Duck Recipes: Rotisserie Duck, Duck Confit

Try these duck recipes for something a little different in your farm kitchen.

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by Dani Yokhna

By Frederic Beranger

How to cook using Duck
In this article …
Duck Confit Recipe
Rotisserie Duck Recipe
About Cayuga Ducks

When you make this recipe for duck confit, you need to know that confit is a method of cooking more than a recipe.

It implies cooking an item slowly in a transient element like oil, fat, sugar, or butter to substitute the water in the food item being cooked. In this case it will be cooking duck in fat.

Fat Makes it Savory
When making this duck recipe, you may be put off to the idea of cooking in fat, those who try the dish will quickly discover this long held traditional French specialty is truly a treat to savor for special occasions.

About the Author

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Fred Beranger teaches us how to cook with Duck

Fred Beranger poses with two buckeye chickens he grew. Beranger is a chef and, with his wife Jeannette, cares for heritage and rare breeds of livestock on their Le Nelhouët Farm in North Carolina.

Jeannette Beranger is research and technical program manager with the American Livestock Breeds Conservancy.
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The secret to our particular success with this duck recipe is that we try to incorporate ingredients from sources that are known to us personally.

We purchase pasture raised animals or at the very least free range and antibiotic free birds.

Collecting Fat
In anticipation of creating a duck confit, we collect and preserve fat from previous dinners that include duck, goose, or heritage turkey until we have enough (about 2 cups) for a confit.

After the holiday season is typically the time of year we think about the dish.

Normally we collect the cooled drippings in an air tight container or ziplock bag and refrigerate or freeze it until needed for the confit.

We choose duck as our favorite item to be cooked in the confit method. Note that this dish is a three-day process but well worth the wait!

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Le Nelhouët Farm Duck Confit

Ingredients

  • 1 duck (4-5 lbs.), whole 
  • 2 cups of fat drippings (from duck, heritage turkey, or goose)
  • 1/2 – 2/3 cup chicken stock (if needed due to lack of fat drippings)

Dry rub

  • ½ tsp. salt
    ½ tsp. cracked black pepper
    ½ tsp. fresh garlic, minced
    ½ tsp. thyme

Preparation
There are primarily three steps in the three-day process of making a duck confit.

Day 1:
Starting with a whole bird, first separate legs and de-bone the breasts being careful to make sure the skin remains on all of the pieces. Combine the dry rub ingredients listed above and coat the inside of the separated legs then take the two pieces and press them together like closing a book with the skin side out. Coat the skinless sides of the breasts with the dry rub and press the two pieces together, skin side out. Put the sandwiched pieces in a covered dish and refrigerate overnight so they can marinate.

*Note- If you are wondering what to do with the leftover duck meat and bones, think about doing a nice duck stock in the event that you don’t have enough fat for step No. 2.

Day 2:
Preheat the oven to 275° F. Take the still sandwiched pieces of duck and place them in a baking dish just small enough for the meat to fill it completely. Cover the meat with the preserved poultry fat drippings. If you do not have enough fat to cover the meat, you can add some poultry stock to compensate so long as it is less than a quarter of the total amount of fat used for the confit.

Cook the duck for 3 – 3 ½ hours or until the meat is fork tender or until the internal temperature reaches 165°F. Remove the dish from the oven and let the confit cool to room temperature. Keeping the duck in the baking dish, refrigerate it once again noting that all of the meat should be submerged in fat at this point.

Day 3:
The refrigerated duck can remain good to eat for up to several days since it is now preserved in fat. When you are ready to serve the duck, heat a skillet on the stove to med-high. Drop 2 Tbs of the fat from the baking dish with the duck into the skillet and spread it across the pan to coat. Remove the duck from the baking dish with your hands and not with a spatula or fork. This is important because it will preserve the integrity of the pieces of duck. Carefully separate the sandwiched pieces from each other and place them skin side down in the hot skillet. Heat until they are ceased and heated throughout. Serve immediately.

It is key to serve the duck immediately after heating it up. It can be served with a wide variety of dishes but it is best to serve it beside something light such as a salad. This dish lends itself wonderfully to parties since you can do all of the prep several days ahead of time. Serves 3-4

Bon Appetite!

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Le Nelhouët Farm Rotisserie Duck

My family was fortunate enough to have been given a small electric rotisserie for Christmas and we have stepped up to the challenge of finding the best dishes for the new cooking instrument.

One of our favorites is rotisserie duck and is quite simply the easiest recipe for this delightful meat.

This cooking method makes for a sumptuous bird every time and allows the duck to be cooked with the least amount of retained fat. Although we like a less fatty bird to eat, we don’t waste the fat itself as it is culinary “liquid gold.”

The rotisserie allows us to easily collect the drippings in the catch pan for use in future dishes, such as confits or patés, that call for high quality fat.

Ingredients

  • 1 duck (4-5 lbs), whole
  • 2 T. olive oil
  • ¼ tsp. salt
  • ¼ tsp. cracked black pepper
  • ¼ tsp. rosemary
  • ¼ tsp. thyme
  • ¼ tsp. sage

Preparation
First you skewer the duck onto the rotisserie forks securely and tie the legs and wings with kitchen grade cotton twine so they don’t hit the heating element of the rotisserie. To help drain the duck fat during the cooking process, we will often take a small wooden skewer and poke small holes under the skin of the duck throughout, being careful not to skewer the meat in the process.

Combine the olive oil, salt, pepper, rosemary, thyme, and sage and brush the mixture over the entire duck. Place the prepared duck into the rotisserie cook for roughly 18+ minutes per pound or until the internal temperature reaches 165°F. Most of the latest rotisseries do not have temperature settings but an estimated cooking temperature may be 350-375°+ F. Note that in the rotisserie, the duck may cook more quickly than it would in a standard oven so keep careful watch.

This method allows for a delicious and moist duck every time and is a great alternative to chicken. Serves 3-4.

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