Genius Recipes
Melissa Clark's Really Easy Duck Confit
Every week, Food52's Senior Editor Kristen Miglore is unearthing recipes that are nothing short of genius.
Today: Your everyday duck confit -- all you have to do is skip one big fat pricey ingredient.
- Kristen
This is not the confit they teach in cooking school, or the kind served at restaurants. It's the kind you can make anytime -- all you need are a few good duck legs, a skillet, and some very basic spices. And it's just as good.
Confiting duck, technically, is just a matter of salting it long enough to draw out its water content, then preserving it by replacing that water with fat. Traditionally this is done by simmering the salt-cured legs in a big burbling vat of duck fat, which you are expected to already have.
It's not terribly hard to come into a bunch of duck fat. Slow roast two ducks and you'll have the two quarts of fat a standard confit recipe might require, easy. Or you could buy it retail in tiny containers. It will cost you an extra $50 or so and you will feel a little silly (or, you know, there's always this bucket).
But all of these demand a significant head start, one that food writer Melissa Clark skips right past, by exploiting the natural gobs of fat that come free in every duck leg. Her trick: Just render that fat out first. It's not traditional, but who cares?

This is the most obvious perk of Clark's method, which she developed after feeling inhibited by this whole vat-of-duck-fat requirement and consulting with Eric and Bruce Bromberg, chef-owners at Blue Ribbon. But there's even more to its genius than this.
For example, you might think the recipe doesn't call for nearly enough salt: a teaspoon and a half -- barely enough for a subdued sprinkle on each side. But it's portioned deliberately, so that you don't have to rinse the excess salt away at the end of the cure stage as you would in many traditional confits. This is doubly good, because the cure stage leads right into the sear-in-a-hot-pan stage, which is much more fun without water and fat spitting angrily at each other.

You'll sear away until you've collected about 1/4 inch of pooling fat in the bottom of the skillet, then you'll flip the legs, cover the pan with foil, and shelve it in the oven for a few hours, covered for most of the time. The lingering fat on top slowly trickles down into the meat, leaving a crackly sheath of skin behind, while the underside stays submerged.
Another bonus of this technique: you don't have to monitor the temperature with a deep-fat thermometer. A modest layer of fat in a heavy skillet at 325°F mostly babysits itself. (Another thing that babysits itself? A slow cooker. But I digress.)
When it's done, the duck will be golden and gorgeous, with jewels of dark luscious meat and a crisp-paper skin to put the best roast chickens to shame. Clark recommends serving with roasted potatoes, noodles, or bitter salad greens. But you should count on being down a leg or two, if you are weak of will (and/or unsuccessful in fending off trespassers, who will just stand there stony-eyed, gnawing on a leg over near the sink like a dog).

