deliciouslyorkshire | Recipes | Harome-reared ‘Loose Birds’ Duck with Garden Lemon Thyme Mash and Traditional Yorkshire Sauce

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Harome-reared ‘Loose Birds’ Duck with Garden Lemon Thyme Mash and Traditional Yorkshire Sauce

Michelin-starred chef Andrew Pern says of his Yorkshire recipe: “A plate of six separate components, from Paul Talling’s ducks, reared just outside Harome, all that is except the foie gras which comes from further afield, and some of the eggs from Sim and Josie Barker’s farm, Aby Green, round the corner from the pub, down past the duck pond. The sauce, a traditional classic, found in the ‘Repertoire de la Cuisine’, a little book of biblical qualities for any chef. The orange and port-based sauce is a perfect partner to the rich, fatty duck. It’s Duck à l’Orange all over again.”

Serves: 4 | Difficulty: Difficult

0 Ratings

Recipe by Andrew Pern

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Method

  1. Confit the duck legs in the duck fat with the star anise and bay leaf in an oven for 2½ hours at 140c. Peel the orange and cut the peel into julienne strips removing all the white. Place in a pan with the red wine, sugar and redcurrant jelly. Juice the left-over orange and add to the pan as well. Reduce until it becomes syrup, and add the duck jus.
  2. Once the duck legs have cooled down, split the thigh and the drumstick, then put onto a baking tray. Boil the potatoes, drain and mash. Reduce 100g of butter and 100ml cream by half and add to the mash. Season. Add the lemon thyme leaves and keep warm. Grill the chipolatas until just cooked and put on the baking tray with the leg and thigh.
  3. Pan-fry the duck breasts until the skin is crispy but still there. Place on the tray and then in a preheated oven at 190c for 5 minutes.
  4. Meanwhile, reheat the mash and put into a piping bag, poach the duck eggs in simmering water with a little white wine vinegar for about 3 minutes, keep warm. Pan-fry the foie gras until it becomes spongy. Pipe 5 turrets of mash around the outside of the plate and 1 in the centre. Place each ingredient on one of the mashed potato turrets, slice and save the duck breast for the centre of the plate, drizzle the Yorkshire sauce around and over the dish ingredients.
  5. Serve immediately.

Fessy’s Brouilly

Expert wine matching from Sean Welsh at Flourish and Prosper, Merchants and Delicatessen based in the historic East Yorkshire town of Howden.

Henry Fessy have picked up the prestigious International Wine Challange Beaujolais Trophy for their 2009 Brouilly, quite an achievement in a vintage as good as 2009. I have chosen the Brouilly to compliment Andrews dish because whilst it is made from the Gamay grape which often gives light, strawberry scented wines, Fessy’s Brouilly has a more masculine earthiness combined with wild hedgerow fruits and a refreshing acidity that will cut through the fattiness of the duck. It retails for £12.99 and yes Henry really does have a classic giant French Moustache as featured on his labels.

Salut, Sean

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Ingredients

  • 4 duck legs
  • 1 ltr duck fat
  • 2 duck breasts
  • 200ml red wine
  • 4 duck eggs
  • 100g redcurrant jelly
  • 300g duck foie gras
  • 150g sugar
  • 4 duck chipolatas
  • 500g mashed potato
  • 10g lemon thyme
  • 100g butter
  • 1 orange
  • 100ml cream
  • 1 bay leaf
  • A little white wine vinegar
  • 1 star anise
  • 100ml duck jus

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