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Posted

My only option for Duck Breasts locally are frozen Maple Leaf Farms brand.  

 

I am pretty good at searing them after years of doing so. 

 

However these duck breasts are just a tad tougher than what I expect. 

 

I do not want a marinade that changes the taste/flavor.  

 

Señor Google suggests a salt brine.

 

Anyone have an opinion on a way to tenderize duck breasts?

Posted

How about SV them for 4-6h @54 oC, then searing them hard as you would ..?

 

I’d assume you’s be happy with the outcome, regardless of minor quality compromises you had to accept concerning the raw material …

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Posted

Do you have a Jaccard?  It's a great tool, not only for tenderizing the meat, but quickly adding tons of skin punctures to help render the fat.

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Posted
14 minutes ago, KennethT said:

Do you have a Jaccard?  It's a great tool, not only for tenderizing the meat, but quickly adding tons of skin punctures to help render the fat.

Thanks for this.  I have a Jaccard but it never occurred to me to use it on duck breasts.  I will next time.

Posted

If no jaccard, can you just pound the heck out of the duck breast with a meat mallet?

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Nancy Smith, aka "Smithy"
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Posted (edited)

You don't mention what temp/degree of doneness you cook them too, but I find too-rare duck breasts to be tougher than I like.

 

Start skin-side down (and while I don't have a Jaccard, I use a sharp knife or trussing needle to piece the skin in multiple places) in a cold pan, and let that sucker cook on low-medium heat for quite some time, in order to render plenty of fat out. Turn over when the skin is nice and crisp and complete cooking to medium-rare to medium, and see how that works.

 

Two duck breast dinners...

 

2013_10_29Duckdinner.JPG.c098df89fdbf16a737a8211b497a1d0c.JPG

 

Duckbreast01-09-22.thumb.jpeg.b66bf580bf8be3f97d610a89960a86f8.jpeg

 

No problems with tenderness.

Edited by weinoo (log)
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Mitch Weinstein aka "weinoo"

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Posted (edited)

I guess one question is 'why so tough?'

 

now,, freezing is not a good tenderizing method . . . (sigh) if frozen is all you can get . . .

for poultry I'm very fond of (oven) low temperature cook - like 200-210'F 

followed by browning/searing/grill marks/make pretty.

without a single question this side of the moon, over cooking chicken/duck/turkey makes it tough.

stop at 140'F, use the carryover heat....

 

poaching is an excellent method - fish/chicken, etc..  just barely simmering water - keeps the meat wet/moist.

 

these method do not lend themselves to "instant dinners" however.

example chicken breast - #1 if it's two inches thick, go to Chic-Filet....

I sliced in half thickness wise - poaching (starting with a frying pan of hot water) only takes <10 minutes.

instant read thermometer highly useful.

Edited by AlaMoi (log)
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