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What's On Your Plate???

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Alright... ;)

So on Friday I washed off the baking powder and salt mixture; see the color it's gained...

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Then the next trick for a crispy skin is to separate the skin from the meat, let's the fat render and drain easier. Just really need to get the breast and the area where the legs join the torso.

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Meanwhile, letting a marinade/baste of water, honey, dark soy sauce, rice wine, and lemon simmer for 20 mins...

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Then you dunk the duck in it a few times then baste it with it. I used a turkey baster to continue to baste it in the fridge every 1/2 hour to hour until I went to bed...

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The next day (Sat), ready for the smoker. Used some poultry needles to stitch up the skin at the bottom...

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Then on the smoker, using a weighted beer can to cook it vertically. The vertical positioning helps the rendered fat drain out. Beneath I put a drip pan with some onion, celery, and chicken broth to catch the fat and juices coming from the bird...

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Unlike normal smoking in the 225-250 degree range, you need to do this at standard oven temp of 350 degrees in order to crisp the skin. I just put in a couple small chunks of smoke wood, apple and / or cherry (I'm not sure; the bags holding those disintegrated and they got mixed up...)

A couple of hours later, nice color...

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While the duck was resting, I pan fried some sliced beets...

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And battered and fried some sliced avocado...

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While the drip pan gets poured into a separator. The lid strains out the solids, then you let the liquid sit and the fat will float to the surface, leaving the juices at the bottom...

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With the spigot of the separator at the bottom, you then pour out the juices and use them as a nice au jus sauce...

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You keep the fat, too - duck fat is actually healthy, high in unsaturated fats, like olive oil, only much more delicious - you can reuse it for all sorts of stuff...

Finally the end result...

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Some nice smoke color on the meat, too - it was delicious! :hi:

Thanks and it looks very very delcious :)
 
Y'all may remember a month ago when I went into my first baking foray, doing cupcakes with The Kid. After the first success, we were planning on doing chocolate ones this month, and making the icing from scratch.

But that changed last week - The Wife and The Kid came home from a shopping trip with this book, and The Kid insisting we do every recipe in it, in order...

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And the first recipe in there is for Pink Lemonade cupcakes (recipe blurred for copyright reasons)...

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So we did those instead. In the middle of all that duck cooking, too.

I kept telling The Kid, "If these turn out yummy, it's because we did a good job. If they turn out yucky, it's because it's a bad recipe..." ;)

I'll save y'all the play-by-play, but here's the finished result. We were a little short on batter, which is why some on the right are a little small...

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And you know what? They actually were delicious!
 
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Y'all may remember a month ago when I went into my first baking foray, doing cupcakes with The Kid. After the first success, we were planning on doing chocolate ones this month, and making the icing from scratch.

But that changed last week - The Wife and The Kid came home from a shopping trip with this book, and The Kid insisting we do every recipe in it, in order...

View attachment 181687

And the first recipe in there is for Pink Lemonade cupcakes (recipe blurred for copyright reasons)...

View attachment 181685

So we did those instead. In the middle of all that duck cooking, too.

I kept telling The Kid, "If these turn out yummy, it's because we did a good job. If they turn out yucky, it's because it's a bad recipe..." ;)

I'll save you the play-by-play, but here's the finished result. We were a little short on batter, which is why some on the right are a little small...

View attachment 181686

And you know what? They actually were delicious!
Wow.
 
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