31 December 2015

Slow-cooking duck legs to make confit de canard

I made slow-cooked duck — canard confit or confit de canard — nearly three weeks ago. We'll be eating some of it tomorrow in what in France is called a cassoulet. That's a dish of slow-cooked white beans with meats like duck, pork sausages, salt-cured pork, or even lamb. Cassoulet is not especially a New Year's Day dish in France, but it's become our own particular January 1 tradition.


That's the slow-cooked duck above. Making confit is kind of like poaching a turkey, except that the poaching "liquid" is pure duck fat rather than water or broth. Both processes give you moist, succulent meat — especially the cooking in fat. Like the poached turkey, the slow-cooked duck then normally goes into the oven at the end for a good browning, to make the skin crispy.

Think of making duck confit as a little like frying chicken, but without that layer of flour on the bird to absorb a lot of cooking oil, and cooked at a lower temperature for a longer time.
When you take the duck out of the poaching fat, you put it on a rack to drip as it heats up and browns in the oven. Duck fat is delicious, by the way, and in France people think of it as being much better for your health than, for example, butter.
One thing that really enhances the flavor of the duck is the dry marinade or rub you use to cure it before you cook it. It's a mixture of onion, garlic, black pepper, coarse salt, and thyme, and the duck legs (you can also use wings) can sit in it for anywhere from 6 to 48 hours in the refrigerator before you cook them. This year I rinsed the marinade off the duck legs before I cooked them in fat — that's optional but safer if you think the confit might turn out too salty.
In France you can buy duck fat at the supermarket, either in jars or, this year, in these 500 gram tubs that were selling for two euros apiece. You can cook with the duck fat and then save it almost indefinitely in the refrigerator for re-use later. Fry potatoes in it. Season beans and greens and other vegetables with it.
I melted the duck fat in the slow cooker and then carefully lowered the duck legs into the fat when it was liquid. I cooked the legs on low temperature for 6 hours. The meat was starting to fall off the bone by that time.
All I added to the crock pot with the fat and duck pieces was a few black peppercorns and a few bay leaves.
Here are the duck pieces after I took them out of the cooker (see the first photo at the top of this blog post) and then put them in another container for storage. I poured the warm fat over them so that they were completely covered, straining the fat to remove the peppercorns and bay leaves.

The confit is better tasting if you let it "cure"  and mellow in the cold, re-congealed fat for a few weeks before eating it. Because it is submerged in the fat it doesn't spoil. Keep in in the refrigerator or in a cold cellar or pantry.

In the days before people had refrigerators and freezers, making confit was a way to preserve cooked meats over the winter.

20 comments:

  1. Very interesting post. Last but not least!

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    1. Do you mean "the last post of the year"? If so, yes, and thanks. Je radote — c'est la 4e ou 5e fois depuis 10 ans que je fais un billet au sujet du confit de canard... Bonne année, CHM, et bonne santé.

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  2. Yes, a very interesting post. Our market always has what they call "duck breast" for a few days
    over the holidays. All fat with a soupcon of meat...not worth the steep price.
    All the best for the New Year, Ken. Looking forward to many new posts in 2016.


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  3. I make duck "confit" pretty often, and it's delicious. I put "confit" in quotes because it's a shortcut method, due to the fact that large quantities of duck fat are almost impossible to obtain here. After salting and spicing the duck legs for 24 hours, I cook them in a roasting pan, covered with foil, for 3 hours at 300 degrees.

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    1. I'm sure that's good, Bob. The key is slow cooking, I think. It's good that you can find duck leg portions over there.

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  4. Must be something in the air! As I speak my husband is preparing his confit duck for his New Years meal. Enjoy yours and have a wonderful New Year.

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    1. Mine is in the oven — cassoulet with the cuisses de canard confites, some gésiers confits, and some Toulouse-style sausages, plus the white beans (from Spain, I think, and delicious). I'm really hungry and can't wait for it to be 12:30 so that we can dig in.

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  5. I've been intrigued by this confit method ever since the first time you wrote about it. Very interesting.
    The. Only time that I have ever had Cassoulet, was New Year"s Eve or day in France, so I do actually always think of it as a NYE specialty:)
    Happy New Year's Eve to you two, and to all of you other commenters !

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  6. The picture of the duck fat looks just like butter. Duck is a favorite of mine....particularly a warm duck salad. And Peking Duck, which is not so common these days.

    I'll second Judy's kind sentiments and wish you a happy and healthy New Yea. 2016 is the year of the fire monkey...so lots of energy and dynamism, if you believe the Chinese Zodiac.

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    1. I like a salad with warm duck gizzards — gésiers de canard confits. Happy New Year to you too, D.

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  7. Replies
    1. We are going to eat the duck with beans in a few minutes. I hope it is as good as it looks.

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  8. I've tasted your confits and they are delicious! Wishing you and Walt a happy and healthy 2016!

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    1. It's all in the oven and I can't wait to bring it to the table. Happy New Year to you two.

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  9. Happy New Year ~ See you in 2016 :)

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    1. For Christmas dinner, you said! Happy New Year to you.

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    2. And I will work towards that goal :)
      I hope your New Year dawned a bit brighter than it did in New York .. a grey gloomy day here. Excellent nap weather ..

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  10. A loyal reader of Western Australia wishes both of you a healthy and happy New Year.

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    1. Thank you, JD, for the good wishes. Happy and healthy new year to you too.

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