Glazed Duck with Clementine Sauce
Peer reviewed by UK recipe editorsAuthored by UK recipe editorsOriginally published 17 Jan 2026
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This elegant glazed duck with clementine sauce is a sophisticated take on a classic roast, offering an exquisite balance of rich, succulent meat and vibrant citrus notes. By slowly braising the duck before a high-heat roast, you achieve a melt-in-the-mouth texture contrasted with perfectly crisp, golden skin. The sauce, infused with Mandarine Napoléon and fresh clementine zest, provides a bright, acidic lift that cuts beautifully through the richness of the bird.
Ideal for a celebratory weekend lunch or a seasonal dinner party, this high-protein dish is surprisingly manageable when planned ahead. Preparing the ducks in advance allows the flavours to develop and ensures the skin crisps up beautifully in the final stage. Serve with roasted root vegetables or a simple mash to let the aromatic clementine glaze take centre stage.
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Ingredients for Glazed Duck with Clementine Sauce
2 (6- to 7-pound) Pekin ducks (sometimes called Long Island duck), thawed if necessary and excess fat discarded
2 tablespoons kosher salt
2 medium onions, quartered lengthwise
1 large celery rib, cut crosswise into 4 pieces
100g plus 2 tablespoons sugar
1.4kg clementines (12 to 20)
120ml red-wine vinegar
80ml finely chopped shallot
45ml Mandarine Napoléon liqueur or Cointreau
1 1/2 tablespoons arrowroot
heavy-duty foil
How to make Glazed Duck with Clementine Sauce
Put oven rack in middle position and preheat oven to 177°C.
Working from large cavity end, separate duck skin (including fat) from breast meat as much as possible by working your fingers between skin and meat, being careful not to tear skin, then prick skin all over ducks with a fork. Put ducks, breast sides up, side by side in a large flameproof roasting pan and rub each duck inside and out with kosher salt. Divide onions and celery between duck cavities and sprinkle 120ml sugar around ducks. Pour enough boiling-hot water over ducks (to help tighten skin) to reach about halfway up ducks (don't fill roasting pan more than 1 inch from rim). Cover pan tightly with heavy-duty foil, then carefully transfer to oven and braise ducks 1 hour.
Remove pan from oven and remove foil (do not discard), then carefully turn ducks over (breast sides down) using one large wooden spoon to turn and another inside cavity. Cover with foil, then carefully return to oven and braise until meat is very tender but not falling off the bone, about 1 hour more.
Remove pan from oven and discard foil. Transfer ducks with wooden spoons to 2 large plates, draining any juices inside ducks back into pan, then transfer cooking liquid to a large bowl. Return ducks to roasting pan, breast sides up, and cool ducks and cooking liquid (separately), uncovered, then chill, uncovered, at least 4 hours (to firm up duck before roasting and to solidify fat on cooking liquid).
Discard all fat from chilled cooking liquid.
Remove zest from 2 large or 4 small clementines in strips with a vegetable peeler, then trim any white pith from zest with a sharp paring knife and cut zest into fine julienne strips. Blanch strips in a small saucepan of boiling water 5 minutes, then drain.
Squeeze enough juice from remaining clementines to measure 475ml and pour through a fine-mesh sieve into a 3-quart heavy saucepan. Add vinegar and remaining 2 tablespoons sugar and boil until reduced to about 80ml (glaze will bubble up and darken), about 15 minutes. Reserve 1 tablespoon glaze in a cup to brush on ducks, then stir julienned zest and 240ml cooking liquid into glaze remaining in pan and reserve for sauce. Reserve remaining cooking liquid.
Put oven rack in middle position and preheat oven to 260°C.
Roast ducks until skin is crisp, 25 to 35 minutes. Brush reserved glaze (from cup) on ducks, then transfer ducks to a platter and let stand while finishing sauce, at least 10 minutes.
Pour off all but 1 tablespoon fat from roasting pan and straddle pan over 2 burners. Add shallot and cook over moderately low heat, stirring, until softened and pale golden, 3 to 5 minutes. Add 475ml reserved cooking liquid and deglaze pan by boiling, scraping up brown bits, 2 minutes, then pour through fine-mesh sieve into sauce (containing julienned zest) and bring to a boil.
Stir together liqueur and arrowroot and whisk into sauce. Simmer, whisking occasionally, until thickened, 3 to 5 minutes, then season sauce with salt and pepper. Serve ducks, whole or carved into serving pieces, with sauce.
Haftungsausschluss
While every effort has been made to ensure the information is accurate and up to date, individual needs may vary and dietary requirements can differ based on personal health conditions. Always check food labels and allergen information before preparing or consuming any recipe. If you have specific health concerns, allergies, intolerances, or are following a medically prescribed diet, seek advice from your GP, pharmacist, or a registered dietitian before making significant changes to your diet or lifestyle.
Artikel Geschichte
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17 Jan 2026 | Ursprünglich veröffentlicht
Verfasst von:
UK recipe editors
Peer-Review durch
UK recipe editors

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