Eight treasure duck explained

Eight treasure duck
Main Ingredient:Duck
Serving Size:100 g
Variations:Shanghai, Cantonese
Creators:-->
National Cuisine:Chinese
Alternate Name:Eight treasures duck
No Recipes:false

Eight treasure duck (; Shanghainese: paq7-pau5-aq7,), also known as eight treasures duck, is a duck dish in Shanghai and Cantonese cuisine. Its name derives from the fact that it is stuffed with eight other ingredients, including rice, mushrooms and shrimp.

Cantonese version

The Cantonese version features a duck stuffed with eight stir-fried ingredients, including glutinous rice, diced mushrooms, water chestnuts, lotus seeds, Chinese sausage, dried shrimp, bamboo shoots, jujubes, salted egg yolk, Jinhua ham, red beans, barley, dried lily, and peanuts. Before the duck is stuffed, the duck is marinated overnight in dark soy sauce, spices, and Shaoxing wine. The duck skin is then tightened with hot oil ladled over the duck. After the duck is stuffed, it is cooked in a chicken and soy broth for over an hour, which produces tender and succulent meat. It became a famous banquet dish in Hong Kong in the 1930s. The dish is labor-intensive to prepare, and is typically ordered several days in advance in restaurants.[1] The dish is traditionally served during Chinese New Year's Eve.[2]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 2021-01-23. Why some classic Cantonese dishes no longer appear on menus. 2021-01-25. South China Morning Post. en.
  2. Web site: 2018-09-22. Adam Liaw's eight treasure duck recipe. 2021-01-25. the Guardian. en.