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sallyhammond.com.au |
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Sydney-based, Australian author, food and travel writer, Sally Hammond, shares her world ... and her table |
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April 16, 2007A DATE WITH DUCKPEKING I had a hidden agenda when visiting Chinatown a week or so ago. I was craving Peking duck.
This famous method of preparing duck originated in Beijing when it was still called Peking. Sydney is so multicultural that here we can front up to any number of places and order it from the menu, but I wanted to do it myself. The easy way, so I saved a day or so and bought the duck ready-cooked. Crisp-edged slices of Peking duck breast, with a dab of hoisin sauce, wrapped in paper-thin pancakes is one of life’s greater pleasures. I am glad that the first time I ate this so-simple meal was in Beijing at a restaurant famous for its roast ducks, where we were seated right beside a window that gave us a perfect view of the white-coated chefs team of at work and the racks of tanned ducks which seemed to disappear and be replenished almost instantly.
Since then of course we have enjoyed this dish several times and now that I know where to look in an Asian grocery shop I buy the wrappers and keep a pack on hand in my freezer. It’s a matter of moments to microwave them and have them ready to use. I simply keep them covered (wrapped in a serviette is fine for me, although I could unearth a steamer basket) and we sauce and wrap them until we can’t eat another bite. This time, though, when I bought the barbecue duck I asked them to leave it un-cleavered so that after I had carved off the meat for our pancakes for one meal, I was left with a carcass still with plenty of good edible duck-meat on it. What to do? For starters I broke it into portions and put it in a pot, simmering it for an hour until the meat was tender and the bones released the meat without argument. If I had let the chopper-man in Chinatown have his way, I would have had villainous slivers of bone to contend with so I was glad I had earned a funny look when buying it. It was worth it. I then picked off all the shreds of meat and strained the stock to use in a risotto that was formulating in my mind. I ended up with too much stock, but I froze the remainder and it’s now awaiting a further incarnation in some other dish. The result was a truly excellent non-Chinese dish, with overtones of Asia meets Italy that I felt was the ideal Day 2 use of a BBQ duck. Let me know what you think.
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