greenspan‘s newest book Around My French Table: More Than 300 Recipes from My Home to Yours. As members of the group, we have purchased the cookbook and cook along as much as we can. There is a new recipe each week, and we post about that recipe on Friday. We are asked to refrain from posting the actual recipes on our blog. The book is filled with stunning photography, and personal stories about each recipe, which makes it that much more intriguing. I highly recommend adding it to your cookbook collection if you haven't already!




Friday, January 14, 2011

Cassoulet, s’il vous plaît

With all the French food I've been making and eating in the New Year, from Around My French Table: More Than 300 Recipes from My Home to Yours, and now with our first Daring Cooks' Challenge of the year, I better brush up on my French! How do you say, "please slather a few more duck fat pounds on my thighs?"

Our January 2011 Challenge comes from Jenni of The Gingered Whisk and Lisa from Parsley, Sage, Desserts and Line Drives. They have challenged the Daring Cooks to learn how to make a confit and use it within the traditional French dish of Cassoulet. They have chosen a traditional recipe from Anthony Bourdain and Michael Ruhlman.

Anthony Bourdain is an American author and chef, whose interests include traveling around the world as an "advocate for communicating the value and tastiness of traditional or "peasant" foods, including specifically all of the varietal bits and unused animal parts not usually eaten by affluent 21st-century Westerners." (Note: Our challenge recipe includes lining the pan with a layer of pork rind ...thanks, but no thanks). Michael Ruhlman is an author, food writer and blogger, and has also made several appearances in shows hosted by Bourdain.

Confit ("con-fee") is a generic term for various kinds of food that have been immersed in a substance for both flavor and preservation. Confit of duck (confit de canard) is usually prepared from the legs of the bird. The meat is salted and seasoned with herbs, and slowly cooked submerged in its own rendered fat. The meat is preserved by allowing it to cool, and then storing it in the fat. Meat confits are a specialty of the southwest of France and are used in dishes such as cassoulet, which is a rich, slow-cooked bean stew or casserole typically containing pork sausages, pork, goose, duck, pork skin, and white beans.

Cassoulet is named for the cassole, a distinctive, round earthenware pot with deep, slanting sides in which cassoulet is traditionally cooked. Cassoulet is said to date back to the 14th century siege of Castelnaudary during the Hundred Years' War, when citizens created a communal dish so hearty their revivified soldiers sent the invaders packing.

Cookbook author, Paula Wolfert, describes cassoulet as "one of those dishes over which there is endless drama. Like bouillabaisse in Marseilles, paella in Spain, and chili in Texas, it is a dish for which there are innumerable recipes and about which discussions quickly turn fierce."

After hearing of this challenge, I was excited to order my first shipment of heirloom beans from Rancho Gordo, in Napa Valley.

Rancho Gordo says their flageolet beans make an excellent substitute
for the traditional, yet elusive, Tarbais bean when making cassoulet


When my beans arrived, I then set out to find the remaining ingredients. After completing my shopping, I was tempted to name this post One Hundred Dollar Cassoulet, but it wasn't quite that bad. Heirloom beans, two cups of duck fat, four duck thighs, two pounds of pork belly, six garlic sausages - these are not inexpensive ingredients, nor are they readily available unless you have well-stocked gourmet markets in your neighborhood. I was able to find everything at Bristol Farms and Iowa Farms Meats. I could have found the beans locally, but I've heard so much about Rancho Gordo and had the pleasure of tasting some of their beans last summer.

This recipe needs to be prepared over at least two days. I do recommend saving it for a special occasion or dinner party.

The first step is preparing the duck confit. This is accomplished by liberally sprinkling salt over four duck legs, and evenly scattering with some garlic, thyme, bay leaves, and a little pepper. The duck is then covered and refrigerated for 1-2 days.



D'Artagnan Duck Fat

On day 2 or 3, depending on how long you refrigerated the duck, you are then ready to complete the confit by poaching the duck in the cherished duck fat, at a low oven temperature. The confit must be cooked slowly, at a very slow simmer, until the duck is tender and can be easily pulled from the bone, about 2-3 hours.

