Duck or Goose Rillettes

User Reviews

5

24 reviews
Excellent
  • Prep Time

    20 mins

  • Cook Time

    1 hr 30 mins

  • Total Time

    1 hr 50 mins

  • Servings

    8 people

  • Calories

    514 kcal

  • Course

    Main Course

  • Cuisine

    French

Duck or Goose Rillettes

Duck or Goose Rillettes is a slow-cooked dish where duck or goose legs are salted and cooked in duck stock with herbs until the meat is tender enough to fall off the bone. It is then shredded and preserved in duck fat, providing rich, spreadable meat suitable for serving on bread or crackers.

Description

In this recipe, legs of duck or goose are cured with salt and dried thyme, which enhances flavor while helping preserve the meat. After curing for 12 to 24 hours, the meat is rinsed and simmered slowly in duck stock and aromatics until extremely tender, allowing the flavors to meld and the connective tissues to break down.

Once cooked, the meat typically is shredded and combined with duck fat and optionally brandy or herbs like minced rue or parsley to create a spreadable pâté-like preparation known as rillettes. This method results in a rich and savory dish that highlights the depth of flavor from the poultry and slow cooking.

Rillettes are traditionally served as a rustic appetizer alongside crusty bread or crackers, making them suitable for entertaining or gourmet snacks. The detailed salting and long cooking process ensure a balanced saltiness and tender texture throughout.

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Ingredients

Servings
  • 3 pounds duck leg or goose legs or wings
  • 1 cup kosher salt or pickling salt
  • 3 tablespoons thyme dried
  • 2 quarts duck stock or vegetable stock
  • 3 bay leaf
  • 1 cup duck fat or butter
  • 1/4 cup brandy
  • 1 tablespoon rue minced or 2 tablespoons parsley

Instructions

  1. Start by mixing the thyme leaves and salt. Massage this mixture into the duck or goose legs, making sure everything is coated well. If there is any left over, pour it into a non-reactive container.
  2. Place the salted duck or goose legs in the container, cover and refrigerate for 12-24 hours. The longer you go, the saltier your rillettes will be. I like to salt them down in the evening and cook them around mid-day the following day.
  3. When you are ready, rinse off the cure well. Arrange the legs in a large pot and cover with the duck stock; add water or white wine if the level of the liquid does not cover the legs. Add the bay leaves.
  4. Cover, then either cook on the stove over low heat or in a 225 degree oven for 4-8 hours. You want the meat to be falling off the bone. Check after about 2 hours to see if you have enough liquid. Uncover the pot in the final hour or two to evaporate the liquid a bit.
  5. When the meat is falling off the bone, turn off the heat and let the duck or goose legs cool. Ideally, you refrigerate everything to solidify any fat (you can use it later).
  6. When it is cool, pull off the skin and discard, then shred the meat and place in a large bowl.
  7. Taste the remaining stock to see how salty it is. You will need a little for the rillettes, but you want to know how much to add — without oversalting the rillettes.
  8. Add a little of the stock to the rillettes and beat together with a stout wooden spoon until the liquid is incorporated.
  9. Add 2 tablespoons of the duck fat and beat it in. Keep adding duck fat until the mixture becomes creamy. Do this little by little.
  10. When a spoonful of the rillettes tastes creamy, not dry-ish, add 2 tablespoons Armagnac and half the rue. Beat it in well. Taste it: You should be able to taste both the Armagnac and the rue, but neither should be overpowering. If you want, add the remainder of the liquor and herbs and beat them in well.
  11. Press the rillettes into ramekins, or just a non-reactive container that works. Tupperware is OK, and a butter crock is ideal. Top with about 1/4 inch of duck fat. Cover with a lid or foil and store in the fridge. It is best to let this ripen for a week before serving, but it is perfectly fine eaten straight away. It’ll keep for at least two months, and if there are no air pockets and it is covered in fat, the rillettes will last up to 6 months.

Nutrition Information

Show Details
Calories 514kcal (26%) Carbohydrates 4g (1%) Protein 32g (64%) Fat 39g (60%) Saturated Fat 12g (60%) Cholesterol 159mg (53%) Sodium 1077mg (45%) Potassium 12mg (0%) Fiber 1g (4%) Sugar 2g (4%) Vitamin A 603IU (12%) Vitamin C 3mg (3%) Calcium 40mg (4%) Iron 4mg (22%)

Nutrition Facts

Serving: 8people

Amount Per Serving

Calories 514 kcal

% Daily Value*

Calories 514kcal 26%
Carbohydrates 4g 1%
Protein 32g 64%
Fat 39g 60%
Saturated Fat 12g 60%
Cholesterol 159mg 53%
Sodium 1077mg 45%
Potassium 12mg 0%
Fiber 1g 4%
Sugar 2g 4%
Vitamin A 603IU 12%
Vitamin C 3mg 3%
Calcium 40mg 4%
Iron 4mg 22%

* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet.

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