Roasted Duck With Kumquat Sauce Food

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ROASTED DUCK WITH KUMQUAT SAUCE RECIPE



Roasted duck with kumquat sauce Recipe image

Geographically speaking, the South Pasadena kitchen where Craig Strong is cooking this December afternoon is only a few miles from the elaborately outfitted kitchen and Michelin-starred white-tablecloth dining room of the Langham, Huntington Hotel & Spa -- previously Pasadena's Ritz-Carlton -- where he's been chef de cuisine for the last eight years. But in other ways, Strong is a world away, the distance more conceptual, even emotional, than geographic.This is downtime, a rare day off during the holidays, a feast cooked purely for the fun of it to celebrate both the season and the gift of time with friends and family."Take a traditional meal and put a twist on it," is how Strong describes his holiday dinner, a menu centered around an old-fashioned roast duck but marked by a faintly Asian spice route of star anise and cardamom, honey, cinnamon and citrus.Strong checks on a roasting duck the color of mahogany, then stirs a honey gastrique sauce in the copper pot his friend (and Langham maitre d') Robert Hartstein carried back from Paris in his luggage years ago. He gives his fiancee ("I can say that now! We got engaged three weeks ago"), Lissa Pallo, pointers on how to tie a bouquet garni to decorate a turnip-potato gratin while he arranges thin slices of fresh ginger around a pan of seared bok choy.Classical eyeThe bouquet of bay leaf and thyme sprigs is a pretty, aesthetic touch more than a flavor signal -- the gratin is subtly laced with star anise. It's also a cheffy gesture that represents how Strong thinks about food: classically, with an attention to detail and technique that provides the foundation for simple meals at home as well as for the tasting menus (operatic, inspired) he orchestrates at the Dining Room.Pallo moves off to play with Hartstein's two small children, 15-month-old Ava and 3 1/2 -year-old Robbie, who has made a fishing rod with a large rubber spatula and kitchen twine. Hartstein fashions an ad hoc bib from a dish towel (Hartstein also trained as a chef) for Ava; his wife, Jennifer, a pediatrician, adds a finishing touch to the dinner table.Strong begins dicing kumquats in the Hartsteins' kitchen, flicking the little seeds to the side of the cutting board with the tip of an old chef's knife."I love kumquats; they remind me of when I was a kid," says Strong, who lived in Camarillo and El Cajon, outside of San Diego, until he was 15. "When we lived in Camarillo, we had kumquat trees, Meyer lemon trees, loquats. There were pomegranates up the street. I'd stuff my shirt with them and then ride away on my bike. The lady hated us."Another neighbor grew sugar cane, which he'd trade for his mother's chocolate chip cookies. Larceny, it seems, only applied to pomegranates.An early passionStrong grew up as one of eight kids and learned how to cook at an early age from his mother and grandmother. His mother not only made barter-quality cookies but also baked bread. "She ground the wheat for the bread she'd bake herself," he says.Strong's father was president of a drip irrigation company, so he installed a system in the family vegetable garden, which was Strong's project. "My older brothers mowed the lawn; I pulled weeds" -- and grew tomatoes and zucchini, the first subjects of his culinary experiments.In public high school in Salt Lake City, where his family moved when he was 15, Strong took cooking classes ("I'd make chicken cordon bleu and rice pilaf; back then I thought that was pretty cool") and apprenticed to a pastry chef at a local restaurant. At 19, he went to culinary school, L'Academie de Cuisine near Washington, D.C., and then moved to Philadelphia to work at the Ritz-Carlton.Back in the kitchen, Strong whips cream into soft peaks, then folds in a ganache of melted chocolate and cardamom-infused cream to make a milk chocolate mousse. He recounts how he made a pie out of the mousse for Thanksgiving, showing Pallo's 9-year-old niece how to work the simple recipe: equal weights of chocolate, warm cream and whipped cream.This same proportion works for a luxurious foie gras mousse Strong makes at the Langham. "You take out the chocolate and use foie. A little secret."He adds layers of purchased pound cake, chopped chocolate, slices of banana and fresh blueberries and raspberries, alternating layers with the chocolate mousse as one would a trifle. ("At my house, we got to lick the bowl; we still do.") Sprigs of chocolate mint dot the top.Another reason Strong likes this recipe is because it's so adaptable: One night at the Langham, he layered the mousse with delicate chocolate craquantes (pearl-size chocolate-covered rice candies) and perfectly cut squares of his own homemade pound cake, then piped chantilly cream stars on the top, alternating them in concentric circles around fresh berries. Sometimes he makes the mousse in individual cups; other times, it's one big family-sized bowl."I have other chocolate mousse recipes -- you have eggs, you have sabayon -- they're much more complicated," Strong says. "I like this better; sometimes simplicity is best."Cultural infusionWhile he was cooking at the Ritz-Carlton in Atlanta, where he'd moved after three years at Philadelphia's Ritz-Carlton, Strong was thinking about Europe. "The chef was trying to get me to go to France, but I couldn't get a work visa." Then a chef whom Strong had met while staging in Atlanta called from a restaurant in Barcelona, Spain, owned by the Ritz-Carlton, saying his sous chef had quit and asking Strong to come over and take his spot.Strong was in Barcelona for two years, learning how to cook with olive oil instead of butter (courtesy of his classical culinary training), and learning how to speak Spanish and a smattering of Catalan."If I'd use butter and cream with fish, they'd say, 'What's that French stuff?' " he says. "It taught me how to do different things."The duck comes out of the oven and rests for a while on the counter before he cuts it with quick precision. "The thing about all birds is that you want the skin crispy," says Strong. He says that in Atlanta he'd sear ducks by rotating them constantly in a hot saute pan -- a huge fork stuck into the bird -- like a manual rotisserie. They never went into the oven.Strong (who finishes his duck in the oven) takes a deep breath. "Your house starts to smell like spices -- the cardamom, the nutmeg, the cinnamon -- if you're cooking for the holidays, you want to smell spice."The gastrique reduced (the amber of the honeyed sauce matches the color of the old copper pan), Strong drops in a nub of butter and the sliced kumquats. "It's basically duck a l'orange," he says, stirring. "I wanted a sauce that didn't have veal stock. We make it once a week at the restaurant, but that's kind of crazy at home. What you want is a combination of things that are a little exotic but that you can get at Vons."While Strong is seeding pomegranates to garnish a simple kabocha squash soup ("Soup!" yells toddler Robbie, who promptly decides to create his own from water, berries and a small mountain of fresh thyme), Pallo comes back into the kitchen to get some of the fruit for the table. An actress whose mother is from Monterey, Mexico, Pallo watches her fiance delicately remove the garnet seeds from their intricate housings. "I grew up on a farm in Fresno; we'd just throw them on the ground," she says.Strong sprinkles a few spiced pecans atop the warm soup and pours the finished gastrique -- the kumquats like disks of bright gold -- into a tiny copper pot for serving. "I'm not going to spend the whole day in the kitchen," says Strong about the short time he has off (the Langham is open throughout the holidays). "When you're entertaining at home, it's about the food -- but it's also about spending time with the people."