So for anyone who thought this was only the stuff of fancypants restaurants or roadside inns in southwestern France, consider this your starter confit -- one that you can make anytime you spot a nice set of legs at the market. Clark's simple dried thyme and bay cure is a good baseline, to be fiddled with later as you see fit (try star anise, dill, or coriander).
And on top of confit, guess what else you get? Duck fat! And lots of it. Stick it in the freezer so next time you're feeling proper, you can try confiting the old school way. Or forget the old school way, and use it all up: fry potatoes, sauté greens, work it into tart crusts, and smear it on your toast.
Melissa Clark's Really Easy Duck Confit
Adapted very slightly from In the Kitchen with a Good Appetite (Hyperion, 2010)
(As you may know, we're big on both salting early and long-cooking in ample fat around here.)
Serves 6-8
1 1/2 teaspoons kosher salt
1 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
1/2 teaspoon dried thyme
1 bay leaf, crumbled
8 moulard duck legs (about 4 pounds total), rinsed and patted dry but not trimmed
See a slideshow and the full recipe (and save and print it) here.
Want more genius? Try Nekisia Davis' Olive Oil and Maple Granola
Got a genius recipe to share -- from a classic cookbook, an online source, or anywhere, really? Please send it my way (and tell me what's so smart about it) at kristen@food52.com.
Photos by James Ransom
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Comments (32)
about 1 year ago Benny
clever clever. I've been using the same batch of fat (kept in the freezer) for multiple batches of confit. However, my product is getting saltier, and I fear that I have to make another hefty purchase of fresh duck fat.
....or I can try this recipe!
about 1 year ago mvangraaf
Can I prepare this ahead? As in mid-afternoon? And then finish cooking/achieve crispy skin just prior to serving? How about potatoes cooked in that duck fat?????
about 1 year ago mvangraaf
I made this and it was delicious! Would like to serve to group at dinner. How can I prepare this ahead? How far ahead? Mid-afternoon? And then finish off......getting crispy skin......just prior to serving?
about 1 year ago Kristen Miglore
Kristen is the Senior Editor of Food52
So glad you liked it! You could certainly make ahead -- mid-afternoon would be fine -- and either heat up in the oven or by searing in a skillet with a bit of the fat (or a combination -- sear, flip, roast in the oven till warmed through). Also, with all that duck fat, you might consider Nigella Lawson's roasted potatoes.
about 1 year ago Kristen Miglore
Kristen is the Senior Editor of Food52
So glad you liked it! You could certainly make ahead -- mid-afternoon would be fine -- and either heat up in the oven or by searing in a skillet with a bit of the fat (or a combination -- sear, flip, roast in the oven till warmed through). Also, with all that duck fat, you might consider Nigella Lawson's roasted potatoes.
about 1 year ago mvangraaf
I made this and it was delicious! Would like to serve to group at dinner. How can I prepare this ahead? How far ahead? Mid-afternoon? And then finish off......getting crispy skin......just prior to serving?
over 1 year ago MTMitchell
I made this yesterday. We couldn't find moulard duck legs (I probably didn't look hard enough) so we made it with what the butcher shop had, and it was crazy good. We served it over homemade pasta...full disclosure: I made enough for there to be leftovers that I had planned to freeze and be able to use one night next week or something, but we ended up, shall we say, snacking on it all evening. It was wonderful, and I will for sure be making it again, probably when we have guests, and I will probably let them think that I didn't do the confit the "genius" way!
over 1 year ago ChefJune
What a great idea for getting enough duck fat! I'm doing that this week!
over 1 year ago SKK
Kristen, I love what you come up with! Love your research and am most grateful for your seemingly "dodgy career choices".
over 1 year ago Kristen Miglore
Kristen is the Senior Editor of Food52
Thank you! As it turns out, dodgy's not always a bad thing.
over 1 year ago AntoniaJames
AntoniaJames is a trusted source on Bread/Baking.
I made this yesterday. It's absurdly easy. I plan to use the bay + thyme dry brine, which is simply divine, on my next roast chicken. Dinner tomorrow: shredded duck on hot-off-the-griddle roti, with the citrus slaw from the pork taco recipe featured in the Jenny's in the Kitchen piece today, and a touch of hoisin sauce (homemade from the Crispy Duck Pancakes recipe posted here on FOOD52 by grantacus). ;o) P.S. I made the duck at the same time that I made Nekisia Davis' granola, as I always like to cook at least two or three things at once when I have the oven on. My house smelled wonderful, as you can imagine.
over 1 year ago SKK
Thank you, AJ. For the first time I am going to cook duck.
over 1 year ago greenbeanalmondine
would be great if it was printable...
over 1 year ago CarlaCooks
I didn't have any trouble. Go directly to the recipe (http://food52.com/recipes...) and there is a little print button on the left side of the screen.
over 1 year ago Kristen Miglore
Kristen is the Senior Editor of Food52
Thanks CarlaCooks!
over 1 year ago Randy-in-Paris
This looks like a fabulous recipe. I live in Paris part-time so can easily get confit de canard in most grocery stores in Paris, in particular "Picard" (frozen food store), which are excellent. I heard about using different oils to substitute duck fat, but it sounds so so messy and what am I gonna do with all that left-over oil. So, this recipe sounds a god-send for when I'm in US and missing confit! Merci beaucoup!...
over 1 year ago Kristen Miglore
Kristen is the Senior Editor of Food52
Lucky you! Is confit de canard priced reasonably at stores like Picard? Here it's a bit of an extravagance.
over 1 year ago Randy-in-Paris
Funny you should ask, I just returned from Picard, it's across the street from where I live. It costs about 7€ for 2 cuisse du canard (2 thighs/drumsticks). Alot of people will use the "canned" ones from Monoprix or Carrefour, which always surprises me, but I think it's more for the rendered fat more than the duck itself, cause it falls apart really easily and tastes mushy. You can buy the fat here inexpensively though in much more reasonable sizes, and we use it to flavor cassoulets or even just plain old fries. I use it for stir frying vegetables... FYI..., you can bring it back with you to US since it's either canned or bottled.
over 1 year ago JuliaB
What a genius technique! I've always been intimidated by duck confit but will definitely try this method!
over 1 year ago Kristen Miglore
Kristen is the Senior Editor of Food52
It's really a breeze, thanks to Melissa Clark.
over 1 year ago Trillinchick
I once purchased duck legs at Whole Foods in Berkeley. Once home I stuffed them in the freezer pre-investigation, then felt so overwhelmingly frightened about duckness, fat, rendering, confit, crispy skin, time et al. Since duck appears more on menus (Piedmont's Bay Wolf specializes, and Chez Panisse in Berkeley serves) this seems the right recipe to give it a go. Just remember, this may be for duck, but I'm still a little chicken! Trillinchick. ;-)
over 1 year ago Kristen Miglore
Kristen is the Senior Editor of Food52
There's no chickenness of any kind with this recipe.
over 1 year ago haeema
We raise our own ducks. A friend GAVE me 3 ducklings, another lady gave me 3 grown ducks, and I have bought 2 Peking drakes. We now have 11 grown ducks. We LOVE the fresh eggs (Duck Eggs Benedict) we get daily. I was looking for a recipe for the duck itself without all of the extreme cooking. Well, now I have found it! We have 2 young drakes that we will butcher in the early spring and this will be the 1st recipe I make!
By the way, we are on a very fixed income and enjoy such a rich life with our small hobby farm.
May YaHuWaH bless you all!
over 1 year ago Kristen Miglore
Kristen is the Senior Editor of Food52
For whole ducks, Merrill's Slow Roast Duck is excellent too: http://food52.com/recipes...
over 1 year ago Hilarybee
I love this recipe. In the kitchen with a good appetite is one of my very favorite cookbooks. Incidentally, Nekisa Davis' Olive Oil Granola is also included in Melissa's Good Appetite.
over 1 year ago Kristen Miglore
Kristen is the Senior Editor of Food52
She's always ahead of the curve, isn't she?
over 1 year ago Shazza
I can hardly wait to try this. Thanks.
over 1 year ago Kristen Miglore
Kristen is the Senior Editor of Food52
Let us know how you like it!
over 1 year ago arielleclementine
i'm so excited to try this! thanks for the recipe!
over 1 year ago Kristen Miglore
Kristen is the Senior Editor of Food52
But of course, arielleclementine!
over 1 year ago charlotte au chocolat
totally genius!
over 1 year ago Kristen Miglore
Kristen is the Senior Editor of Food52
Totally agree.