This brilliant recipe will prove that cooking duck isn't something that only happens in fancy restaurants. Bursting with fresh, zingy flavours and on the table in 35 minutes, this is the perfect recipe to add a little bit of no-fuss luxury to your mid-week menu. Quacking stuff.
The quantities provided above are averages only.
Boxes and ingredients are packed in facilities that handles Peanut, Nuts, Sesame, Fish, Crustaceans, Milk, Egg, Mustard, Celery, Soya, Gluten and Sulphites. Due to the war in Ukraine, it has been necessary to substitute sunflower oil with rapeseed oil in some products without a label change. The FSA have advised that allergic reactions to rapeseed oil are rare.
1 unit(s)
Pak Choi
1 unit(s)
Garlic Clove**
½ unit(s)
Cucumber
(May contain traces of: Celery)
25 grams
Salted Peanuts
(Contains: Peanut May contain traces of: Almonds, Macadamia Nuts, Pecan Nuts, Cashew nuts, Nuts, Sesame, Hazelnuts, Pistachio nuts, Brazil nuts)
150 grams
Jasmine Rice
2 unit(s)
Duck Breasts
15 milliliter(s)
Rice Vinegar
25 milliliter(s)
Soy Sauce
(Contains: Wheat, Cereals containing gluten, Soya)
30 grams
Honey
300 milliliter(s)
Water for the Rice
2 tsp
Sugar for the Salsa
1 tbsp
Olive Oil for the Salsa
Preheat your oven to 220°C/200°C fan/gas mark 7.
Trim the pak choi, then thinly slice widthways. Peel and grate the garlic (or use a garlic press).
Trim the cucumber (see ingredients for amount), then quarter lengthways. Chop widthways into small pieces.
Roughly chop the peanuts.
Pour the cold water for the rice (see ingredients for amount) into a medium saucepan with a tight-fitting lid.
Stir in the rice and 0.25 tsp salt and bring to the boil. Once boiling, turn the heat down to medium and cover with the lid.
Leave to cook for 10 mins, then remove the pan from the heat (still covered) and leave to the side for another 10 mins or until ready to serve (the rice will continue to cook in its own steam).
Meanwhile, pop a frying pan on medium-high heat (no oil). Once hot, lay the duck in the pan, skin-side down, and fry until the skin is golden, 6-8 mins. Flip, then sear the other side for 1 min more.
Transfer to a baking tray, skin-side up, and season with salt and pepper. Roast on the top shelf of your oven until cooked, 16-18 mins.
Once cooked, transfer to a plate. Cover and rest for 10 mins. IMPORTANT: Wash your hands and equipment after handling raw duck and its packaging. The duck is cooked when no longer pink in the middle.
While the duck roasts, pop the cucumber into a large bowl.
Add the rice wine vinegar, sugar and olive oil for the salsa (see ingredients for both amounts) and a pinch of salt.
Mix together, then set aside.
When the duck is resting, wipe out the the frying pan and pop it on high heat with a drizzle of oil.
Once hot, add the pak choi and stir-fry for 2-3 mins, then add the garlic and cook for 1 min more. Transfer the pak choi to a plate, then reduce the heat to medium.
Add the soy sauce and honey to the pan. Simmer until reduced by two thirds, 2-3 mins. TIP: If your honey has hardened, pop it in a bowl of hot water for 1 min.
Remove from the heat, then return the rested duck to the pan and coat it in the glaze.
Fluff up the rice with a fork, then share between your plates and top with the pak choi.
Cut the glazed duck widthways into 1cm slices and serve alongside with the remaining glaze from the pan drizzled over.
Add the cucumber salsa to the plate, then scatter with the chopped peanuts to finish.
Enjoy!