Provided by Amy Scattergood

Categories     MAINS

Time 45m

Yield Serves 6

Number Of Ingredients 13

1 (4 1/2 pound) duck, washed and dried
Salt
Pepper
2 stalks celery, diced
1 onion, diced
2 cinnamon sticks
2 star anise
2 tablespoons olive oil, divided
1/4 cup honey
1/4 cup sherry vinegar
2 cups orange juice
1 tablespoon butter
10 kumquats, each sliced crosswise into 1/8 -inch thick slices

Steps:

  • Heat the oven to 400 degrees.
  • Prepare the duck: Poke the skin all over the duck with a fork. Season the duck all over with 1 1/2 teaspoons salt and one-fourth teaspoon pepper, rubbing the seasoning over the skin.
  • In a small bowl, stir together the celery, onion, cinnamon sticks, star anise and 1 tablespoon olive oil. Stuff the mixture into the cavity of the duck and tie the legs together with the tail to prevent the stuffing from falling out.
  • Heat a large saute pan over medium-high heat and add the remaining tablespoon oil. Brown the duck, turning every few minutes to color each side evenly and well, about 20 minutes total.
  • Place the duck and any juices in a baking pan and roast, basting every 15 minutes, until the juices run clear when you prick the thigh, about 2 hours.
  • Remove the duck and set aside to rest 20 to 30 minutes before carving.
  • While the duck is resting, make the kumquat sauce. Place the honey in a 2-quart heavy-bottom saucepan over high heat. Bring the honey to a boil and cook just until it begins to darken and caramelize. Immediately remove the pan from heat and add the vinegar and orange juice, stirring to combine. Cook over medium heat until the liquid is reduced by three-fourths, 20 to 25 minutes. Stir in the butter and kumquat slices and simmer gently for 5 minutes, stirring occasionally to allow the flavors to marry. Remove from heat and serve with the duck.

