originally posted by Jeff Grossman:
originally posted by mlawton:
Even simpler still was the duck proscuitto - I might try that one first if you haven't cured meat before. It is very easy, takes a very short time and is just plain delicious when it's done.
How is it done? And what kind of conditions are needed in the hanging room?
Take duck breast. Do not remove fat. Coat with kosher salt...lots of it. It really needs to sit in the salt, not just have some on it. Just cake it on the duck. I put it in a tupperware to keep it encased in the salt.
Let sit in fridge for around a week. The meat will harden, dry out and turn a much deeper brick red color. Rinse off the salt (I really scrubbed it off), which at this point will be a bit soggy from the liquid that comes out of the meat/fat.
I never had enough liquid with the duck to pour it off at any time during the curing, unlike the guanciale which was sitting in liquid each day when I went to overhaul it.
Then wrap in cheesecloth and hang for about a week. Cool and humid is good. Some people even hang it in the fridge. I put mine in the wine cellar/car parts storage area/basement.
Slice thinly and enjoy. I found the meat was good, but the fat layer definitely was the best part. The breast I found (Savenors, for locals) was about half meat, half fat, by size.
Despite all the salt, I did not find the duck salty at all - unlike some pork proscuitto I've had.