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'''Almond Pressed Duck''', or '''Mandarin Pressed Duck''', (in Chinese ''Wor-Shu Chun Op'') was a popular Cantonese dish in Chinese and Polynesian-themed restaurants in the United States in the middle of the 20th century.  Crispy and boneless, it is deep-fried and served in either medium-sized pieces of uniform shape or as an entire duck.  It is generally served with a sauce poured over it, either brown or sweet and sour.<ref>A menu from [[Don the Beachcomber|Don the Beachcomber's]] famous Polynesian restaurant in Hollywood circa 1959 says that it is "molded, crisped in special oil, and served with wild plum sauce"</ref> Crushed or powdered almonds are frequently sprinkled over it just before eating, hence one of its names.  Its preparation can be a lengthy process involving a number of steps over a period of several days, making this relatively simple-appearing dish a labor-intensive process.  This may explain its virtual disappearance from present-day restaurants: today only a handful of restaurants that feature it on their regular menus.<ref>Two that still do are the Mai-Kai, a venerable Polynesian restaurant in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida, http://www.maikai.com/, and Su Hong, a Chinese restaurant in Menlo Park, California, http://suhong.com/</ref>  
'''Almond Pressed Duck''', or '''Mandarin Pressed Duck''', (in Chinese ''Wor-Shu Chun Op'') was a popular Cantonese dish in Chinese and Polynesian-themed restaurants in the United States in the middle of the 20th century.  Crispy and boneless, it is deep-fried and served in either medium-sized pieces of uniform shape or as an entire [[duck]].  It is generally served with a [[sauce]] poured over it, either brown or sweet and sour.<ref>A menu from [[Don the Beachcomber|Don the Beachcomber's]] famous Polynesian restaurant in Hollywood circa 1959 says that it is "molded, crisped in special oil, and served with wild [[plum]] sauce"</ref> Crushed or powdered almonds are frequently sprinkled over it just before eating, hence one of its names.  Its preparation can be a lengthy process involving a number of steps over a period of several days, making this relatively simple-appearing dish a labor-intensive process.  This may explain its virtual disappearance from present-day restaurants: today only a handful of restaurants that feature it on their regular menus.<ref>Two that still do are the Mai-Kai, a venerable Polynesian restaurant in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida, http://www.maikai.com/, and Su Hong, a Chinese restaurant in Menlo Park, California, http://suhong.com/</ref>  


A Cantonese dish, one source says that it originated in the north of China and was brought south in the 17th century at the end of the Ming dynasty by the many people who fled the new Manchus rulers.<ref>Kuo, page 309</ref>  There are at least three major variations in the method of preparing it, although both the taste and the general procedures remain fairly close.  In all cases, a whole duck is seasoned and either steamed or simmered until tender.  Its flesh is then flavored and coated with a batter or some form of flour.  It may then be steamed a second time; eventually, just before serving, the meat is deep-fried until crispy.  Before this final cooking, however, some recipes call for the duck meat (with its skin discarded) to be shredded and then molded into a patty or patties; other recipes have the various pieces of the boned duck pressed firmly together within an envelope of the reserved skin;<ref>Kuo, page 309</ref> a third method is to carefully bone the entire duck while preserving its appearance.<ref>Hong, page 163</ref>  In the latter case, the whole duck is eventually deep-fried and presented to the table.
A Cantonese dish, one source says that it originated in the north of China and was brought south in the 17th century at the end of the Ming dynasty by the many people who fled the new Manchus rulers.<ref>Kuo, page 309</ref>  There are at least three major variations in the method of preparing it, although both the taste and the general procedures remain fairly close.  In all cases, a whole duck is seasoned and either steamed or simmered until tender.  Its flesh is then flavored and coated with a batter or some form of flour.  It may then be steamed a second time; eventually, just before serving, the meat is deep-fried until crispy.  Before this final cooking, however, some recipes call for the duck meat (with its skin discarded) to be shredded and then molded into a patty or patties; other recipes have the various pieces of the boned duck pressed firmly together within an envelope of the reserved skin;<ref>Kuo, page 309</ref> a third method is to carefully bone the entire duck while preserving its appearance.<ref>Hong, page 163</ref>  In the latter case, the whole duck is eventually deep-fried and presented to the table.

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Almond Pressed Duck, or Mandarin Pressed Duck, (in Chinese Wor-Shu Chun Op) was a popular Cantonese dish in Chinese and Polynesian-themed restaurants in the United States in the middle of the 20th century. Crispy and boneless, it is deep-fried and served in either medium-sized pieces of uniform shape or as an entire duck. It is generally served with a sauce poured over it, either brown or sweet and sour.[1] Crushed or powdered almonds are frequently sprinkled over it just before eating, hence one of its names. Its preparation can be a lengthy process involving a number of steps over a period of several days, making this relatively simple-appearing dish a labor-intensive process. This may explain its virtual disappearance from present-day restaurants: today only a handful of restaurants that feature it on their regular menus.[2]

A Cantonese dish, one source says that it originated in the north of China and was brought south in the 17th century at the end of the Ming dynasty by the many people who fled the new Manchus rulers.[3] There are at least three major variations in the method of preparing it, although both the taste and the general procedures remain fairly close. In all cases, a whole duck is seasoned and either steamed or simmered until tender. Its flesh is then flavored and coated with a batter or some form of flour. It may then be steamed a second time; eventually, just before serving, the meat is deep-fried until crispy. Before this final cooking, however, some recipes call for the duck meat (with its skin discarded) to be shredded and then molded into a patty or patties; other recipes have the various pieces of the boned duck pressed firmly together within an envelope of the reserved skin;[4] a third method is to carefully bone the entire duck while preserving its appearance.[5] In the latter case, the whole duck is eventually deep-fried and presented to the table.

References

  1. A menu from Don the Beachcomber's famous Polynesian restaurant in Hollywood circa 1959 says that it is "molded, crisped in special oil, and served with wild plum sauce"
  2. Two that still do are the Mai-Kai, a venerable Polynesian restaurant in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida, http://www.maikai.com/, and Su Hong, a Chinese restaurant in Menlo Park, California, http://suhong.com/
  3. Kuo, page 309
  4. Kuo, page 309
  5. Hong, page 163

Sources

  • The Chinese Cook Book, Wallace Yee Hong, Crown Publishes, New York, 1952 — an early cookbook of mostly Cantonese recipes
  • The Key to Chinese Cooking, Irene Kuo, Alfred A. Knopf, New York, 1980 — the Chinese equivalent of Julia Child's Mastering the Art of French Cooking, by the same publisher

See also