Fragrant Crispy Duck
- 1 (4 1/2- to 5 1/2-lb) fresh Pekin duck (sometimes called Long Island duck)
- 6 tablespoons toasted Sichuan-peppercorn salt
- 1 tablespoon five-spice powder
- 2 tablespoons Chinese rice wine or dry Sherry
- 6 (1/8-inch-thick) slices fresh ginger
- 4 scallions, cut into 2-inch pieces
- About 12 cups corn, peanut, or canola oil
- 2 tablespoons dark (black or mushroom) soy sauce
- 1/3 cup all-purpose flour
- Special equipment: a 10-inch glass pie plate or shallow heatproof bowl; a 16- to 18-inch wok with a lid and a 9 1/2- to 10-inch round metal rack, or a 14-inch wok and same rack plus a large pot (at least 12 inches wide and 5 inches high); long oven mitts; a bulb baster; an electric fan; 2 large Chinese mesh spoons or large slotted spoons
- Cut off wing tips with poultry shears or a sharp knife.
- Remove and discard excess fat from body cavity and neck, then rinse inside and out.
- Pat dry inside and out and press on breastbone to break it and flatten duck.
- Heat peppercorn salt and five-spice powder in a dry skillet over moderate heat, stirring, until hot.
- Measure out 3 tablespoons and rub 1 tablespoon in body cavity and 2 tablespoons over outside of duck, including under wings and legs.
- Reserve remaining spiced salt for serving with duck.
- Put duck in a bowl and marinate, covered and chilled, 8 to 24 hours.
- Drain any liquid from cavity and put duck in glass pie plate.
- Rub rice wine over duck.
- Smash ginger and scallions with flat side of a large heavy knife, then put one third in duck cavity and scatter remainder over duck.
- Fill wok with enough water for rack to sit 1/2 inch above water and bring to a rolling boil.
- Wearing oven mitts, put pie plate with duck on rack over boiling water and cover wok with lid.
- Reduce heat to moderate and steam duck 2 hours, checking every half hour to siphon off fat and juices from around duck and in cavity with bulb baster and replenishing boiling water as necessary.
- Wearing oven mitts, remove pie plate from steamer.
- Discard ginger and scallions.
- Drain duck and cool in pie plate 15 minutes.
- Slide duck onto a rack set over a baking sheet (to catch juices) and pat dry with paper towels.
- Position duck in front of a fan and air-dry 2 hours, making sure air blows directly onto duck.
- Heat 2 inches oil in large wok or large pot until a deep-fat thermometer registers 375F.
- Meanwhile, brush outside of duck with soy sauce, then dust with flour, gently knocking off excess.
- Dip mesh spoons in hot oil (to keep duck from sticking) before using them to gently lower duck into hot oil.
- Fry duck, spooning hot oil over top, 2 minutes.
- Carefully turn duck over and fry 1 minute more.
- With extreme care, remove duck from oil with mesh spoons, draining cavity, and transfer to paper towels to drain.
- Heat oil to 400F and fry duck a second time, in same manner, until dark brown and crisp, 30 seconds to 1 minute on each side.
- Again with extreme care, remove duck from oil with mesh spoons, draining cavity, and transfer to paper towels to drain briefly.
- Serve duck with small dishes of reserved spiced salt for dipping.
sichuanpeppercorn salt, fivespice powder, chinese rice wine, ginger, scallions, corn, mushroom, flour, glass pie
Taken from www.epicurious.com/recipes/food/views/fragrant-crispy-duck-103555 (may not work)