- My Forums
- Tiger Rant
- LSU Recruiting
- SEC Rant
- Saints Talk
- Pelicans Talk
- More Sports Board
- Fantasy Sports
- Golf Board
- Soccer Board
- O-T Lounge
- Tech Board
- Home/Garden Board
- Outdoor Board
- Health/Fitness Board
- Movie/TV Board
- Book Board
- Music Board
- Political Talk
- Money Talk
- Fark Board
- Gaming Board
- Travel Board
- Food/Drink Board
- Ticket Exchange
- TD Help Board
Customize My Forums- View All Forums
- Show Left Links
- Topic Sort Options
- Trending Topics
- Recent Topics
- Active Topics
Started By
Message

Duck Pot Roasts
Posted on 11/30/10 at 9:56 am
Posted on 11/30/10 at 9:56 am
Was wondering if anybody had any good recipes for pot roasting ducks. I've been doing mine the same way forever kinda want to try something different.
Thanks
Thanks
Posted on 11/30/10 at 10:00 am to cland56
Seems that most folks frown upon it while deer hunting. Prolly be the same with duck hunting.
Posted on 11/30/10 at 10:49 am to cland56
It's a felony to roast duck pot with a firearm.
Posted on 11/30/10 at 10:51 am to Chad504boy
This is my recipe after much trial and error
Ingredients:
2 teal per person; 1 big duck per person (depends on the number of people eating)
4 Medium Yellow Onions. I usually cook 6-8 ducks so use that a rule of thumb for onions
3-4 Tablespoons of Garlic. Use same rule for onions.
2 cans of Mushrooms. Use the same rule for onions.
Olive oil/Bacon Grease. I prefer Bacon Grease.
2 Tablespoons of Sugar
3 Bell Peppers (I like the Tri-color)
Bundle of Green Onion Tops
Flour for Thickening Purposes
Red Wine
Worcestershire Sauce
Tony’s
Chicken Stock
2-3 Cans of Beer
Process:
Season ducks with Tony’s, Red Wine, and Worcestershire Sauce.
DO NOT ADD ANY SALT TO THIS. THE TONY’S AND CHICKEN STOCK WILL BE PLENTY. IT’S USUALLY A GOOD IDEA TO BUY LOW SODIUM CHICKEN STOCK.
Pour thin layer of Olive Oil/Bacon Grease in the largest Magnalite Pot you can find. It has to be big enough for all the duck to lay flat in. You do not want them on top of each other.
Sprinkle the sugar in the oil.
Place ducks in the Pot on a medium/high heat. This part is the most crucial. I usually brown my ducks for 1 ½ hours. Every 20-25 minutes remove ducks from the pot and pour half can of beer in the pot and scrape the bottom. It might look like it is burnt but it is not. Just keep on scraping until all the black at the bottom is off and dissolved. Place ducks back in the pot and repeat this process 3-4 times within the 1 ½ hour of the browning process. You might have to add a little oil depending on if the ducks are sticking really badly. I might do this 45 minutes into my 1 ½ hour. Remove ducks after final browning is done.
Pour chopped onions, bell peppers, and garlic into the pot for browning. All of this will add liquid to the pot so it will be easy to watch. Cook down until they basically turn to mush. I throw my Red Wine in once they start to stick and then just scrape the bottom. I usually cook my veggies on a medium fire for about 45 minutes to 1 hour. Add you wine during this. A good splash every 30 minutes during the hour of cook down should suffice.
Place ducks back in pot with cooked veggies and brown for another 15 minutes.
Cover ducks in Chicken Stock until you can barely see them. Bring fire to medium heat and cover.
I usually add my 2 cans of mushrooms after about 1-2 hours of cooking. Cook ducks down until breast meat is splitting, thigh meat is falling, and the backs are breaking. You might have to add Chicken Stock throughout the cook down depending on you boil. Once the meat is done I always cook the gravy down half way below the ducks. You do not want too much liquid. Then I add a couple dashes more of Red Wine and thicken the gravy with flour and water/corn starch.
Throw in the Green Onion Tops 30 minutes before serving.
Serve over rice.
The whole process usually takes me 4-5 hours.
