OK that’s a misleading title.
It’s traditional in that I was trying to use up things I had in the fridge, and as ridiculous as that sounds, confit ducks legs was one of those things. I made a batch a while back and even gave some out as gifts (something I’m horrified by now) and when my wife, and I went to eat a bag (i made them using Thomas Keller’s SV recipe) they were inedibly salty, which is odd because I’ve made that recipe a number of times before and it was flawless.
So, I’ve got two bags (with two duck leg quarters each) of inedibly salty confit, which I didn’t want to go to waste (duck fat doesn’t grow on trees you know), so I figured I’d use them up in a cassoulet just like in the southwest of France would use up the duck they had (confit so it wouldn’t spoil then canned cassoulet).
Of course, I couldn’t just leave it at that, and I had to go get the toulouse sausage from Surfas, and beans from the store and chicken thighs (see why on this excellent article from Serious Eats Food lab http://www.seriouseats.com/2014/10/how-to-make-cassoulet-chicken-food-lab-french-casserole.html).
I warmed up the legs and broke the meat apart and added hot water to reconstitute and pull some of the salt from the meat (which I then used to brine the beans). Then used the bones and some browned roast chicken bits to make a pressure cooked stock, which I used for the cassoulet. After frying up some lardons from the danish bacon we have in the freezer (we buy by the slab), I added it all together.
I never really got that crust, whether the reason being that I didn’t have enough gelatin (though the cassoulet did gelatinized when it was in the fridge), or because the oven went on the fritz when the power went out in our neighborhood. Alas, crusty it was not, but tasty it still was (and a bit salty if I’m honest…stupid confit duck quarters)…
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