Favorite Sauces
Try these easy recipes to prepare flavorful marinades, bastes and dipping sauces for waterfowl
Try these easy recipes to prepare flavorful marinades, bastes and dipping sauces for waterfowl
By Scott Leysath - thesportingchef.com
Without question, you can prepare a delicious duck or goose just by giving it a good rub with your favorite seasoning and slapping it on a hot grill until it's cooked to a perfect medium-rare. The bird will be moist and tasty, and for some folks there's simply no reason to fix something that's not broken. Others prefer a little variety on the plate.
Great restaurants make sauces from scratch. Roasted bones and carcasses simmer with vegetables and herbs to make stocks and broths. A bottle of wine is reduced and emulsified with creamy butter. It's all about depth of flavor, and there's no doubt that a well-prepared homemade sauce will taste better than something from a packet, bottle, or salty bouillon cube. Fortunately, there's a middle ground between basic preparation and extravagant dishes, where those of us who prefer to spend more time in the field than in the kitchen can combine a few ordinary ingredients into a special sauce.
If you start with a basic condiment, like mustard or ketchup, and add a couple of dashes of flavor, you can create unique and savory sauces in your own kitchen. For example, start with a quarter cup of ketchup and whisk in a little sesame oil, a squeeze of lime, some soy sauce, and a pinch of sugar. You'll create a sweet-and-sour dipping sauce that's great for smoked duck or goose. Give it your own touch with a little hot sauce and maybe some herbs or a pinch of garlic powder.
Here are a few more fast-and-easy sauces that will add flavor to ducks, geese, and just about any other game you want to prepare for the table.
Makes about 1 cup. Start with store-bought barbecue sauce and add a squeeze of this and a pinch of that to transform your sauce from mundane to marvelous.
Whisk all ingredients together and bring to a boil in a small saucepan. Allow to cool.
Makes about 1 1/4 cups. These Asian-inspired ingredients combine to add a great finish to any waterfowl stir-fry.
Whisk all ingredients together.
Makes about 2/3 cup. This is my go-to sauce when I want to change the minds of those who complain that game birds taste "gamey."
In a small saucepan, heat the first three ingredients over medium heat. Reduce liquid by half. Remove pan from heat and whisk in butter until emulsified. Spoon sauce over cooked waterfowl.