Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Duck a'la Orange

Not as difficult as it sounds, just time consuming. Allow 3 hours, minimum total elapsed time. 

One 5-6lb duck
S&P
Frozen orange juice concentrate. 
Butter
Soy sauce
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Thaw duck if frozen. I leave it in the fridge for a couple days on the bottom where it's out of the way. 

Preheat oven to 350*

Remove from wrapper and remove the goodies from inside, usually livers, heart, neck and sauce mix. I never use the sauce mix. It's filled with all kinds of extraneous ingredients. Yuk. 

Rinse the duck, inside and out. Pull off any extra fat you find. Prick the skin thoroughly with a fork. Place on a rack in a roasting pan, and pour a couple cups of boiling water over it. This help tighten the skin. Let it sit for a minute to cook again. Lift the duck to drain water out of cavity, leaving the water in the pan. Dry the duck, inside and out. S&P inside and out and return to rack, folding neck skin underneath. 

Bake for 45 minutes and remove from oven so you can flip the bird, er, I mean, turn the duck over. This way you give all the skin a chance to crisp up. So, at the end of 45 minutes, take the pan out, with your tongs lift the duck up to drain liquid from cavity into pan. Turn over, back side up. Feel free to poke it a bit more with the fork, if you'd like. It helps to release the fat from under the skin. Duck is very fatty, if you want crisp skin, the fat needs to melt away. 

Put it back into the oven, bake another 45 minutes. 

After the second 45 minutes, take out, flip again, poke again and back in it goes for yet, a third 45 minute baking session. 

You now have about 45 minutes. Start your side dishes and get ready to finish the duck. Mix your orange sauce: 1/4 cup OJ concentrate, 2T soy sauce, 2T butter. Melt in a pan and baste over duck the last 10 minutes, at which time I switch the oven from bake to broil. This just concentrates the cooking to the top, where it'll crisp up the skin and glaze the duck with the orange sauce. 

My family doesn't care for stuffing so much. So, I roast without stuffing. You can stuff yours. Just realize that it will add to the baking time and you must check internal stuffing temperature to reach 165*. 





Pull off extra fat.



Poke well with a fork.



Can you see the fork holes?



Don't run out and buy one of these, but if you find a rack that is built with a V shape, it's great for keeping your bird, or meat, from rolling around in the roasting pan.



Pour the boiling water over.



Remove from rack, and dry off nicely.



Salt and Pepper, inside and out.



This is where you practice your massage techniques and no one will whine that it's too rough or too soft. ;)



Really... inside too.



I guess I shoulda put a picture in before this, but you DID remove the goodies, right?? I won't mention names, but someone I love cooked a whole Thanksgiving feast and found the giblet package at carving time. :) Hey, that only happens once! For comparison's sake. I've looked at the orange sauce mix that came included with the duck. Ingredients: OJ from concentrate, water, sugar, modified corn starch, dextrose, citric acid, salt, natural flavor (of what? orange?), torula yeast, xanthan gum, sodium benzoate, caramel color, spice, extracts of paprika, onion powder.



Ok, our duck is all massaged and relaxed, warmed up with the boiling water bath and now, time to hit the sauna, er, oven. Shh, when I invited him to dinner he had no idea he WAS dinner!



350* for 45 minutes.



First 45 minutes is done.



Drain out liquids.



Flipped over, breast side down. Now, back into the oven for the next 45 minutes.



Second 45 minute baking session complete. Starting to look browned and crispy. :)



Turn the duck back over, breast side up, allowing the juices to drain from the cavity, as you turn it. Feel free to poke some more. I always give extra attention to the area around the legs where there are fatty deposits. Bake in for the last 45 minutes. This is when you start your side dishes. Tonight, we are having French Bread, Wild Rice and Broccoli.



Orange sauce to melt together.



Sauce ready to baste with.



10 or 15 minutes before the end, I take the duck out and cut it in half.



I don't change the temperature, but I change oven from bake to broil. 5 minutes under the broiler and then it's ready to baste with sauce which is just finishing.



Baste with orange sauce. Back under the broiler for 10 minutes. Keep watch, you don't want it to burn.



10 minutes under the broiler. Look how nice and crispy and brown! Baste it again when it comes out. :D



Use a serrated knife or kitchen scissors to cut into quarters. Some people are hungry enough to eat a half. That looks nice to serve. We just don't eat that much.



For a holiday meal, I'd add a nice healthy green salad too. But we've been nibbling dips and veggies all afternoon! :)



Broccoli, wild rice and fresh hot bread to go with. Yum!



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