Peking Duck
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INGREDIENTS 1 (5-pound) duck
6 cups water
1/4 cup honey
4 slices peeled, fresh ginger root, 1/8-inch thick
2 scallions, including green tops, cut into 2-inch lengths
THE SAUCE
1/4 cup hoisin sauce
1 tablespoon water
1 teaspoon sesame seed oil
2 teaspoons sugar12 scallions
Madarin Pancakes, see recipePREPARE AHEAD
Wash the duck under cold running water, then pat inside and out with paper towels. Tie one end of a 20-inch length of white cord around the neck skin. If the skin has been cut away, loop the cord under the wings. Suspend the bird from the string in a cool, airy place for 3 hours to dry the skin, or train a fan on it for 2 hours.
In a 12-inch wok or large flameproof casserole, combine 6 cups water, 1/4 cup honey, ginger root and cut scallions, and bring to a boil over high heat. Holding the duck by its string, lower it into the boiling liquid. With string in one hand and a spoon in the other, turn the duck from side to side until all its skin is moistened with the liquid. Remove the duck (discarding the liquid) and hang it again in the cool place, setting a bowl beneath it to catch any drippings; the duck will dry in 1 hour with the fan trained upon it or 2 to 3 hours without it.
Make the sauce by combining hoisin sauce, water, sesame seed oil and sugar in a small pan, and stirring until sugar dissolves. Bring to a boil, then reduce heat to its lowest point and simmer, uncovered, for 3 minutes. Pour into a small bowl, cool and reserve until ready to use.
To make scallion brushes, cut scallions down to 3-inch lengths and trim off roots. Standing each scallion on end, make 4 intersecting cuts 1-inch deep into its stalk. Repeat at other end. Place scallions in ice water and refrigerate until cut parts curl into brushlike fans.
TO COOK
Preheat oven to 375 degrees. Untie the duck and cut off any loose neck skin. Place duck, breast side up, on a rack and set in a roasting pan just large enough to hold the bird. Pour 1 inch of water into the pan and roast the duck in the middle of the oven for 1 hour. Then lower heat to 300 degrees, turn duck on its breast and roast 30 minutes longer. Now, raise the heat to 375 degrees, return the duck to its original position and roast for a final 1/2 hour. Transfer the duck to a carving board.
With a small, sharp knife and your fingers, remove the crisp skin from the breast, sides and back of duck. Cut skin into 2 x 3-inch rectangles and arrange them in a single layer on a heated platter. Cut the wings and drumsticks from the duck, and cut all the meat away from the breast and carcass. Slice meat into pieces 2-1/2 inches long and 1/2-inch wide, and arrange them with the wings and drumsticks on another heated platter.
TO SERVE - Place the platters of duck, the heated pancakes, the bowl of sauce and the scallion brushes in the center of the table. Traditionally, each guest spreads a pancake flat on his/her plate, dips a scallion in the sauce and brushes the pancake with it. The scallion is placed in the middle of the pancake with a piece of duck skin and a piece of meat on top. The pancake is then folded over about 1 inch to enclose the filling, and the whole rolled into a cylinder that can be picked up with the fingers and eaten.
As a main course, Peking Duck will serve 6