Duck legs covered with melted duck fat, with some thyme, rosemary, and garlic

After a few hours in the oven

At this point, the duck can then be refrigerated, in the cooled and hardened fat, until you are ready to complete the cassoulet.

You will need to soak the dried beans in fresh water overnight. The beans are then cooked with the slab of pork belly, onion, parsley, thyme, and a bay leaf.


The pork belly is removed from the beans after cooking and cut into smaller pieces. Based on the advice of fellow Daring Cook, Robert, an awesome chef in Alaska, I crisped up the pork belly pieces after I browned my garlic sausage. Otherwise, you will have pieces of very fatty pork belly throughout the cassoulet.

Bristol Farms carries fresh garlic sausage.
You can also use another type of pork sausage.

Pork Belly and Garlic Sausages

After browning the sausages and pork belly in a little duck fat, I sauteed two onions, added some tomato paste, deglazed the pan with white wine, and blended the onions in the blender


Blended onion puree

The finished Cassoulet...a large Dutch Oven is necessary to hold all of the meats and beans



"Cassoulet, that best of bean feasts, is everyday fare for a peasant but ambrosia for a gastronome, though its ideal consumer is a 300-pound blocking back who has been splitting firewood nonstop for the last twelve hours on a subzero day in Manitoba.
-Julia Child, Julia Child and More Company Cassoulet for a Crowd

***

Cassoulet
Adapted from Cassoulet by Anthony Bourdain and Michael Ruhlman (as featured on the Travel Channel’s “No Reservations”)
Serves 4-8

Ingredients for Duck Confit

4 whole duck legs (leg and thigh)
Coarse sea salt or Kosher salt
2 cups duck fat
1 cup olive oil
Freshly ground black pepper
8 sprigs of fresh thyme
1 sprig of fresh rosemary
6 garlic cloves
4 bay leaves

Day One

1. Rub the duck legs fairly generously with sea salt, place in the shallow dish. Distribute four sprigs of thyme, 4 crushed garlic cloves, and 4 bay leaves around the duck legs. Cover with plastic and refrigerate overnight.

Day Two

1. Preheat the oven to moderately hot 375ºF

2. Render (melt) the duck fat in the saucepan until clear.

3. Rinse the duck legs and pat dry. Season with black pepper, and place the duck legs in the clean, ovenproof casserole.

4. Nestle the remaining thyme sprigs, rosemary and remaining 2 gloves of garlic in with the duck legs, and pour the melted duck fat over the legs to just cover.

5. Cover the dish with foil and put in the oven. Cook for 1 to 1 1/2 hours, or until the skin at the "ankle" of each leg pulls away from the "knuckle." The meat should be tender.

6. If you are not cooking the cassoulet on Day Two, you can allow the duck and duck fat to cool and then store as is in the refrigerator, sealed under the fat. When you need the confit, warm the whole dish, melting the fat, and remove the duck, allowing the excess fat to drip off.

Ingredients for Cassoulet

2 pounds dried Tarbais beans, or white beans such as Flageolet, Great Northern or Cannelini
2 1/4 pounds fresh pork belly
1 onion, cut into 4 pieces
1 bouquet garni (tie together two sprigs parsley, 2 sprigs thyme and one bay leaf)
Kosher salt and fresh ground pepper
3 tablespoons olive oil
6 Garlic Sausages (or other pork sausages)
2 onions, thinly sliced
3 tablespoons tomato paste
1 cup white wine
1 14 oz. can low-sodium chicken broth
1 28 oz. can whole, peeled, Italian tomatoes, drained
1 garlic clove, thinly sliced
4 confit duck legs
2 cups Panko bread crumbs sauteed in 2 tablespoons olive oil until golden brown (optional)

Day One

1. Place the beans in the large bowl and cover with cold water so that there are at least 2 or 3 inches. Soak overnight.

Day Two

1. Drain and rinse the beans and place in the large pot.

2. Add the pork belly, the quartered onion, and the bouquet garni.

3. Cover with water, about 2 inches above the beans, and bring to a boil. Reduce to a simmer and cook for about one hour, until the beans are tender. Season with salt and pepper.

