Duck With Cherries and Red Wine Vinegar
Published June 3, 2014
- Total Time
- 1 hour
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
FOR THE DUCK
2 Muscovy duck breasts, about 1 pound each
Kosher salt
1 teaspoon black peppercorns
½ teaspoon allspice berries
4 cloves
2 bay leaves
½ teaspoon fennel seeds
FOR THE SAUCE
¼ cup turbinado or raw sugar
½ cup red wine vinegar
½ cup red wine
1 cup chicken broth
1 tablespoon grated fresh ginger
Pinch of cayenne
Kosher salt
2 tablespoons butter
½ pound ripe cherries, left whole or halved and pitted
2 teaspoons granulated sugar
1 tablespoon kirsch or Cognac
Preparation
- Step 1
Trim excess fat from duck breasts, leaving a ¼-inch layer covering the breast. (Save fat trimmings to render and use for another purpose.) With a sharp knife, lightly score fat cover diagonally in two directions, taking care not to cut too deeply and expose meat. Turn breasts over and remove the thin tenderloins from underside. Trim away any veiny or ragged bits. (Save meaty trimmings for making stock.) Season generously on both sides with salt.
- Step 2
Pulverize the peppercorns, allspice berries, cloves, bay leaves and fennel seed in a mortar or electric spice mill. Sprinkle spice mixture over duck breasts; massage seasoning into meat on both sides. For more-intense flavor, do this several hours ahead or overnight and refrigerate (recommended). Bring duck to room temperature before cooking.
- Step 3
Make the sauce: Put turbinado sugar and red wine vinegar in a saucepan and simmer over medium-high heat for 2 minutes, until syrupy. Add red wine and chicken broth and simmer briskly until sauce coats spoon, about 5 minutes. Stir in ginger, cayenne and ½ teaspoon salt. Set aside. You should have about 1 cup sauce. (Sauce may be made a day or two in advance, if desired.)
- Step 4
Place a wide cast-iron pan over medium high heat. When pan is hot, place duck breasts side by side, skin side down. Let sizzle gently for about 7 minutes, until skin is crisp and golden, turning down heat as necessary to keep from getting too dark. Turn breasts over and cook 5 to 7 minutes more. (Alternatively, finish cooking breasts in a 400-degree oven.) Check temperature frequently with an instant-read thermometer; internal temperature should be a bit less than 125 degrees. Remove breasts and let rest on a warm platter for 8 to 10 minutes.
- Step 5
To finish sauce, put butter in a saucepan over medium high heat. Add cherries and granulated sugar and cook for a minute or two, stirring, until cherries are heated through and beginning to get juicy. Add kirsch and cook 1 minute more, then add previously prepared sauce and bring to a simmer.
- Step 6
Thinly slice duck breasts at an angle and arrange slices on a platter. Spoon some of the sauce and cherries over meat and pass remaining sauce at table.
Private Notes
Comments
I love this dish. I used, in winter, frozen cherries, halved while still semi-frozen. They tasted delicious. Added lemon zest to sauce for some tang. Served this with wild and white rice, and asparagus. Pinot noir too.
Definitely double the sauce and make a day ahead—it took an hour to reduce, not five minutes. Once it reduced, however, the flavor was fabulous.
I’ve made this 4 or 5 times, to rave reviews. For the sauce, I would recommend using frozen sweet cherries, sliced, if out of season. My biggest departure is with the length of time cooking the sauce- just cut the broth in half, skip the sugar, and add 2-3 TBDp cherry jam (Bonne Maman works well). The vinegar and jam balance, and no need to cook it down so long. The ginger is key, though! This has been deemed restaurant worthy with multiple groups of people, if you keep the duck crisp and rosy.
Have made this several times and it is a great but confusing recipe. It calls for two one pound duck breasts. I buy a two pack of breasts that weigh a total of 14.5 ounces. I double the amount of herbs for the rub. I use a coffee grinder to pulverize the herbs and pepper. As others have said the reduction time for the sauce is way off. I now double the quantities and at least thirty minutes the level of sauce has been reduced but not thickened. Next time I will use a thickener.
This was so good! One of my favorite NYT recipes.
I didn't have a lot of the ingredients for the sauce. So I just used some Plum Wine, as well as some chilean wine we had in the cupboard from some guest and some cherry balsamic vinegar - not too much because it affects Peter's cough. I had the chicken stock (better than bouillon) but no fresh ginger, so I used the pre-minced version that I had in the fridge. I dumped it all in the pan, except for the bouillon and the fresh cherries. I added them at the end with the recommended butter.

