![]() |
Roast Duck (¿¾Ñ¼ Kaoya)
To cook ducks by direct heat dates back at least 1,500 years to the period of the Northern and Southern Ynasties, when ¡°broiled duck¡± was mentioned in writing. About eight hundred years later, Husihui, imperial dietician to a Mongol emperor of the Yuan Dynasty, listed in is work Essentials of Eiet (1330 A.D.) The ¡°grilled duck¡± as a banquet delicacy. It was made by heating the duck¡ªstuffed with a mince of sheep's tripe, parsley, scallion, and salt ¨C on a charcoal fire.
Thus, when dried and roasted, the duck will look brilliantly red as if painted. Perhaps that is why it is known among some Westerners as the canard laque or ¡°lacquered duck¡±. Before being put in the oven, the inside of the fowl is half filled with hot water, which is not released until the duck has been cooked. For oven fuel, jujube-tree, peach or pear wood is used because these types of firewood emit little smoke and give steady and controllable flames with a faint and pleasant aroma. In the oven, each duck takes about forty minutes to cook, and the skin becomes crisp while the meat in tender.
Before the duck appears, however, various warm or cold dishes are often served, made of kidneys, hearts, livers, webs wings and eggs, all from the duck. Even duck tongues can be prepared into very tasty dishes, and the skeleton of the eaten duck normally goes into a soup which finds few equals. A highly experienced chef of a duck restaurant can produce an ¡°all-duck banquet¡± of over eighty dishes made of different parts of the fowl.
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||