ROAST DUCK BUNS WITH KUMQUAT SAUCE



Roast Duck Buns with Kumquat Sauce image

A delicious play on duck a l'orange, these homemade steamed buns filled with roast duck and kumquat-hoisin sauce will have your taste buds singing.

Number Of Ingredients 15

Serves 8-10
STEAMED BUNS (makes 8-10)
7g (1/4 oz) active dry yeast
375ml (12 fl oz / 1 1/2 cups) lukewarm water
1 tbsp sugar
500g (1lb 1 1/2 oz) plain (all-purpose) flour
FILLING
1 store-bought roast duck, deboned and sliced
Spring onions (scallions) to garnish, cut into thin strips
KUMQUAT-HOISIN SAUCE
140g (5 oz) kumquats, cleaned, halved and seeded, with pips reserved in a muslin bag
220g (73/4 oz) caster sugar
1 tsp grated ginger (optional)
300ml (10 fl oz /1 1/4 cups) water
1 tbsp hoisin sauce

Steps:

  • STEAMED BUNS Sprinkle yeast into lukewarm water and add the sugar. Briefly stir to partially dissolve the sugar and let it stand for 5-10 minutes. If bubbles appear, the yeast is active, so continue with the recipe. If no bubbles appear, repeat with a new packet of yeast. Put flour in a large bowl and slowly pour in yeast mixture. Using a spatula, mix the liquid and flour until it comes together. Now, use your hands and knead the dough into a ball. It is important to feel the texture of the dough. If it is too dry, add more water and if too wet, add some flour but not too much as it will change the texture of the buns. Knead dough until smooth and elastic, about 10 minutes. Place dough in a big bowl and cover with a cloth. Place in a warm place or under the sun. Leave dough to rise for about 1 hour or until it doubles in size. After the dough has risen, separate into 2 portions for easy handling. Flatten each portion with a rolling pin, then roll the flattened dough using your hands into logs. Divide each log into 4-5 equal pieces. Leave dough to rise further for 20 minutes. Place buns in a steamer, making sure to leave room for them to expand further. Steam buns over high heat for 15-20 minutes. Leave to cool for 5 minutes before serving. KUMQUAT-HOISIN SAUCE Prepare sauce. Place kumquats in a heatproof bowl and cover with boiling water. Leave to cool, then drain. Do this another 2 times. Combine sugar, ginger (if using), water and reserved kumquat pips in a saucepan and stir over medium-high heat until sugar dissolves. Add kumquats and bring to the boil. Simmer for 40-45 minutes or until fruit is translucent and liquid is syrupy. This sauce can be made ahead and can be stored in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to 3 months. For this recipe, spoon out about 4 tbsp of kumquat sauce. Mixed with the hoisin sauce and set aside. TO ASSEMBLE To prepare duck buns, tuck sliced roast duck and spring onions into steamed buns. You can either spread a generous layer of kumquat sauce in the buns or serve the sauce on the side. From 'Building a Perfect Meal' by Michelle Tchea, published by Marshall Cavendish Cuisine.

CRISP-TENDER ROAST DUCK WITH CHERRY-ROSEMARY SAUCE



Crisp-Tender Roast Duck with Cherry-Rosemary Sauce image

Provided by Ted Allen

Categories     main-dish

Time 5h40m

Yield 4 servings

Number Of Ingredients 11

One 5-pound Pekin (aka Long Island) duck
Kosher salt and freshly ground pepper
1 shallot, peeled and chopped
3 cloves garlic, chopped
1 cup cherries fresh or frozen, halved and pitted
1/2 cup chicken stock, preferably homemade, or low-sodium store bought
2 tablespoons cherry or berry whole-fruit preserves
2 teaspoons honey
1 teaspoon fresh rosemary leaves, chopped
2 tablespoons fresh lemon juice
1 tablespoon unsalted butter

Steps:

