Ingredients
Units
Scale
- 1 3 1/2 lb. whole duck, cleaned and neck attached
- ***
- Dry Seasoning:
- 1 Tbsp. Knorr Aromat (TFD change, was kosher salt)
- 1 Tbsp. freshly-ground white pepper
- 1 Tbsp. five-spice powder
- 1 1/4 tsp. freshly-ground Sichuan peppercorn
- 1 tsp. sugar
- ***
- 16 cups water, divided
- 2 cups ice, for ice bath
- Plum sauce, aka “duck sauce” for serving
- ***
- Liquid Marinade:
- 1 Tbsp. vegetable oil
- 2 tsp. garlic paste
- 1 Tbsp. ginger paste
- 3 scallions (including tops), cut into 3-inch pieces
- 1 star anise, broken into pieces
- 1 Tbsp. hoisin sauce
- 1 Tbsp. oyster sauce
- 3 Tbsp. soy sauce
- 1 Tbsp. Shaoxing wine or dry sherry
- 2 tsp. sugar
- 2 pieces fermented red bean curd from the jar
- 1 tsp. thirteen-spice powder (TFD change, original was five spice)
- ***
- For the blanching liquid:
- 8 cups water
- 1/2 cup rose cooking wine (mei kuei lu chiew), or if you must, substitute Shaoxing rice wine or dry Sherry
- 1/2 cup diluted red vinegar (da hong zhe cu)
- 1/2 cup maltose
Instructions
- Wash duck with warm water and pat dry with paper towels. Remove excess fat from the inside of the cavity and render for future-use duck fat. (If you can, choose a leaner duck, which will roast up crispier.)
- Use tweezers to pluck out any pinfeathers; if you have a cooking torch, you can also use it to singe them off. Chop off the feet, if attached, with a knife.
- To make the dry rub, in a small bowl, combine ingredients and mix well. Rub the mixture all over the duck and inside the cavity. Transfer to the fridge and let sit for 2 hours.
- To make the liquid marinade, in a bowl, combine soy sauce, oyster sauce, hoisin sauce, fermented red bean curd, five-spice powder, and sugar and mix well, breaking up the bean curd. Add all remaining ingredients. Remove duck from the fridge. Pour the marinade inside the cavity and rub it all over. Use an 8-inch stainless steel turkey lacer or bamboo skewer to truss the cavity closed.
- If you have an air compressor, use it to blow air under the skin of the duck to separate the skin from the meat. Place the duck breast side up and insert the tube of the air compressor under the skin, around the neck area. Press paper towels over the cavity and rest of the neck to ensure that no air leaks out. Blow air under the skin for about 1 minute, until the duck inflates like a balloon and the skin is separated from the meat. Flip the duck and repeat.
- If you do not have an air compressor, use your hands or the back of a wooden spoon to reach under the skin and loosen it from the meat.
- Secure an S-shaped hook on the duck’s neck, or tie butcher’s twine securely under both wings. ***ENSURE*** that the duck does not fall when you lift it by the hook or the twine!!!
- In a large bowl or pot big enough to fit the duck, prepare an ice bath. In another large pot, bring 8 cups of water to a boil. Turn off the heat. Holding the duck by the hook or the twine, suspend it over the pot and use a ladle to spoon the water all over the duck, for about 2 minutes, until the skin turns firm and white. Discard the water.
- Immediately submerge the duck in the ice bath, to further firm up the skin. Remove and pat dry with paper towels.
- To make the blanching liquid, clean the pot of any grease and bring another 8 cups of water to a boil. Add the rose cooking wine, red vinegar, and maltose and mix well. Turn off the heat. Once again, holding the duck by the hook or twine, suspend it over the pot and use a ladle to spoon the liquid all over the duck, for about 2 minutes. Allow the duck to semi-dry, and repeat the process a total of five times.Yes – five!
- When totally dry, remove the hook from the neck, or snip off the twine, and chop off the neck and head with a knife. Set a wire cooling rack on a plate and place the duck on the rack, breast side up. Transfer to the fridge to air dry for 24–48 hours. (You can also use a fan or blow dryer to speed up the process.)
- The next day, roast the Cantonese Roasted Duck:
- Line a roasting pan with foil, for easier clean-up, and set a roasting rack on top. Place the duck breast side up on the roasting rack (because the breast side is thicker). Wrap up the wings and legs with foil, to prevent burning. Let rest at room temperature for 20 minutes. Meanwhile, place a rack in the center of the oven and preheat to 425 degrees F.
- Transfer duck to the middle rack of the oven and roast for 10 minutes. Then, lower the oven temperature to 350 degrees F and continue to roast for another 20 minutes.
- Remove roasting pan from the oven. Flip the duck so that it is breast side down. Return roasting pan to the middle rack of the oven and roast, still at 350 degrees F, for 20 minutes.
- Remove roasting pan from the oven. Remove the foil from the wings and legs of the duck. Return roasting pan to the oven and roast for another 20 minutes. (If your duck is larger than what this recipe calls for, add 15 minutes of roasting time for each additional pound. The USDA recommends cooking duck breasts to an internal temperature of 165 degrees F to ensure that any harmful bacteria are killed.)
- Remove duck from the oven and let cool for 10 minutes. Remove the solid aromatics from the duck cavity and discard. Reserve the juices – you can boil them down to thicken if you so desire, or just leave them as is. Spoon very hot oil over the duck one final time to gloss the skin. Chop the duck into small pieces, serve the cavity liquid in small bowls to each diner to dip the meat into and serve immediately with plum sauce for alternate dipping.