Preserved duck, or confit de canard, is a traditional method of curing, cooking and preserving duck or goose legs and thighs in their own fat enabling them to be preserved and stored for long periods of time. Once tinned the duck can be stored for up to four years. A popular way of cooking duck confit is to simply dice some potatoes and sit in a roasting dish, remove most of the fat from the duck legs (chill or freeze the fat for future roast potatoes) place the duck on a rack above the potatoes and roast at a high temperature for approximately twenty minutes. Serving it with lentils is also a big hit in my house, I use puy lentils as I like the texture but any green lentils will do.
(Serves six.)
Olive oil
500g of puy lentils
1 carrot roughly chopped
1 onion, quartered
2 whole cloves of garlic
1 bay leaf
3 sprigs of fresh thyme
The juice of four lemons
Sea salt and fresh black pepper
6 large duck confit legs
Fresh parsley chopped.
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