Traditionally this takes days to make. The duck legs are rubbed with salt and herbs and pressed overnight. Then the legs are covered with gallons of rendered duck fat and slowly roasted for hours. Finally the legs are crisped-up in a hot oven and serve with some type of tangy fruit-based sauce. The two part version you are about to watch is specially designed for the home Chef.
While not exactly the “classic” method, the results are still AMAZING and must be tried!! In part one we prep and slow-roast the legs. They are cooked in a low oven, 225 degrees F., for 2 1/2 hours. After cooling to room temp., they are kept in the frige overnight. Check for part 2 and see this great dish finished.
10 comments:
Oh, that was YUM! Tip: make double the quantity so you can use the left-overs for duck salad, duck risotto or just as a lush afternoon snack...
woops left a comment on the pork meant for this - how long should you let the duck sit before putting it in the fridge overnight?
I am making duck confit using the method you taught.. but the skin of the duck leg is gone after they are baked. Was there anything that i have done wrong?
haven't heard about "gone" but the skin renders almost all the fat. It should still crisp up nicely. keep going.
Hi Chef John! Love your site. Do you have a recipe page for this? Tried to look for the text version but can't seem to locate it.
Hi Chef John, thanks for this! Love the recipes. Is there a text recipe for this? Was trying to locate it but can't find it.
sorry, I don't do written recipes...yet.
Hi Chef John, Love ur site! Just wonderin further, ur video u said "read the recipe page" - wat does it refer to? - Beefy
this page. thanks!
Hi Chef John, I just wanted to ask, how long can duck confit made in this way be stored and how.
Post a Comment