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Duck, Duck, Goose
I love duck. More specifically, I’m a dark meat kind of girl, so that means I love duck legs. For heaven on earth, duck legs as duck confit can’t be beat. Confit is a form of food preservation where the meat is cooked slowly in its fat and then stored, encased in the fat for longer storage.
Fortunately for me, when Howard first started with his sous vide experiments, he easily mastered duck confit during his early efforts. Because the meat is cooked in vacuum-sealed bags, the duck renders enough fat for this process, more or less, which is much less overwhelming than the quarts of duck fat called for in recipes that are cooked in a pot. He actually wrote this up for an earlier “guest post”. It was our only duck confit failure because that time, he tried something new and decided to store the duck out of the bags in a plastic container, still in the refrigerator. The problem was the fat didn’t completely cover the duck and it spoiled (hence no Part 2). You can read about Part 1 here.
This put Howard off making this for quite a while (it’s been over a year). He recently tried again. I’m happy to report he’s back on his game, and it was good as ever. Once made, With the duck confit stashed in the refrigerator (in their vacuum sealed bags), it’s practically fast food. The final preparation is to broil the duck legs to crisp up the skin. The contrast of the meltingly tender meat (it’s falling off the bones) and the crispy skin is a delight.
In addition to duck confit, I also love beans. My favorites, in no particular order, are tiny French lentils, black beans, and chick peas. Lentils are the perfect accompaniment to this French-inspired meal. I tossed cooked lentils with diced carrots and a vinaigrette heavily laced with tarragon for a warm salad that made a bed for the duck leg. Roasted asparagus rounded out the plate perfectly.
No leftovers, but we enjoyed every bite!
Lentil Salad
Serves 4 to 6 as a side dish
1 cup dried French (Le Puy) lentils, rinsed
1 onion, chopped fine
3 bay leaves
2 carrots, peeled, and diced fine
½ cup Tarragon Vinaigrette (recipe below)
Sort through the lentils and discard any rocks or other debris. Don’t skip this step. I always seem to find at least one little stone.
Place the lentils, onion, and bay leaves in a medium pot. Cover with water, about 1-inch above the contents of the pot. Bring to a boil, then reduce heat, cover, and simmer until tender, 20 to 30 minutes. Drain.
Toss the warm lentils with carrots and vinaigrette. Season to taste with salt and pepper.
I prefer this warm, but it’s good served at any temperature (warm, room temperature, or cold).
Tarragon Vinaigrette
Makes about 1 cup
When tarragon is booming in the herb garden, I make this dressing frequently. I also like to steep sprigs of tarragon in vinegar to make my own tarragon vinegar.
¼ c tarragon vinegar (or red wine vinegar)
2 Tbsp Dijon mustard
½ cup olive oil
2 Tbsp chopped tarragon leaves
½ cup chopped parsley (optional)
Salt & freshly ground pepper
In the blender, combine vinegar, mustard, and oil. Add herbs and blend until leaves are chopped fine, but not pureed. Season with salt and pepper to taste.
Leftover dressing is great on green salad and potato salad. When it sits, the vinaigrette sometimes thickens. Thin with water, as needed.
Guest Blog: Howard on Sous Vide
If you have been reading Betsy’s blog, you will notice that she enjoys cooking, a lot. Part of her joy in cooking is how she can relax while putting together an amazingly great meal in an hour or so and escape from her high tech software career with pots, pans and knifes. For me, the joy of cooking comes from the thrill of slow cooking food, such as the the slow BBQ of ribs or a brisket in a Texas smoker for 4 to 10 hours. But this is a warm weather activity, so during the colder seasons, I combine slow cooking with my many years of experience in the lab. (Ask Betsy how she enjoyed the trips to the lab to check on my experiments in the “warm room”).
There is a cooking technique called Sous Vide, French for “under vacuum”. I will explain the reason for the name later. The goal of Sous Vide is to cook food to a thermodynamically stable state in contrast to a specific kinetic time point. I’ll bet you didn’t expect to run across these terms in Betsy’s cooking blog. So much for her inviting me to be a guest blogger.
What does this all mean? Normally, food is cooked for a certain amount of time to reach a final desired temperature; say, for a rare steak, cooking it for 15 minutes over a 500F fire to reach an internal temperature of 125F , or, maybe, roasting a chicken for 1 hour in a 350F oven to reach an internal temperature of 180F. In these examples, cooking longer than the 15 minutes or 1 hour causes the food to overcook. This is what I mean by a specific kinetic time point. Get the time right, and the food is ready: too short of time and it’s undercooked; too long of time and it’s overcooked.
However, even when done correctly, the food actually has a temperature gradient from the outside to the inside. The outside of the steak is at 500F while the center is 125F. Cook a thick enough steak, and it becomes very hard to get the steak right without under- or overcooking the steak. The same is true with poultry or any other food. It’s just very difficult to get all the food to a single uniform temperature. Instead, consider setting the heat source to 125F or 180F. Cook the food long enough, and it will reach exactly 125F or 180F. It might take a while to cook, but no matter how long it’s cooking, the food can’t overcook. This is the thermodynamically stable state.
Most ovens can’t cook at 125F or even 180F reliably. This is where my lab experience comes into play. In lab, we need to conduct experiments at a number of different temperatures. This is commonly achieved with water baths: metal tubs filled with water and heated with an electric coil controlled by an electronic thermostat. Some baths can be set as accurately as 0.1 F. So, knowing that every well-equiped kitchen needs its own accurate water bath, I bought an immersion circulating heater on eBay and rigged it to work placed in a pot of water. (N.B. The temperature display says 79.7 but that is Celsius, its about 180F.)
Putting food into a water bath of this sort would cause most of the flavor to be washed out, sort of a low-temperature New England boiled dinner. This is where a seal-a-meal bag comes to the rescue. If the food is placed in a bag with spices and then sealed under vacuum (hence the origin of the cooking style “Sous Vide”) with the FoodSaver, the whole bag can then be placed into the pot, left until the food reaches steady state and then enjoyed at the finally desired temperature.
I have cooked a few different cuts of meat like this: Short Ribs, Fish, and Duck. This week, I made Duck leg confit. I have made this a number of times. Here’s how:
Duck Legs Confit, Part 1, the first 60 hours…
8 legs (1.95 Kg/4.31 lbs)
34 g salt (1.2 oz)
24 peppercorns
16 cloves
3 cloves garlic, sliced thinly
Coat the bottom of a glass baking dish with half the salt. Layer the legs in a single layer in the baking dish. Cover the legs with the remaining salt. Distribute the peppercorns, cloves and garlic slices over the legs.
Cover with plastic wrap and store in the refrigerator for 48 hours. (If you are in a rush, you can take them out after 36 hours.)
Rinse well and dry.
Place 4 legs into a seal-a-meal bag. Add 1 Tbs duck fat, and seal the bag. Repeat with the other 4 legs.
Place the bags into a 180F water bath.
Cook for 12 hrs (yes, twelve hours). Remove the bags from the bath and chill. Leave in refrigerator for a month or more. You don’t want to eat them right away.
I will be back then to discuss preparing the duck legs confit in Part 2.