  • Preheat the oven to 300 degrees F.
  • Rinse the duck inside and out and pat dry. Trim any excess fat from the neck and cavity, snip off wingtips and discard. Mix 1 tablespoon salt and 1/2 teaspoon pepper in a small bowl, and sprinkle the bird inside and out. Using a paring knife, make dozens of slits through the skin and fat (taking care not to pierce the meat) all over both sides and all parts of the bird.
  • Put the duck breast-side up on a rack in a roasting pan and roast for 1 hour. Take the bird out of the oven, transfer to a platter and carefully drain the fat from the pan into a measuring cup (you'll end up getting 2 to 3 cups). Return the duck to the pan, prick with the knife again, turn it breast-side down and roast another hour. Repeat each hour, roasting the duck for a total of 4 1/2 hours.
  • While the duck cooks, make the sauce: In a small saucepan, heat 1 tablespoon duck fat over medium heat and cook the shallots until soft, about 4 minutes. Add the garlic and cook until fragrant, 1 minute. Add the cherries, stock, preserves, honey and rosemary, and simmer until slightly thickened, about 10 minutes. Remove from the heat, add the lemon juice, swirl in the butter and taste for salt and pepper. Set aside until the duck is finished.
  • After 4 1/2 hours of roasting, turn the oven temperature up to 350 degrees F, prick the duck skin one last time, salt the skin again and return bird to the oven, breast-side up. Roast for 30 minutes until the skin is nicely browned.
  • Remove from the oven, tent with foil and let rest for 20 minutes. Gently reheat the sauce over low heat. Carve the duck, put the pieces on a serving platter and serve with sauce.

GRANDMA'S ROASTED DUCK



Grandma's Roasted Duck image

When I was growing up, my grandma always served roast duck for the holidays, and for other family events throughout the year. I always thought it was better than turkey! -Sue Gronholz, Beaver Dam, Wisconsin

Provided by Taste of Home

Categories     Dinner

Time 1h55m

Yield 4 servings.

Number Of Ingredients 6

1 domestic duck (4 to 5 pounds)
3 tablespoons sugar
2 teaspoons water
3/4 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon ground cloves
1/4 teaspoon pepper

Steps:

  • Preheat oven to 325°. Pierce duck skin all over with a fork. Mix remaining ingredients; rub over outside of duck. Place duck on rack in a shallow roasting pan; add 1 inch of water., Roast duck, uncovered, until a thermometer inserted in thigh reads 180°, 1-1/2 to 2 hours. Remove from oven; let stand 15 minutes before carving. If desired, skim fat and thicken pan drippings for gravy. Serve with duck.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 649 calories, Fat 51g fat (18g saturated fat), Cholesterol 152mg cholesterol, Sodium 550mg sodium, Carbohydrate 10g carbohydrate (9g sugars, Fiber 0 fiber), Protein 34g protein.

ROAST DUCK WITH ORANGE AND GINGER



Roast Duck with Orange and Ginger image

For a festive occasion, a burnished whole duck makes quite an impression - fancier than chicken and more elegant than turkey. Roasting the duck is not so difficult to do, but it can be smoky; to be on the safe side, dismantle your smoke alarm and turn on a good exhaust fan. (If your oven has a convection fan, don't use it; that way you avoid unnecessarily sputtering fat blowing about.). Seasoning the duck ahead and leaving it in the fridge overnight helps to deepen the flavor and keeps work to a minimum the following day. This one is seasoned with orange zest, along with fair amount of ginger and five-spice powder, which gives it a marvelous perfume; serve it with mashed butternut squash.

Provided by David Tanis

Categories     dinner, lunch, main course

Time 3h30m

Yield 4 servings

Number Of Ingredients 12

1 5- to 6-pound Pekin (Long Island) duck
3 tablespoons kosher salt
1 tablespoon 5-spice powder, preferably homemade (see note)
1 large orange, zested and cut into 6 wedges
1 tablespoon grated ginger
1 tablespoon grated garlic
2 cups orange juice
1 tablespoons honey
2 tablespoons Demerara sugar
2 tablespoons soy sauce
1 2-inch piece of ginger, thickly sliced
3 star anise

Steps:

