4 duck butchering techniques. Pic heavy. Dial-up slow.

sjemac

CGN Ultra frequent flyer
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
We all know how to breast a bird and most of us can pluck and gut one. I thought I'd share some ways of butchering birds for special uses/occassions.
The kids took the pics below so some things might not show up well. And yes I am wearing pajama bottoms in the pics -- they're comfy.

Easy Gutting

This is good for birds you want to roast low and slow and stuff without having to cram your hand up their arse.

Start with a basic plucked bird and cut straight though the rear of the bird just above the preen gland, taking off the anus. Then cut the skin all around the neck.
IMG_0202.jpg


Then using a set of game shears cut up either side of the spine.
IMG_0204.jpg



Simply pull the spine out and most of the guts come with it. The kidneys and lungs are also easily removed.
IMG_0205.jpg


The carcasse can now easily be stuffed and roasted -- holding the back together with skewers if needed.
IMG_0206.jpg


Skin on Breasts and Legs

Ususally the breasts are better cooked and served separately from the legs. I collect the legs and save them until I have enough for a meal. The skin on breasts are great seared of in a pan and then finished in a hot oven.

Again, a simple plucked duck (I normally take the wings off at the shoulder joint if they've been broken). No gutting required here.

Score the skin around the breasts and legs leaving lots of it overlapping the meat as it shrinks up quite a bit on cooking.

IMG_0197.jpg


Take the legs off by cutting close to the knee joint and peeling out. Make sure to cut right to the back popping out the hip joint and getting all the meat of the thigh.

IMG_0198.jpg


Take breasts out as per normal.

IMG_0201.jpg


The "easy" gutted bird and the disjointed plucked bird.

IMG_0207.jpg


Spatchcocked

Sounds dirty but it ain't. M12 Shooter mentioned this method in another post. It's just a bird that has had the spine, ribs and keel bone pulled out. It is great for grilling a whole bird and getting it to cook fast and evenly.

Proceed as if preparing the Easy Gut duck.

IMG_0208.jpg


Once the spine is out, shear off the shoulder blades. Then take a boning knife and carefully slice out the ribs and keel bone. Let the bones be the guide for your knife tip.

IMG_0210.jpg


End result is a semi boneless bird. When this is cooked you end up with a bird that can be easily cut into quarters each of which has its own wingbone or leg handle.

IMG_0211.jpg


Boneless Duck

Probably the most difficult technique but again provides a nice product that can be cooked flat on the grill or stuffed and tied for roasting. No gutting here either and you get all of the meat.

Make a single cut down the length of the spine.

IMG_0212.jpg


Scrape the knife along the back getting all of the skin and meat off until you get to the hip joint. Pop out the hip joint and sever close to the body,making sure you don't slice through the skin on the opposite side.

IMG_0213.jpg



Debone the leg by scraping the meat off with the knife tip working all the way down to the joint where the foot skin begins where you should be able to pull the entire leg bone free. (This bird had wings removed at the shoulders but if wings are left on, simply use the leg procedure for them too)

IMG_0214.jpg


Bird with legs deboned and back exposed.

IMG_0215.jpg


As with Spatchcocking now simply use the bones to guide the knife tip and remove the ribs and keel bone.

IMG_0216.jpg

IMG_0217.jpg


Carcass nearly clean of meat.

IMG_0218.jpg


Boneless duck.

IMG_0219.jpg

IMG_0220.jpg



From left to right: Spatchcocked, easy gutted whole duck, disjointed plucked duck, skinless breasts and whole boneless duck.

IMG_0221.jpg
 
Thanks for the post, some great info there that I will be sure to try in the future.

Looks like good eatin' and happy hunting.
 
Good post but when you have 30-40 ducks to do at the end of a mornings hunt I think I will stick to filleting the breasts and making pepperettes of them,lol!:D

Been there and done that but even when I have that many birds I will take the 2 seconds a bird it takes to determine whether they are good for one of these techniques or not. Most get filleted, especially in the early season. So out of the 32 birds we got a couple of weeks ago, we filleted all of the geese (these methods are basically wasted on them), the heavily hit mallards and all the divers but the canvasback. The teal were easy gutted and the prime mallards and pintails were spatchcocked. Added about 30 minutes to the entire operation.

I've got an electric plucker that does a bird in 30 - 40 seconds so it is a little easier for me. Just figured folks would like to have a few more options for when they get that perfect mallard/pintail/canvasback that seemed to have died of fright.
 
Thank you for posting! And... You've made me HUNGRY! Lucky for me, Huntress prepared Mango Chutney Glazed Duck for thankgiving! YUM!

Cheers
Jay
 
Back
Top Bottom