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Nutrition Facts

Serving Size 1 (896g)

Recipe makes 2 servings

The following items or measurements are not included below:

Chinese five spice powder

Calories 2923
Calories from Fat 2247 (76%)
Amount Per Serving %DV
Total Fat 249.7g 384%
Saturated Fat 83.9g 419%
Monounsaturated Fat 118.5g
Polyunsaturated Fat 32.3g
Trans Fat 0.0g
Cholesterol 481mg 160%
Sodium 6757mg 281%
Potassium 1721mg 49%
Total Carbohydrate 88.8g 29%
Dietary Fiber 2.5g 10%
Sugars 80.3g
Protein 82.0g 164%

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Steamed and Roasted Whole Duck

Recipe #67291 | 2½ hours | 30 min prep | add private note
kiwidutch

By: kiwidutch
Jul 24, 2003

SERVES 2 -4 (change servings and units)

Ingredients

Directions

  1. 1
    To reduce the fat and produce a crispy skin, begin by trimming the excess fat from the neck and body.
  2. 2
    Rinse the duck, inside and out, and pat dry thoroughly with paper towels.
  3. 3
    Combine the Chinese five-spice, sugar, and salt in a small bowl.
  4. 4
    Rub the spice mixture all over the duck, inside and out.
  5. 5
    Salt and five-spice powder makes a fragrant dry marinade, which draws some of the moisture from the duck so that the spices penetrate.
  6. 6
    Stuff the duck cavity with the aromatics: the ginger, garlic, green onions, and tangerine peel.
  7. 7
    Fold the wing tips back under the duck and tie the legs together with kitchen string.
  8. 8
    Poke the duck breast a few times, piercing the skin.
  9. 9
    Place a roasting pan on the stovetop over 2 burners and fill with 2-inches of water, turn the heat to medium.
  10. 10
    Set a V-rack insert inside the pan and lay the duck on the rack, breast-side up.
  11. 11
    Cover tightly with aluminum foil.
  12. 12
    Steam the duck for 45 minutes, checking the water level periodically.
  13. 13
    Steaming the duck first melts away some of the fat and shrinks the skin.
  14. 14
    In a small saucepan combine the vinegar, honey, and soy sauce over low heat.
  15. 15
    Bring to a boil and simmer and stir for 15 minutes until sauce thickens.
  16. 16
    The duck will be lacquered with the sweet glaze, which caramelizes during roasting, making the skin crisp and brown.
  17. 17
    Preheat the oven to 375 degrees F.
  18. 18
    Take the foil off the duck, remove the rack with the duck, and pour out the water and all the fat that has rendered out.
  19. 19
    Put the rack with the duck back inside the roasting pan.
  20. 20
    Baste the duck with the vinegar mixture, until all the skin is completely coated in the glaze.
  21. 21
    Stick the whole thing in the oven.
  22. 22
    Roast the duck for 1 hour, basting periodically with any remaining glaze to set in a deep mahogany color.
  23. 23
    Tent the breast with some foil if it gets too dark.
  24. 24
    The legs will wiggle easily when it's done.
  25. 25
    Carve and serve.

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Featured Reviews for This Recipe

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From: IngridH

On Nov 1, 2009

This was very tasty! It served 3 adults, with enough leftovers for 2 more meals. I really like this method, as it cuts down on some of the fat. My bird was done after 30 minutes in the oven, but the skin wasn't crispy at that point point. To solve this, I put it under the broiler briefly, which crisped it up nicely. The glaze is also wonderful, I think next time I will use the remainder as a sauce, as I had about half of it left after basting several times. Thanks for posting a wonderful recipe!

0 people found this review helpful

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    From: Dr. Jenny

    On Mar 29, 2008

    DH and I enjoyed this duck recipe last night. We followed all directions and ingredients as posted. I agree with many of Sackville's posted comments. Thank you for this tasty duck recipe.

    0 people found this review helpful

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  • From: Sackville

    On Dec 25, 2003

    We made this for our Christmas dinner and were quite pleased with it. The skin came out beautifully and the duck was moist. I'm not quite giving it full marks though, since it took far longer for the sauce to boil down into a thick glaze (10-15 minutes) and also because I didn't feel much taste came through from all the fillings. The skin was wonderful, but although the ginger, orange, garlic etc certainly made the duck smell good when it was steaming, the flavour didn't really filter through to the meat. Next time I would make a sauce to go over the duck.

    5 people found this review helpful

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    From: JustJanS

    On Dec 7, 2003

    This was a very good duck-high praise from my family of duck lovers! We don't get tangerines, so I used mandarine skin instead. I found that it took longer than 5 minutes to reduce the sauce to a stickyglaze, and longer than 1 hour to cook my 1.9kg duck. I basted it several times, and the oven lost heat each time. Still the duck was (almost) the most flavoursome we have eaten-only beaten by a thrice cooked duck we were served at a Malaysian restaurant!

    5 people found this review helpful

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  • Read all 13 reviews

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