Crispy duck breast tip...........

Crispy duck breast tip...........

Author
Discussion

dickymint

Original Poster:

27,230 posts

273 months

Friday 29th February 2008
quotequote all
For years I have tried and failed to get crispy duck skin without a thick layer of oozing mushy fat underneath. I found the solution the other day.

1. Score the skin quite deeply.
2. Put breasts into boiling water for about 10-15 minutes on a strong simmer.
3. Remove and pat dry - you will see loads of blisters on the skin - burst these and pat dry.
4. Put in the fridge for at least an hour.
5. When absolutely cold. Fry fat side down as usual until crisp then do the other side for a couple of minutes.

Enjoy.


PS. I used a vegetable stock with some halved onions to do the boiling and used this stock as a base for a noodle soup. yum

bint

4,664 posts

239 months

Friday 29th February 2008
quotequote all
Did you watch the Heston Blumenthal episode where he tried to get the perfect crispy duck? Usully I find his programmes fascinating, this just went on and on and as far as i can tell, the result was far too fiddly for any 'normal' person to make. Which was generally his intention.

Tuscan Tart

2,187 posts

224 months

Friday 29th February 2008
quotequote all
I did crispy duck breasts once, never again, far too much faffing around. I bought the bamboo pot things and a trivit, steamed them first for about 6 hours, and then deep fried them in hot oil. Far easier to buy one. yes

biglepton

5,042 posts

216 months

Sunday 2nd March 2008
quotequote all
There is a far easier way that avoids the breasts losing their flavour whilst boiling:

Score the duck breasts and place on a grid over the sink, skin up. Pour a kettle of boiling water evenly over the skin. Pat dry, sprinkle skin with sea salt immediately and refrigerate. When you are ready cook them, place a metal handled, thich bottomed frying pan on the hob. Hob should be off and pan cold. Place breasts skin side down into cold pan and turn hob onto a low heat. Putting the cold breats into a cold pan and then putting on low heat will allow the fat between to skin and meat to slowly render out without over-cooking the duck or burning the skin. When you are happy that enough of the fat has gone, transfer pan to top of very hot oven, skin up. Serve as soon as skin is crispy!

TIGA84

5,407 posts

246 months

Monday 3rd March 2008
quotequote all
dickymint said:
For years I have tried and failed to get crispy duck skin without a thick layer of oozing mushy fat underneath. I found the solution the other day.

1. Score the skin quite deeply.
2. Put breasts into boiling water for about 10-15 minutes on a strong simmer.
3. Remove and pat dry - you will see loads of blisters on the skin - burst these and pat dry.
4. Put in the fridge for at least an hour.
5. When absolutely cold. Fry fat side down as usual until crisp then do the other side for a couple of minutes.

Enjoy.


PS. I used a vegetable stock with some halved onions to do the boiling and used this stock as a base for a noodle soup. yum
Much easer way than that matey. Put it in a cold pan to start, the fat will render as it heats up to temperature, then simply pour away the excess an allow to crisp up.


Thudd

3,100 posts

222 months

Monday 3rd March 2008
quotequote all
I believe the cold pan is the key.

dcw@pr

3,516 posts

258 months

Tuesday 4th March 2008
quotequote all
TIGA84 said:
dickymint said:
For years I have tried and failed to get crispy duck skin without a thick layer of oozing mushy fat underneath. I found the solution the other day.

1. Score the skin quite deeply.
2. Put breasts into boiling water for about 10-15 minutes on a strong simmer.
3. Remove and pat dry - you will see loads of blisters on the skin - burst these and pat dry.
4. Put in the fridge for at least an hour.
5. When absolutely cold. Fry fat side down as usual until crisp then do the other side for a couple of minutes.

Enjoy.


PS. I used a vegetable stock with some halved onions to do the boiling and used this stock as a base for a noodle soup. yum
Much easer way than that matey. Put it in a cold pan to start, the fat will render as it heats up to temperature, then simply pour away the excess an allow to crisp up.
great tip

rupert the dog

1,433 posts

232 months

Tuesday 4th March 2008
quotequote all
Thanks for the cold pan tip, I've never tried that. Next time.........