Duck with Potato Puree and Quince Jelly Sauce

Duck with quince jelly and potato puree

And so, another weekend flies by and with it, Sunday afternoon. This part of the week was traditionally a bit of a departure lounge at the end of a holiday for me – waiting patiently for the return flight to Monday morning.

In the Frankly household of late though I’ve tried to fight off the dreariness as I attempt, and I use that word advisedly, something I have neither the time nor inclination to piece together in the week. I’m not sure this really fits that bill, but it was something new.

I had some duck breasts in the fridge and (sticking to a theme from a couple of posts ago) some quince jelly. I remember reading somewhere that these go together pretty cosily, as duck can be paired with pretty much any sharp tasting fruit and so decided to incorporate into a sauce.

My minor obsession experiments with purees continues, my apologies, but I’d never actually made a potato puree before (or should I say pomme puree – this dish has a decidedly French tone) so thought I’d give it a go.

I pan fried the duck to keep it nice and rare. Well-done duck breast should be outlawed under some EU treaty in my opinion, but have had it in some over-anxious restaurants probably concerned more with keeping its punters out of the bathroom.

The sauce was a reduction made with the pan/resting juices, some red wine (a nice Shiraz  – full of berries), chicken stock and the quince jelly.

For the potato puree, I must admit, I think I over-worked it a bit and it was a bit gluey, not bad by any stretch, but more like “C+, good effort”. Schoolboy error.

  • 2 duck breasts at room temperature
  • About 10 button mushrooms
  • Salt and Pepper
  • Oil

For the potato puree:

  • 4 medium potatoes, peeled and cut into chunks
  • About 150ml warm milk (enough to make a loose puree)
  •  Butter – to taste or as your waistline dictates 😉
  • Salt

For the sauce:

  • 200ml good ‘fruity’ red wine (I used Shiraz)
  • 200ml chicken stock
  • About two tbsp quince jelly
  • Salt
  • Steamed Cauliflower and Broccoli to serve

Broccoli and Cauliflower

Start by getting the potatoes on to boil. Once simmering away, get on with the rest…

Get a metal pan smoking hot with just a little oil. Rub the duck breasts with a pinch of salt and pepper on each side. Place in the pan, skin side down, to coat in oil. Leave to cook on a medium heat for 10 minutes. It releases an alarming amount of oil, but don’t worry, it won’t all be in the final dish.

After ten minutes, flip them and cook to other side(s) until well seared all over for 3 or 4 minutes – this will leave them nice and pink in the middle.

As soon as I flipped them I actually added the vegetables to steam for a few minutes in a steamer insert over the potatoes. Saves washing up and energy!

Before the end of cooking the duck, the potatoes/vegetables will probably be done, if they are, drain the potatoes and leave in the hot pan to dry a bit, but place the steamed vegetables to keep warm in an oven.

Remove the duck breasts and leave to rest in the warm oven (80C) on a plate. Fry off the mushrooms for a few minutes until tender in the duck fat and then set aside with the duck in the oven.

Pour out most of the fat, being careful to leave in any caramelised bits and deglaze the pan with the red wine. Pour it into a small saucepan and reduce rapidly for a few minutes with the chicken stock. Add the quince jelly and any resting juices from the well rested duck and season to taste.

I thickened it slightly with arrowroot, but it’s not essential. Finish the sauce with a knob of butter for taste and shine.

Lastly use a potato ricer (best – but a masher will do) to mash the potato. Microwave the milk to warm it through for 30secs to 1 min and pour it in with the butter. Stir well to make a puree and season to taste. Don’t overwork it like I did, stir gently.

Sliced duck breast

Slice the duck at a nice ‘cheffy’ angle. Plate it all up on very hot plates and pour over the sauce. Enjoy with a large glass of Shiraz. Salut!

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17 thoughts on “Duck with Potato Puree and Quince Jelly Sauce

  1. Your duck looks perfectly cooked, I like the idea of the quince addition, hence I picked up some Potuguese quince jam in London. I intend to try something similar with goose breast – rare, of course, you are right about overlooked duck breast – it should be deemed a culinary crime , at least 😉 thanks, T

  2. Looks good Phil. I assume Rew hadn’t been invited around for lunch then? I think he is getting a bit fed up of cheese now.

    I love duck breast with a morello cherry sauce, but fancy giving the quince a try some time. I tend to take a different approach to duck breast. It’s the one meat which I start in a pan at room temperature rather than a sizzling hot one. As the pan heats up it allows the fat to render down slowly which I have found cooks the fat really well. Loving the blog by the way.

    • Hi Nick, thanks very much, glad you like it! Need to spend a bit more time on ‘subjects’ but time is tight lately. With regards Rew, Funnily enough, no he hasn’t! I said I’d do some meat free posts in sympathy 😉

      I’ll have to try that, I’m guessing it would render it a bit better then? Morello cherry too – ill keep an eye out next time I’m in the booze isle….

      Phil

  3. I love a good puree – and didn’t have the creative flair to think up a potato version – I agree about the duck thing…except for crispy duck – zap the blighter till its quacking round the oven,,

    • Ah, yes, of course I did forget about crispy duck. I’d make an allowance for that in the EU treaty.

      Give the puree a go, it’s basically a wetter mash, but excellent if you don’t over-mix it. As I did.

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