Wild Duck Tacos de Guisado

RECIPE BY Morgan Webber

PHOTOS BY John Dunaway

PRESENTED BY Fat Tire


My approach to wild game is not all that different than it would be with packaged meat purchased at the grocery store or your local farm. For all intents and purposes, meat protein is meat protein. Of course, some is leaner, and some inherently has more fat. I grew up in South Texas, so tacos de guisado (usually with stewed beef or pork) was part of everyday life. In its most basic form, tacos de guisado is meat stewed down in liquid that can then be eaten in a tortilla as a taco. It falls into those one-pot meals that make life easy on the clean-up and leave you with killer leftovers. This process is just as versatile if you have other game meat in the icebox. Wild duck is traditionally lean, so I like to add diced bacon to help add extra flavor. Rice and beans make a great side or can go in the tacos themselves. 

A quick note on ingredients: The better your base ingredients, the better the finished product. For spices such as smoked paprika, cumin and chili powders, I always lean into a company called Terra Spice. They have an incredible selection of individual chili powders such as ancho, pasilla, chipotle morita, etc., but they also have really good chili powder blends that they make in-house. 

Miso: Aged dark miso can be easily procured online. Start slipping this into food preparations that wouldn’t be considered Japanese or Asian, and you’ll quickly realize how amazing and versatile it is. 

Tortillas: This can make or break a great meal. Most grocery store corn or flour tortillas are terrible and are a tortilla only in notion. They’re stuffed full of every stabilizer and preservative available, I just don’t like them. Guisado is typically served with corn tortillas, but I would suggest using the best ones available. I buy my tortillas from a Sonoran buddy who started Caramelo Tortillas, based in, out of all places, Kansas City, Missouri. They are hands down the best flour tortillas I’ve ever had. He ships worldwide, and since we are cooking wild duck here, give his duck fat tortillas a spin. You won’t be sorry.

Adding Fat Tire beer to a wild duck recipe

SERVES 4-6

INGREDIENTS

6-8 Wild duck breasts, preferably bone-in

1/2 lb. Bacon, diced

1 Red onion, diced

6 Cloves garlic, minced

2 8 oz. cans fire-roasted tomatoes

2 oz. Fresh lime juice

1 Tbsp.Molasses

2 cans Fat Tire beer

1/2 cup. Pickled jalapeños, diced

2 Tbsp. Aged dark miso paste

1 Tbsp. Smoked paprika

2 Tbsp Chili powder

1 Tbsp. Cumin

 

INSTRUCTIONS

In a medium-sized stockpot, cook the bacon to crisp it and render the fat. Next, add the duck. Stir until brown, being careful not to burn. 

Then add the red onion, and sweat it until translucent, but not browned. Add garlic and stir continuously until tender, being careful not to burn it. 

Next, deglaze the brown bits on the bottom of the pan by adding both cans of beer, gently scraping them with a wooden spoon. When the pan is deglazed, add both cans of tomatoes and pickled jalapeños, molasses and lime juice. Stir to combine.

Bring the duck guisado to a light simmer and add paprika, chili powder, cumin and miso. Miso is the oddball here, as it’s a traditional Japanese fermented rice or bean paste. Miso takes years to ferment. During that process, it develops some of the deepest umami flavors imaginable. I know this is not going to be found in carne guisado south of the border, but the depth of flavor it adds to stews can be mind-blowing. 

Cook for 2-3 hours or until the duck easily shreds and reduces down to a consistency that would be at home in a tortilla. Season with salt and fresh black pepper to your preference.

Serve with warm flour tortillas. I like to top mine with freshly diced onions, cilantro and crumbled queso fresco (a dry Mexican cheese that can be found in most grocery stores), and hot sauce — I’ve been really into Yellowbird’s Serrano hot sauce lately.

Wild duck simmering in a stock pot

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