  • Rinse duck and pat dry. Remove neck and giblets and save for another purpose. Remove excess fat from cavity and tail area and trim off a bit of flappy neck skin. Prick duck skin all over with tip of sharp paring knife, making sure not to penetrate meat.
  • Mix together salt and 5-spice powder. Season interior of duck with 1 tablespoon salt mixture; use remainder to generously season exterior (you may have a little left over). Combine orange zest with grated ginger and garlic, then smear mixture inside cavity. Place orange wedges in cavity. Tie legs together. Secure neck flap with wooden skewer or toothpicks. Place duck on rack in roasting pan breast-side-up and refrigerate overnight, uncovered.
  • Heat oven to 350 degrees. Meanwhile, bring duck to room temperature and make the glaze: Bring orange juice, honey, sugar and soy sauce to a simmer. Add sliced ginger and star anise, then reduce mixture until you have a medium-thick syrup, about 10 minutes. Remove from heat and set aside.
  • Roast duck for 2 hours, carefully pouring off fat and turning duck over every 30 minutes. Paint with glaze and roast another 30 minutes (2 1/2 hours in all). Tent with foil if glaze begins to get too dark. Duck is done when temperature at thickest part of leg reads 165 degrees. Paint duck once more, keep warm and let rest 20 minutes. Use poultry shears to cut into quarters (remove backbone first) or carve in the traditional way, removing legs from carcass and slicing breast. Serve with mashed butternut squash if desired.

ROASTED DUCK



Roasted Duck image

A simple rub made with salt, pepper, and paprika seasons this roast duck basted with butter. It is delicious. I all way do make duck often if I have one, and not just for special occassions.

Provided by CHEF GRPA

Categories     Whole Duck

Time 2h10m

Yield 6 serving(s)

Number Of Ingredients 5

2 teaspoons salt
2 teaspoons paprika
1 teaspoon black pepper
1 (5 lb) whole duck
1/2 cup melted butter

Steps:

  • 1. Preheat oven to 375*F.
  • 2. Rub salt, pepper, and paprika into the skin of the duck. Place in a roasting pan.
  • 3. Roast duck in preheated oven for 1 hour. Spoon 1/4 cup melted butter over bird, and continue cooking for 45 more minutes. Spoon remaining 1/4 cup melted butter over duck, and cook for 15 more minutes, or until golden brown.
  • My Note: I added a bit of garlic to the rub, I also put half a stick of butter in the duck before putting it in the oven and the last 15 minutes of cooking I glazed it with the orange sauce, and it was just so good. We have duck every year during the holidays and this was the best I have ever turned out.
  • I had always liked the inside of duck, but was not fond at all of the sweet sauce that was always on top. Noone else seemed to know how to do a savory skin.
  • Some time I put a quartered lemon and some sprigs of fresh thyme and savory in the cavity. I did not add butter but basted it with the rendered fat. I made a gravy with the pan drippings (fat separated)and some stock made from the neck, gibblets and wing tips along with chopped carrots, onions and celery.I took the advice of previous reviewers and reduced salt by 1/2t and overall cooking time by 15 minutes A great recipe that you can fancy up or make as is. added just a little garlic powder to the rub just because we love garlic.
  • One tip, get a food thermometer that you can keep in the meat while it's cooking. The probe runs a wire to the outside of the oven attached to the display. You can see the internal temp w/out opening the oven. The full 2 hours would have been a little too long for my bird.
  • Next time though, I'll bet you be making two small ducks so there will enough for all four of us:.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 1667.2, Fat 164.3, SaturatedFat 59.8, Cholesterol 328.2, Sodium 1149.2, Carbohydrate 0.7, Fiber 0.4, Sugar 0.1, Protein 43.8

EASY ROAST DUCK



Easy Roast Duck image

Duck is so difficult to roast badly that all experienced cooks seem to claim their procedure is the best. Having tried many methods, I can say that the results are all about the same. So I chose the one presented here, which is the easiest way to guarantee a succulent but beautifully browned bird.

Provided by Mark Bittman

Categories     dinner, main course

Time 1h

Yield 2 to 4 servings

Number Of Ingredients 3

1 4- to 5-pound duck
Freshly ground black pepper
1/4 cup soy sauce, more or less

Steps:

  • Preheat oven to 450 degrees. Remove giblets and neck from duck cavity and discard or reserve for another use. Cut off excess fat from duck cavity.
  • Place duck, breast side down (wings up), on a rack in a roasting pan; add water to come just below the rack. Sprinkle duck with pepper and brush with a little soy sauce.
  • Roast 30 minutes, undisturbed. Prick the back all over with point of a sharp knife, then flip bird onto its back. Sprinkle with pepper and brush with soy sauce again. Add a little more water to the pan if the juices are spattering (carefully--you don't want to get water on the duck).
  • Roast 20 minutes, then prick the breast all over , and brush with soy sauce. Roast 10 minutes; brush with soy sauce. Roast 5 or 10 minutes more if necessary, or until duck is a glorious brown all over and an instant-read thermometer inserted into the thigh measures at least 155 degrees. Let rest 5 minutes before carving and serving.

