Duck confit

Duck confit
Duck confit with salad
Confit de canard from Café du Marché in Paris

Duck confit (French: confit de canard) is a French dish made with the leg of the duck. While it is made across France, it is seen as a speciality of Gascony. The confit is prepared in a centuries-old process of preservation that consists of salt curing a piece of meat (generally goose, duck, or pork) and then poaching it in its own fat.

To prepare a confit, the meat is rubbed with salt, garlic, and sometimes herbs such as thyme, then covered and refrigerated for up to 36 hours. Salt curing the meat acts as a preservative.

Prior to cooking, the spices are rinsed from the meat, which is then patted dry. The meat is placed in a cooking dish deep enough to contain the meat and the rendered fat, and placed in an oven at a low temperature (170 – 275 Fahrenheit/ 76 - 135 degrees Celsius).[1][2] The meat is slowly poached at least until cooked, or until meltingly tender, generally four to ten hours.

The meat and fat are then removed from the oven and left to cool. When cool, the meat can be transferred to a canning jar or other container and completely submerged in the fat. A sealed jar of duck confit may be kept in the refrigerator for up to six months, or several weeks if kept in a reusable plastic container. To maximise preservation if canning, the fat should top the meat by at least one inch. The cooking fat acts as both a seal and preservative and results in a very rich taste. Skipping the salt curing stage greatly reduces the shelf life of the confit.

Confit is also sold in cans, which can be kept for several years. The flavourful fat from the confit may also be used in many other ways, as a frying medium for sautéed vegetables (e.g., green beans and garlic, wild or cultivated mushrooms), savory toasts, scrambled eggs or omelettes, and as an addition to shortcrust paste for tarts and quiches.

A classic recipe is to fry or grill the legs in a bit of the fat until they are well-browned and crisp, and use more of the fat to roast some potatoes and garlic as an accompaniment. The potatoes roasted in duck fat to accompany the crisped-up confit is called pommes de terre à la sarladaise. Another accompaniment is red cabbage slow-braised with apples and red wine.

Duck confit is also a traditional ingredient in many versions of cassoulet.

References

External links


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно сделать НИР?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Confit — Not to be confused with comfit. Confit (French, pronounced [kɔ̃fi] or in English con fee ) is a generic term for various kinds of food that have been immersed in a substance for both flavor and preservation. Sealed and stored in a cool place,… …   Wikipedia

  • Duck (food) — For the living animal, see Duck. For other uses, see Duck (disambiguation). Magret redirects here. For the wine grape also known as Magret, see Malbec. Duck breast with apple honey sauce and wild rice …   Wikipedia

  • confit — /ˈkɒnfi/ (say konfee) noun salted meat, cooked in its own fat, and then packed into a crock or pot and sealed with its own fat: duck confit. {French} …  

  • confit — [kōn fē′] n. meat or poultry, esp. duck or goose, cooked immersed in its own fat with herbs and other seasonings and then preserved within the solidified fat …   English World dictionary

  • confit — [[t]kɒ̱nfiː[/t]] confits N MASS Confit is meat such as goose or duck which has been cooked and preserved in its own fat. ...confit of duck …   English dictionary

  • duck — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun ADJECTIVE ▪ wild ▪ long tailed, mallard, etc. ▪ plastic, rubber ▪ A rubber duck floated in the bath …   Collocations dictionary

  • confit — noun Confit is used after these nouns: ↑duck …   Collocations dictionary

  • confit — noun a piece of meat (especially a duck) cooked slowly in its own fat • Hypernyms: ↑cut, ↑cut of meat * * * confit, fite obs. f. comfit n. and v …   Useful english dictionary

  • confit — noun Etymology: French, from Old French, preparation, preserves, from past participle of confire to prepare more at comfit Date: 1951 1. meat (as goose, duck, or pork) that has been cooked and preserved in its own fat 2. a garnish made usually… …   New Collegiate Dictionary

  • confit — /kawonn fee /, n. French Cookery. duck or goose cooked in its own fat and preserved. [ < F; see COMFIT] * * * …   Universalium

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”