Homemade Duck Confit Ravioli Recipe | Dash of Savory (2024)

Duck Confit Ravioli sounds fancy right?! This recipe is so simple and beautiful that your guests will think you spent days slaving over this meal when it really will take you no more than a hour and half to prepare.

Duck Confit is just duck legs that have been braised in their own fat. The whole process takes about three days because you have to cure the duck before you cook it. I’ve made it once and it was such a production, so you can see how excited I was when I found it in the store.

This was actually the first time I’ve made ravioli before. I’ve made tortellini, dumplings and pierogis but not ravioli. So I was due and I had to test this out. When I bought the package of pre-cooked duck confit at Costco, {you can also buy it from D’Artagnan Foods} I knew it was destined for raviolis but I didn’t realize you needed the equipment for it. So then I had to buy a ravioli makerHomemade Duck Confit Ravioli Recipe | Dash of Savory (2). Worth it. Although next time I may free form them and stamp them out.

Homemade Duck Confit Ravioli Recipe | Dash of Savory (3)

Just simply savory and gorgeous.

I decided to go all out for this “fancy meal”, I say fancy because it looks fancy but it really is a simple meal to make. This cremini mushroom sauce is a winner that I just want to drink. It will go on everything and is the perfect accompaniment for this recipe.

Homemade Duck Confit Ravioli Recipe | Dash of Savory (4)

We paired this with an ‘Unoaked’ Chardonnay and Syrah. The pairing was heaven.

Duck Confit Ravioli

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This recipe will make a large portion, we did about 48 ravioli. It's tedious work but if you have helping hands the work goes faster. All in all when we were testing this recipe it took about a hour. If it's your first time making ravioli have patience and know that the end result is worth it. Have fun with this recipe, pour yourself a glass of wine, put on some music and go to work. Cheers!

By: Victoria Townsend

Ingredients
  • 3 cups Flour
  • 3 whole Eggs
  • 2 tablespoons Olive Oil
  • 2 tablespoons Water
  • 1 teaspoon Kosher Salt
  • 1-2 pounds Duck Confit Legs, shredded {I bought mine pre-cooked from Costco}
  • 1 whole Egg
  • 1/2 cup Ricotta
  • 1/2 cup Parmesan, grated
  • 1 teaspoon Thyme Leaves, minced
  • 1 tablespoon Parsley Leaves, minced
  • 2 tablespoons Olive Oil
  • 1 whole Shallot, chopped
  • 1 package Cremini Mushrooms, quartered
  • 2 cloves Garlic, minced or grated
  • 1 teaspoon Thyme Leaves, minced
  • 1/2 cup Dry White Wine
  • 1 cup Vegetable Stock
  • 1 cup Heavy Whipping Cream
  • Kosher Salt and Ground Black Pepper, for seasoning
  • Micro Kale, for garnish
  • Grated Parmesan, for garnish
Directions
  • Step 1 On a clean work surface, like a large cutting board or counter, pile the flour up and use a fork to create a well in the middle with high raised sides. Crack the eggs into the well. Add the olive oil, water and kosher salt. Using a fork, beat the egg to slowly incorporate the flour by pulling it in from the sides of the well. As you continue to pull more flour and mix, the dough will start coming together. Using your hands, the fork or a bench scraper, work the dough until it comes together. Add more flour if it is sticky, add a few splashes of water if it is too dry.
  • Step 2 Knead the dough for 8 – 10 minutes until smooth and elastic. Wrap the dough in plastic wrap and set aside for 20 minutes to rest.
  • Step 3 While the dough is resting make the ravioli filling. {The pre-cooked duck confit from the store is great because you can just warm it under the broiler and shed it for this recipe.} Add the shredded duck confit to a medium sized bowl and add the egg, ricotta, parmesan, thyme and parsley. Fold the ingredients together until combined. Set aside
  • Step 4 Sprinkle a large sheet pan with flour or cornmeal. Unwrap pasta and cut into four sections. You will work with one section at a time. Wrap the remaining three up in plastic in the mean time so your dough won’t dry out. Flour your work surface and roll out the dough with a floured rolling pin, working from the middle and rolling out. Try to get the thinnest and longest piece of dough you can to cut into two pieces for a frame. Keep rotating and turning the dough to prevent sticking. If using a ravioli maker like myself you’ll need 2 long rectangle shapes.
  • Step 5 Once your dough is rolled very thin, place one strip of the dough over your ravioli frame and press the dough into the frame with the indented tray. Fill each indent with about a teaspoon of duck confit filling. Try your best not to overfill! Place the second strip of pasta over the strip with filling. Press strips together with your fingers.
  • Step 6 Using a rolling pin gently roll the pin over the frame until the frame is visible. Remove ravioli and trim out the squares using a knife or ravioli cutter. You may have to pinch the sides of the ravioli to make sure it’s sealed. Place the ravioli on the floured or cornmeal sheet pan. Remove the excess dough and re-roll. Repeat the process until dough and filling is used. Let ravioli dry for 20 minutes before cooking. {Ravioli may be frozen at this point for later use.}
  • Step 7 To cook, bring a large pot of salted water to boil. Drop in your raviolis and stir gently. Cook for about 5 minutes and drain well. Pour back into the hot pot and drizzle with a little olive oil to prevent from sticking. Place on the warm burner just to keep warm while making the sauce. {You don’t need the burner on!}
  • Step 8 In a large pan, heat the olive oil over medium high heat. Add the chopped shallot and quartered cremini mushrooms, cook until mushrooms begin to brown, about 5 minutes. Add the garlic and thyme and cook while stirring until fragrant, about 30 seconds. Add the white wine and deglaze the pan. Bring wine to a boil in the pan and reduce for about 2 minutes. Add the vegetable stock, bring to a boil in the pan and simmer for 2 minutes. Turn heat down to low and add the cream. Simmer on low for 3 minutes until sauce is thickened. If too thick add a splash more of vegetable stock. Season with a pinch of kosher salt and black pepper.
  • Step 9 Pour sauce over the cooked ravioli and serve with grated parmesan and micro kale for garnish. {Micro kale can be found at your local grocery store in the salad or greens section. Such a fun garnish that tastes delicious and looks impressive on a plate.}

