Wild Game Recipe: Pan Roasted DucksteemCreated with Sketch.

in #food7 years ago

Wild Game Recipe: Pan Roasted Duck with Corn Crepes and Sage, Sour Cherry Sauce


pan-roasted-duck.jpg


For this recipe, I use either muscovy duck, a brazilian breed which is known for its incredible flavor and lean profile, or wild-hunted duck. Other breeds, such as moulard or pekin, will do fine, but be aware that the principal difference among these types of duck is the fat cap underneath the skin. With any breed of duck, to cook it properly, you want to render the fat from under the skin of the breast at a cooking temperature and time that will allow the skin to brown perfectly, once all the excess fat is rendered away. For all breeds, lightly score the duck breast, skin side, so that the skin is pierced (freeing the fat to render away), without going into the flesh of the breast. To do this, you will need a sharp knife. Score the breast at 45 deg. angles, so you end up with a diamond pattern on the skin side of the breast.

To prep the duck for cooking, score it and season it with salt and pepper on both sides.


Allow the duck to rest for 30 minutes


Allow the duck to rest for 30 minutes. When you are ready to serve, do not add butter or oil to your pan – just set the duck, skin side down, in the pan and cook over low to moderate heat. As the fat renders away, pour it off. You want to adjust your heat, and your time in cooking the skin side, so that most of the fat is rendered about the time your skin is browned nicely.


What You Need


Duck
6 hen breasts, or 3 drake breasts (of moulard or muscovy), each portion being app. 8 ounces, uncooked.

Corn Crepes

  • Corn Crepes
  • 4 cups corn kernels (about 4 ears)
  • salt
  • white pepper
  • 1 cups flour
  • 4 eggs
  • 1 cups milk
  • 3 tbsp melted butter
  • nutmeg (couple of pinches)
  • 4 tbsp minced chives
  • Olive Oil

How To Do It


Heat oil in pan over medium heat. Add corn, salt and pepper and cover, cooking about 3-4 minutes and tossing through a couple of times. Process in food processor and cool. Once cool, add flour, eggs, milk, butter and nutmeg. Blend until smooth. Fold in minced chives. Refrigerate at least 3 hours. Prepare crepes with olive oil in non-stick per s.o.p. Cool and set aside. At service, take 3 crepes and reheat gently. Fold into triangles.


The Sauce


Sage-Sour Cherry Sauce

  • 2 cups pinot noir or good burgundy
  • 1/3 c shallot, minced
  • 1 cup sliced, dried tart cherries
  • 2 cups duck demi-glace, 4 cups (thin) duck stock, or 2 cups demi-glace (more than gourmet will work o.k.)
  • 1 tsp minced sage
  • pinch of minced thyme
  • 1/3 tsp balsamic vinegar
  • salt
  • pepper

Simmer wine with shallots, cherries and duck sauce until reduced back to 2 cups. When serving, bring 2 ounces of sauce (with cherries) to simmer and toss in sage, thyme and balsamic vinegar together and heat through. Season with salt and pepper and serve.


What Now?


Ok, let's get this thing finished

  • Pre-heat oven to 375F
  • Add some sea salt to the top layer of the duck
  • Sear the duck as above.

Once skin is browned and fat is rendered, “kiss” flesh side approximately 1 minute and place in oven. Remove from oven when duck breast still has a good deal of easy “spring” to the touch – you do not want to go beyond medium (I prefer medium rare). Remove the duck from the cooking/roasting pan and cover loosely with foil, shiny side out. Meanwhile, reheat crepes in a pan with a touch of olive oil, fold in triangles, and place in overlapping mound at center of plate. You also want to saute some coarsely chopped rainbow chard, which adds some caramelized sugar, bitterness, and color to the plate (use organic if possible – it will contain more natural sugars). Thinly slice duck and arrange on either side of crepes; drizzle with warmed sauce (including cherries), and place a few crystals of fleur de sel over the meat (if you have it).

Here are some helpful links in case you need them: These are NOT affiliate links, just helpful places for you to visit. I do not endorse them or have any ties to them.

3 Reasons to Score your Meat
How to Score Meat
All About Rainbow Chard

As always, thanks for reading and you can follow me @shannonpurple for more postings like this one :-)

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