How To Cook a Duck
- 1 each duckling
- 1 tablespoon kosher salt
- 1 teaspoon black pepper ground
- REMOVE ANY GIBLETS from the cavity of the bird and reserve.
- Remove any fat deposits from the cavity and cut off excess skin around the neck.
- Rinse the bird under cold running water and pat dry.
- Sprinkle the cavity with salt and pepper.
- Sever the wing tips at the first joint and reserve with the giblets.
- Tie the legs together at the ankles and sprinkle the outside of the duck with salt and pepper.
- If you don't have a steamer, improvise one.
- Use a roasting rack or create one by placing 2 small heatproof baking dishes or loaf pans upside down in a larger roasting pan.
- Fill roasting pan with a 2-inch depth of water and place the bird breast up on the rack.
- Cover tightly with the lid or with aluminum foil.
- Place over high heat on top of the stove.
- When the water boils, reduce heat to low and steam approximately 15 minutes per pound.
- Remove from the heat and transfer the birds to a plate.
- Strain the steaming liquid into a container, cool and place in the refrigerator.
- When chilled, remove the fat and pack into containers, discarding any water.
- Place in the refrigerator until ready to cook, or in the freezer for up to 1 year.
- Use the fat for frying and sauteeing.
- Place the bird on its side in a roasting pan, add reserved giblets, neck and wings, place in the oven and turn oven temperature to 350F (180C).
- After about 15 minutes, turn birds on the other side and cook an additional 10 minutes.
- Turn the bird breast up and cook another 20 minutes, basting the bird as it renders fat.
- In all, cook about 9 minutes per pound or about 45 minutes for a 5-lb duck, about 7 minutes per pound for an 11-lb goose.
- Remove the bird from the oven and set the bird aside on a platter.
- Remove any trussing and serve with sauce.
duckling, kosher salt, black pepper
Taken from recipeland.com/recipe/v/how-to-cook-duck-47093 (may not work)