Skillet Duck with Red Oak Salad

| September 18, 2011

Episode 119: Game Day
Recipe: Skillet Duck with Red Oak (Lettuce) Salad

Easy and delicious, this duck is cooked in much the same way as Southern fried chicken — fried in its own fat in a covered pot so steam develops, making the meat very moist and tender and the skin crisp. Be sure to use a very large skillet or a saucepan with a lid. Some of the rendered duck fat, a bonus from this recipe, is used in the salad dressing, and the rest is delicious for sautéing potatoes or flavoring soup.

Skillet Duck with Red Oak Salad

Serves 4

1 duck (about 5 pounds)
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/4 cup fruity dry white wine

DRESSING
1 medium garlic clove, crushed and minced (1/2 teaspoon)
1 tablespoon chopped shallot
1/4 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
1 tablespoon white wine vinegar
3 tablespoons duck fat, peanut oil, or olive oil, or a mixture of the fat and oils
1 teaspoon light soy sauce
1 head red oak leaf lettuce, leaves separated, washed, and dried (about 6 cups)
1 bunch arugula, trimmed, washed, and dried (about 2 cups loosely packed)

GARNISH
2 teaspoons unsalted butter
2 large eggs, beaten with a fork
Pinch each of salt and freshly ground black pepper

Using a sharp heavy knife or poultry shears cut the duck lengthwise in half, slicing through the carcass bones. Then cut each half into 2 pieces: the leg and the breast, with wing attached. Reserve the duck neck, gizzard, liver, and heart.

Heat a large skillet or saucepan, either nonstick or heavy aluminum, until hot. Place the duck pieces skin side down in one layer in the pan, sprinkle with the salt, and cook over high heat for 5 minutes. Lift the pieces to dislodge them from the bottom of the skillet and lay them, still skin side down, back in the skillet. Add the duck neck and gizzard, cover, reduce the heat to medium, and cook for 15 minutes. The duck should be cooking in a deep layer of fat and its skin should be very brown at this point.

Reduce the heat to very low, cover, and cook for 30 more minutes. (The duck pieces should be almost immersed in the fat.) Add the liver and heart, cover, and cook for 5 additional minutes.

Preheat the oven to 170 degrees.

Remove the duck pieces to a large baking sheet and keep warm in the oven. Pour the fat from the skillet into a bowl and let cool. (Covered and refrigerated, the fat can be used as needed for up to 2 months for sautéing potatoes or other vegetables.) There will be a small residue of glaze, or solidified juices, in the bottom of the skillet. Add the wine to the skillet and stir to melt the solidified juices. Keep warm.

FOR THE DRESSING: Combine all the ingredients in a bowl and stir gently. The dressing should not be homogenized but should look separated.

Toss the salad greens with the dressing and arrange the salad on four serving plates. Place a piece of duck in the center of each, and sprinkle the pan drippings on the pieces of duck.

FOR THE EGG GARNISH: Heat a skillet for 1 minute. Add the butter, and when it is hot, add the beaten eggs and stir gently over high heat to scramble. Season with the salt and pepper. The eggs should still be runny.

Arrange spoonfuls of the egg around the duck on each salad. The pieces of duck should be lukewarm to warm, the salad at room temperature, and the eggs warm. Serve.

Copyright © 2011 by Jacques Pépin. Used by permission of Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. All rights reserved.

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Category: duck, poultry, Recipes

Comments (4)

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  1. Russ says:

    A great, cool-weather dish! Rich, succulent, and incredibly easy to prepare. Perfect for an autumn dinner with friends.

  2. ninefingersgrapes . says:

    I just tried this 11/17/2013 with a 5.5 pound PA duck. The duck broken beautifully and I got 1 cup of clear duck fast from it.
    The surprising thing, to me, was that the wonderful browned skin was not crisp. NO problem for me, I do not eat check, duck, turkey and goose skin!
    I added NO liquid to the pan, but for the called the 1/4 cup of Riesling to the pan.
    Just wondering what when wrong for me, Oh, by the way the duck was great and my house smell’s of cooked duck!!!!

    • Suz in SD says:

      Wondering sir, if perhaps you had not removed the finished duck from the pan prior to adding your Riesling to deglaze the pan drippings?

  3. Suz in SD says:

    This recipe is so simple and delicious! I have “Essential Pepin” and find inspiration from Chef Pepin all the time. The skin comes out so delightfully crisp and light and the deglazed pan drippings are so good! Thank you!! I am preparing this for my birthday this Saturday!