ROASTED DUCK



Roasted Duck image

I made this last year out of the blue, and my whole family enjoyed it. We had never had duck before, and it was a nice exchange for the traditional turkey. We served it with all the usual side dishes.

Provided by Rhonda Brock Fuller

Categories     Meat and Poultry Recipes     Game Meats     Duck

Time 2h10m

Yield 4

Number Of Ingredients 5

2 teaspoons salt
2 teaspoons paprika
1 teaspoon black pepper
1 (5 pound) whole duck
½ cup melted butter

Steps:

  • Preheat oven to 375 degrees F (190 degrees C).
  • Rub salt, pepper, and paprika into the skin of the duck. Place in a roasting pan.
  • Roast duck in preheated oven for 1 hour. Spoon 1/4 cup melted butter over bird, and continue cooking for 45 more minutes. Spoon remaining 1/4 cup melted butter over duck, and cook for 15 more minutes, or until golden brown.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 624.9 calories, Carbohydrate 1 g, Cholesterol 280 mg, Fat 45.1 g, Fiber 0.6 g, Protein 51.8 g, SaturatedFat 20.3 g, Sodium 1538.1 mg, Sugar 0.1 g

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Web Heat the pan over medium and add the sauce mixture and reserved kumquat syrup; bring to a boil and cook until reduced to 3/4 cup, about 8-10 minutes. Remove from the heat, …
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BEST DUCK BREAST WITH KUMQUAT SAUCE RECIPES | THANKSGIVING
Web Aug 12, 2015 - A thanksgiving recipe for making the best Duck Breast with Kumquat Sauce. Aug 12, 2015 - A thanksgiving recipe for making the best Duck Breast with …
From pinterest.ca


DUCK à L'ORANGE RECIPE - BBC FOOD
Web Method. For the roast potatoes, preheat the oven to 220C/200C Fan/Gas 7. Put the potatoes into a saucepan and cover with cold water. Add a generous pinch of salt and …
From bbc.co.uk


CHINESE ROAST DUCK (烤鴨) - OH MY FOOD RECIPES
Web 2019-05-05 5. Wrap the wings with foil to prevent the wings get burned. Next, bake the duck at 375 F for an hour. After that, remove the foil and change the temperature to 425 …
From ohmyfoodrecipes.com


RECIPE: SWEET-SOUR-SPICY KUMQUAT SAUCE - EASY RECIPES
Web 10 Best Kumquat Sauce Recipes 1 tablespoon chili garlic sauce (such as Lee Kum Kee®) Steps: Stir the vinegar and sugar together in a small saucepan over medium heat until …
From recipegoulash.cc


10 BEST KUMQUAT RECIPES | YUMMLY
Web 2022-11-29 butter, baking powder, granulated sugar, salt, orange zest, brown sugar and 12 more
From yummly.com


ROASTED DUCK WITH KUMQUAT SAUCE RECIPES
Web Roasted Duck With Kumquat Sauce Recipes with ingredients,nutritions,instructions and related recipes
From tfrecipes.com


DUCK BREASTS WITH ORANGE SAUCE (BEST SAUCE FOR DUCK!)
Web 2022-06-27 Heat oven to 350°F (175°C). Glaze the duck breasts with the orange sauce on both sides, then place skin-side up and stick in a meat thermometer. Place uncovered in …
From alwaysusebutter.com


OVEN-BAKED DUCK MAGRET WITH HONEY AND KUMQUAT
Web 2022-09-18 The duck magret is washed, dried well with kitchen paper and rubbed with a mixture of honey, soy sauce and spices. It is left for 1 day in the refrigerator and the …
From bonapeti.com


23 BEST IDEAS RECIPES USING DUCK SAUCE
Web 2020-09-08 Using the bottom of a ramekin or your palm, delicately shatter the potatoes. Pre-heat the oven to 400 °F (200 °C). Starting with a chilly as well as dry oven-safe …
From eatandcooking.com


HOW TO USE KUMQUATS | 30 RECIPES WITH KUMQUATS
Web 2022-07-21 You can make some amazing kumquat appetizer recipes. Kumquat Kale Salad with Tahini Dressing | Minimalist Baker. Goat Cheese Stuffed Endive with …
From bestoflifemag.com


RECIPES - EASY FOOD RECIPES & COOKING TIPS AT THE COOKEATSHARE …
Web This review includes a variation (e.g. uses less salt) or Close. Advertisement
From cookeatshare.com


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