Jamie drizzling honey on top of a fig tart

Enter the email address associated with your account, and we’ll email you a link to reset your password.

Password Strength

Must contain at least

*Enter your email to receive news and exclusive offers from Jamie Oliver Limited about Jamie's businesses, including books, TV shows, restaurants, products, commercial partners and campaigning activities. By signing up, you agree to our Terms of Use . Learn how we collect, use and share your data in our Privacy Policy .

0
duck stir fry

Stir-fried duck with sugar snap peas and asparagus

Try this lovely combo with pork or chicken too

duck stir fry

30 mins

Super easy

serves 4

About the recipe

Bursting with flavour, duck is perfect for stir-frying – gorgeously juicy inside and crispy outside


nutrition per serving

919

Calories


81.5g

Fat


22.2g

Saturates


16.6g

Sugars


1.66g

Salt


29.9g

Protein


17.9g

Carbs


3g

Fibre


of an adult’s reference intake


Recipe From

Jamie's Dinners

Jamie's Dinners

Ingredients

4 x 200g/7oz duck breasts

2 teaspoons five-spice

sea salt and freshly ground black pepper

2 tablespoons sunflower or groundnut oil

2 large handfuls of thin asparagus, trimmed

2 large handfuls of sugar snap peas or mangetouts

4 cloves of garlic, finely sliced

1–3 fresh red chillies, deseeded and finely sliced 2 thumb-sized pieces of fresh ginger, peeled and grated

4 oranges, zested and segmented

1 tablespoon honey

a handful of fresh mint, leaves picked

3 tablespoons low salt soy sauce

Top Tip

Lots of people have woks, but so many people get it wrong because they don’t really understand the principle of stir-frying – make sure to get your pan really hot, and don’t overcrowd it with veg so that it starts boiling and not stir-frying. Give it a go!

Method

  1. First of all, score the skin of the duck with a sharp knife. Then dust the breasts all over with the five-spice and a small pinch of salt. Put the duck breasts skin side down in a cold wok, then bring it slowly up to a medium low temperature so the white fat turns into wonderful thin, crispy, golden crackling. Cook for around 12 minutes, then turn the breasts over and cook for a further 5 minutes.
  2. By which time they will be cooked medium, so remove them to a plate and pour away the duck fat. Get all your veggies and flavourings ready to go and wipe your wok. Now you want to get it really hot – if you want to open the window (and cover the fire alarm – joke!), then do. You may need to cook it all in smallish batches depending on the size of your wok.
  3. Add a couple of tablespoons of sunflower or groundnut oil to your hot wok. Carefully swill the oil around so that it covers the whole pan. Add your asparagus and sugar snap peas or mangetouts and toss around, then add the garlic, chilli and ginger. Continue stir-frying on the highest heat for a couple of minutes, until the asparagus has softened a little but still has a nice crunch. By all means have a taste. Remove the veg to a plate. Slice up your duck breasts into little slivers and put these back into the wok with any resting juices and maybe an extra pinch of five-spice. Cook until nice and crispy.
  4. Put all your vegetables back into the wok, and turn down the heat. Add the oranges, honey, half the mint and the soy sauce, and serve straight away on a large plate, sprinkled with the rest of the mint. Serve with rice or noodles, as a starter or main course.

You could make this with breast of chicken instead, if that takes your fancy, or slices of pork.

There are loads of ways you can vary this using different vegetables – try beansprouts, water chestnuts, spinach, courgettes or baby corn.

Tags