4. Let cool for 20 minutes, then discard the onion and the bouquet garni.

5. Remove the pork belly, cut it into 2-inch/5-cm squares, and set aside.

6. Strain the beans, reserving the cooking liquid separately. To the beans, add the chicken broth and tomatoes, breaking up the tomatoes with your hands. Mix well, bring to a simmer, and turn off heat.

7. In a sauté pan, heat 2 tablespoons of olive oil over medium-high heat until it shimmers.

8. Add the sausages and brown on all sides. Remove sausages and set aside, draining on paper towels.

9. In the same pan, over medium heat, saute the pork belly until some of the fat is rendered off and it starts to crisp up a bit. Remove pork belly and set aside, draining on paper towels.

10. In the same pan, over medium-high heat, brown the sliced onions and garlic, for about 7-10 minutes. Add the tomato paste and saute another minute. Add the white wine and continue to saute until most of the liquid has evaporated. Remove from the heat and transfer to the blender. Add the remaining 1 tablespoon of olive oil and purée until smooth. Set aside.

11. Preheat the oven to moderate 350ºF.

12. Arrange all your ingredients in alternating layers, beginning with a layer of beans, then sausages, then more beans, then pork belly, beans, duck confit and finally more beans, adding a dab of the onion purée between each layer.

13. Add 1 cup of the bean cooking liquid.

14. Cook the cassoulet, uncovered, in the oven for one hour. Carefully remove from the oven distribute the panko bread crumbs evenly over the top of the cassoulet.

15. Reduce the oven temperature to 300ºF and continue cooking for another two hours. Remove from the oven and serve immediately.

NEWF NOTES: I did make some variations from the recipe provided for this Challenge. Primarily, I omitted lining the bottom of the pan with pork rind or bacon (I felt there was enough pork with the sausages and pork belly). My addition of white wine, tomato paste, chicken broth, Italian tomatoes, and use of Panko bread crumbs, was based on Thomas Keller's Cassoulet recipe. Finally, browning the pork belly to render off the additional fat and crisp it up a bit was based on a suggestion in the Daring Cooks' forum, and is highly recommended.  Leftovers freeze well.

You can find the full recipe in The Daring Kitchen Recipe Archive, here. Phenomenal challenge, Jenni and Lisa! Excusez-moi, but I must now get back to my diet (and my French lessons). Merci beaucoup!

Monday, June 21, 2010

The Exotic Cuisine of Thailand, featuring Grilled Duck with Red Curry Sauce

Our Coronado Concert in the Park Culinary Challenges continued last evening with The Exotic Cuisine of Thailand. Thai cuisine places emphasis on lightly-prepared dishes with strong aromatic components, and is known for its balance of the five fundamental taste senses in each dish or the overall meal: hot (spicy), sour, sweet, salty, and (optional) bitter.  A Thai family meal normally consists of rice, paired with several dishes designed to form a harmonious contrast of ingredients and ways of preparation. The dishes are all served at the same time.

I’ve said this before, but I find it amazing how our group always prepares such a harmonious offering of drinks, appetizers, main courses, and desserts. We've talked about trying to coordinate dishes and courses, but it's more fun being surprised as the dishes are unveiled on the picnic table.

Last night, our Thai spread featured a glorious balance of cocktails, wine, Spicy Roasted Coconut Cashews, Grilled Duck and Red Curry, Pineapple Fried Rice with Prawns, Thai Fish Cakes with Cucumber Salad, Waterfall Beef, Pork Satay, and Grilled Pineapple with Coconut Sauce.

Alec & Nina started us off with a giant My Thai cocktail, made with light and dark rums, Disaronno Amaretto, Grand Marnier, Triple Sec, and pineapple and orange juices.  We sipped our cocktails and nibbled on John's spicy Roasted Coconut Cashew Nuts.


We had two grills going, one for my duck breasts and the other for Jim and Carmen's Pork Satay. I've been salivating at duck recipes for quite some time, and used this opportunity for Grilled Duck with Red Curry Sauce.  I served the sliced duck on grilled Sweet Potato Rafts, a presentation inspired by a photograph in Big Small Plates (my Grilled Duck with Red Curry recipe appears at the end of this post).

A few slices of grilled sweet potato...


Followed by a few slices of grilled duck,  and a spoonful of red curry over the top...