Ingredients:
2 teal per person; 1 big duck per person (depends on the number of people eating)
4 Medium Yellow Onions. I usually cook 6-8 ducks so use that a rule of thumb for onions
3-4 Tablespoons of Garlic. Use same rule for onions.
2 cans of Mushrooms. Use the same rule for onions.
Olive oil/Bacon Grease. I prefer Bacon Grease.
2 Tablespoons of Sugar
3 Bell Peppers (I like the Tri-color)
Bundle of Green Onion Tops
Flour for Thickening Purposes
Red Wine
Worcestershire Sauce
Tony’s
Chicken Stock
2-3 Cans of Beer
Process:
Season ducks with Tony’s, Red Wine, and Worcestershire Sauce.
DO NOT ADD ANY SALT TO THIS. THE TONY’S AND CHICKEN STOCK WILL BE PLENTY. IT’S USUALLY A GOOD IDEA TO BUY LOW SODIUM CHICKEN STOCK.
Pour thin layer of Olive Oil/Bacon Grease in the largest Magnalite Pot you can find. It has to be big enough for all the duck to lay flat in. You do not want them on top of each other.
Sprinkle the sugar in the oil.
Place ducks in the Pot on a medium/high heat. This part is the most crucial. I usually brown my ducks for 1 ½ hours. Every 20-25 minutes remove ducks from the pot and pour half can of beer in the pot and scrape the bottom. It might look like it is burnt but it is not. Just keep on scraping until all the black at the bottom is off and dissolved. Place ducks back in the pot and repeat this process 3-4 times within the 1 ½ hour of the browning process. You might have to add a little oil depending on if the ducks are sticking really badly. I might do this 45 minutes into my 1 ½ hour. Remove ducks after final browning is done.
Pour chopped onions, bell peppers, and garlic into the pot for browning. All of this will add liquid to the pot so it will be easy to watch. Cook down until they basically turn to mush. I throw my Red Wine in once they start to stick and then just scrape the bottom. I usually cook my veggies on a medium fire for about 45 minutes to 1 hour. Add you wine during this. A good splash every 30 minutes during the hour of cook down should suffice.
Place ducks back in pot with cooked veggies and brown for another 15 minutes.
Cover ducks in Chicken Stock until you can barely see them. Bring fire to medium heat and cover.
I usually add my 2 cans of mushrooms after about 1-2 hours of cooking. Cook ducks down until breast meat is splitting, thigh meat is falling, and the backs are breaking. You might have to add Chicken Stock throughout the cook down depending on you boil. Once the meat is done I always cook the gravy down half way below the ducks. You do not want too much liquid. Then I add a couple dashes more of Red Wine and thicken the gravy with flour and water/corn starch.
Throw in the Green Onion Tops 30 minutes before serving.
Serve over rice.
The whole process usually takes me 4-5 hours.
Posted on 11/30/10 at 12:10 pm to GCHunter
quote:
I prefer Bacon Grease.
You're a good man!

Posted on 11/30/10 at 2:23 pm to GCHunter
GCHunter....You're a good man. Finally someone with the balls to actually post a recipe that requires the appropriate amount of cooking time to get something like this done. 5 hours????...That's right! You did say pot roast duck didn't you?




Posted on 11/30/10 at 2:28 pm to PVillePandG
quote:
GCHunter....You're a good man. Finally someone with the balls to actually post a recipe that requires the appropriate amount of cooking time to get something like this done. 5 hours????...That's right! You did say pot roast duck didn't you?
For a skinny little bastard, he sure can cook!

Posted on 11/30/10 at 3:33 pm to TopWaterTiger
Yep...pot roasted ducks.
I might be skinny but I can throw it down with the best of them when it comes to cooking ducks. Honestly if done right, you will not be disappointed.
I might be skinny but I can throw it down with the best of them when it comes to cooking ducks. Honestly if done right, you will not be disappointed.
Popular
Back to top
