Braised/Roasted Duck Legs with Vegetables combines rustic, one-pan cooking with a few elegant ingredients for a simple, delicious fall dinner. Recipe below.
Two things led to this week’s recipe. First, fall is officially here. That makes me officially very happy; it’s my favorite season of the year for many reasons, none of them having to do with football or season premieres.
One place I enjoy fall the most is in the kitchen. Braising and roasting various meats (usually surrounded with various aromatics, vegetables and herbs) or making stews and soups are some of my favorite ways to cook. And they produce some of my favorite things to eat. Which brings me to the second thing.
One of my absolute favorite things to eat is duck. If we’re in a restaurant (particularly if it’s French) and duck is on the menu, I know what I’m having. The only thing that has a fighting chance in this situation is lamb, but duck usually wins.
We were in a restaurant Friday night, Wasabi in Chicago’s Logan Square neighborhood. Obviously not French, but in addition to the amazing bowls of authentic Japanese ramen made with pork broth cooked for days that had brought us there, they had small plates of grilled duck skewers.
Tasting the delectable bites of duck—salty, crispy and wonderfully juicy—and feeling the chill in the air as we left the restaurant, an idea of something I wanted to make and eat began to form. Duck legs, more interesting and flavorful even than duck breasts, roasted or maybe braised, surrounded with vegetables and seasoned with herbs that took them in a French direction.
As I started looking around for inspiration, the ever reliable Mark Bittman came through with a technique for cooking duck that he calls crisp braising. To me, it’s a hybrid of braising and roasting. Unlike straight roasting, the meat is partially submerged in a braising liquid to keep things moist—I used broth, wine and water. And unlike straight braising, you cook the dish uncovered, allowing the non-submerged duck skin to crisp up.
This is an easy recipe that comes together in a little more than an hour—an hour and a half at the most. The toughest part may be finding duck legs. Here in Chicago, the Paulina Meat Market reliably carries them, frozen. You can thaw them in a bowl of running water in 15 minutes or so.
The resulting dish not only combines two of my favorite cooking methods, it’s a mix of one-pan rustic and “I’m eating duck cooked with leeks, thyme and wine” elegant. Perfect for my favorite season.
Braised/Roasted Duck Legs with Vegetables
Serves 2
2 duck legs, a little more than 1 pound total
salt and freshly ground pepper, to taste
2 carrots, peeled and cut into thick diagonal pieces
2 medium potatoes, peeled and cut into 8 wedges each (I used Yukon Gold)
2 leeks, white and pale green part only, halved lengthwise and sliced
3 large garlic cloves, minced
4 sprigs fresh thyme
1 bay leaf
1 cup reduced-sodium chicken broth
1 cup dry white wine
water
Preheat oven to 400ºF. Pat duck legs dry with paper towel and trim away excess fat, reserving fat. Season duck legs on both sides with salt and pepper. Place them skin side down in a large, ovenproof, dry, unheated skillet and place over a medium flame. Add reserved duck fat to the skillet to render it. Cook duck legs on the skin side 6 to 10 minutes, until nicely browned. Turn legs and brown them on the other side for 2 minutes. Transfer to a plate.
Remove any unrendered fat pieces from the skillet. If you have more than 2 tablespoons of fat in the pan (basically enough to coat the pan), spoon the excess off. Save it, though—you may still need it. Add the carrots and potatoes to the pan, toss to coat with duck fat and season with salt and pepper. Sauté vegetables for 5 to 10 minutes, stirring occasionally, until they begin to brown. Stir in the leeks (you can substitute onions, if you like) and cook for 3 to 5 minutes, stirring frequently to avoid burning. Add garlic and thyme to the pan and cook just until fragrant, 45 seconds or so, stirring. (Here’s where you may need to add a little extra fat to the pan. My duck wasn’t particularly fatty, so I actually had to drizzle some canola oil in the pan to not scorch the garlic.)
Return duck legs to pan, skin side up. Add bay leaf, broth and wine. Liquids should only come about halfway up the side of the duck legs; use less if necessary. increase heat and bring to a boil. Transfer pan to the oven and cook, uncovered, for 30 minutes. Check liquids at this point. My wine and broth and mostly cooked away, so I added some water (not enough to come up to the original levels, but enough to keep vegetables moist).
Reduce heat to 350ºF and cook duck for another 30 minutes. Serve immediately, spooning vegetable mix onto individual plates and topping with duck leg.
How much dried thyme would you say equals 4 sprigs fresh? (I’ve got the dried, and I’m gonna use it!)
I would use a teaspoon of dried thyme, Anita. That should give it plenty of thyme flavor without overdoing it.
I’ve been asking for duck legs at the farmer’s market, but can only get the whole duck at once–but that’s not so bad, I can see making something like this with a whole duck broken down into pieces. Thanks for a great post!
Yum. I love me some duck. This strategy, the crisp braising, sounds like the perfect method for duck legs. I get so disappointed by losing out on the beauty of duck skin with good ol’ braising (though the braising does make the meat meltingly delicious). In short: you’ve inspired me!
Wau…this is delicious! I love braised meat because normally it becomes tender and all juices absorbed into the meat. This recipe is amazing, it seem that the duck meat will be tender inside but crispy outside. Definitely have to try it. 🙂
Rowdy, here’s what I’d suggest. Duck legs like long cooking times, but the breasts not so much. I’ve seen a number of recipes that call for braising the legs, then pan searing the breasts quickly when the legs are almost done.
I hope you like it, Christina!
Thanks, love cooking!
Yum… a great recipe for fall, and I especially like the idea of adding in seared duck breasts towards the end.
braising, one pot (well, pan), root vegetables, duck . . . oh my! I must try this one. beautiful!