Plating and photographing in the park has its challenges, but we often have curious visitors standing on the sidelines...


Olivia stepped in as Jim's sous chef and helped grill the pork satay...



Kai presented two dishes, Thai Fish Cakes with a Cucumber Salad, and Waterfall Beef.  One of my inspirational bloggers, Jen at Use Real Butter, just posted a beautiful Thai Cucumber Salad recipe, here.



Mom, tempted by Elissa's Chocolate Marble Cheesecake with Coconut, Lemongrass and Kaffir Lime, ultimately opted for Pineapple Fried Rice with Chicken and Prawns, a signature dish of Thailand.  With inspiration from Almost Bourdain's recipe and presentation in a beautiful pineapple boat, Mom made her own version with the addition of red bell peppers, green onions, and cashews.


For dessert, Carmen served Grilled Pineapple with Coconut Dipping Sauce.


Alec & Nina's Sonoma, and Kai & Hill's Olivia - our precious and charming girly-girls...


Olivia may be growing up a bit too fast, but she's learning to appreciate fine food and wine at a young age...now promoted from Jim's sous chef to our after-dinner wine connoisseur ;-)




A handsome sailor, from the Navy Southwest Band, belted out America the Beautiful....


We closed down Spreckels Park, and enjoyed every last drop of daylight...and Dean's wine!

John and I devoured the leftover Duck with Red Curry for dinner tonight. We added some roasted chicken, sweet potatoes, onions, red bell peppers, and peas, and served it over rice. On the spice scale, this is a 7/10. You can reduce the curry paste to 2 tablespoons if you're a bit timid. We like it hot, baby!


Grilled Duck with Red Curry Sauce
Adapted from Williams Sonoma
Serves 6

Ingredients:

1 garlic clove, minced
1 Tbs. granulated sugar
1 Tbs. rice wine or dry sherry
2 tsp. light soy sauce
1 1/2 tsp. Asian sesame oil
1 tsp. dark soy sauce
1 tsp. peeled and minced fresh ginger
1/2 tsp. Chinese five-spice powder
1/2 tsp. salt, plus salt, to taste
6 duck breast halves, each 4 to 6 oz.
2 cans (each 13 1/2 fl. oz.) unsweetened coconut milk
2 to 3 Tbs. Thai red curry paste
1 to 2 Tbs. Thai fish sauce
1 Tbs. palm sugar or dark brown sugar
8 fresh or frozen kaffir lime leaves
4 red chilies, seeded and sliced
1 cup diced fresh pineapple
1/2 cup fresh Thai basil or sweet basil leaves, plus leaves for garnish
Freshly ground pepper, to taste

Directions:

In a large glass bowl, combine the garlic, granulated sugar, rice wine, light soy sauce, sesame oil, dark soy sauce, ginger, five-spice powder and 1/2 tsp. salt. Using a fork, prick the duck skin at 1-inch intervals. Add the duck to the bowl and turn to coat evenly, rubbing the marinade on both sides of the breast halves. Cover and refrigerate for 4 hours.

Meanwhile, open the cans of coconut milk without shaking them. Spoon the thick layer of cream on top into a bowl. In a wok over medium-high heat, combine 1/2 cup of the cream and the red curry paste and cook, stirring frequently, until the cream is aromatic and beads of oil float on top, about 3 minutes. Add the fish sauce, palm sugar, lime leaves, chilies and the remaining coconut cream and milk. Cook, stirring occasionally, until heated through, about 5 minutes. Stir in the pineapple and 1/2 cup basil leaves. Remove from the heat and keep warm while grilling the duck.

Prepare charcoal or gas grill.  When medium-hot, remove the duck from the marinade, discarding the marinade, and place directly on the grill rack, skin side down. Grill until the fat is rendered from the skin and the skin is crisp, about 8 minutes. Turn and grill until the duck is fully cooked and, when pressed, feels firm to the touch on the other side, 3 to 5 minutes (internal temperature of 165 degrees F).  Cut the duck across the grain into slices 1/4 inch thick.

To serve, arrange one sliced duck breast half on each plate. Spoon the curry sauce over the top and garnish with the basil leaves.



***