On a clean work surface, like a large cutting board or counter, pile the flour up and use a fork to create a well in the middle with high raised sides. Crack the eggs into the well. Add the olive oil, water and kosher salt.

Homemade Duck Confit Ravioli Recipe | Dash of Savory (5)

Using a fork, beat the egg to slowly incorporate the flour by pulling it in from the sides of the well. As you continue to pull more flour and mix, the dough will start coming together.

Homemade Duck Confit Ravioli Recipe | Dash of Savory (6)

Using your hands, the fork or a bench scraper, work the dough until it comes together. Add more flour if it is sticky, add a few splashes of water if it is too dry.
Knead the dough for 8 – 10 minutes until smooth and elastic.

Homemade Duck Confit Ravioli Recipe | Dash of Savory (7)

Wrap the dough in plastic wrap and set aside for 20 minutes to rest.

Homemade Duck Confit Ravioli Recipe | Dash of Savory (8)
While the dough is resting make the ravioli filling.

Homemade Duck Confit Ravioli Recipe | Dash of Savory (9)

{The pre-cooked duck confit from the store is great because you can just warm it under the broiler and shed it for this recipe.}

Homemade Duck Confit Ravioli Recipe | Dash of Savory (10)

Gorgeous broiled duck legsfresh out of the oven. The smell in your kitchen will be mouth-watering and you’re welcome.

Homemade Duck Confit Ravioli Recipe | Dash of Savory (11)

Add the shredded duck confit to a medium sized bowl and add the egg, ricotta, parmesan, thyme and parsley. Fold the ingredients together until combined. Set aside
Sprinkle a large sheet pan with flour or cornmeal. Unwrap pasta and cut into four sections.

Homemade Duck Confit Ravioli Recipe | Dash of Savory (12)

You will work with one section at a time. Wrap the remaining three up in plastic in the mean time so your dough won’t dry out. Flour your work surface and roll out the dough with a floured rolling pin, working from the middle and rolling out.

Homemade Duck Confit Ravioli Recipe | Dash of Savory (13)

Try to get the thinnest and longest piece of dough you can to cut into two pieces for a frame. Keep rotating and turning the dough to prevent sticking. If using a ravioli maker like myself you’ll need 2 long rectangle shapes.

Homemade Duck Confit Ravioli Recipe | Dash of Savory (14)

Once your dough is rolled very thin, place one strip of the dough over your ravioli frame and press the dough into the frame with the indented tray.

Homemade Duck Confit Ravioli Recipe | Dash of Savory (15)

Fill each indent with about a teaspoon of duck confit filling.

Homemade Duck Confit Ravioli Recipe | Dash of Savory (16)

Try your best not to overfill!

Homemade Duck Confit Ravioli Recipe | Dash of Savory (17)

Place the second strip of pasta over the strip with filling. Press strips together with your fingers.
Using a rolling pin gently roll the pin over the frame until the frame is visible. Remove ravioli and trim out the squares using a knife or ravioli cutter.

Homemade Duck Confit Ravioli Recipe | Dash of Savory (18)

You may have to pinch the sides of the ravioli to make sure it’s sealed. Place the ravioli on the floured or cornmeal sheet pan. Remove the excess dough and re-roll. Repeat the process until dough and filling is used. Let ravioli dry for 20 minutes before cooking.

{Ravioli may be frozen at this point for later use.}
To cook, bring a large pot of salted water to boil. Drop in your raviolis and stir gently. Cook for about 5 minutes and drain well. Pour back into the hot pot and drizzle with a little olive oil to prevent from sticking. Place on the warm burner just to keep warm while making the sauce.

{You don’t need the burner on!}
In a large pan, heat the olive oil over medium high heat. Add the chopped shallot and quartered cremini mushrooms, cook until mushrooms begin to brown, about 5 minutes.

Homemade Duck Confit Ravioli Recipe | Dash of Savory (19)

Add the garlic and thyme and cook while stirring until fragrant, about 30 seconds. Add the white wine and deglaze the pan. Bring wine to a boil in the pan and reduce for about 2 minutes.

Homemade Duck Confit Ravioli Recipe | Dash of Savory (20)

Add the vegetable stock, bring to a boil in the pan and simmer for 2 minutes.

Homemade Duck Confit Ravioli Recipe | Dash of Savory (21)

Turn heat down to low and add the cream.Simmer on low for 3 minutes until sauce is thickened. If too thick add a splash more of vegetable stock. Season with a pinch of kosher salt and black pepper.

Pour sauce over the cooked ravioli and serve with grated parmesan and micro kale for garnish.

Homemade Duck Confit Ravioli Recipe | Dash of Savory (22)

{Micro kale can be found at your local grocery store in the salad or greens section. Such a fun garnish that tastes delicious and looks impressive on a plate.}

Savor and Enjoy!

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Homemade Duck Confit Ravioli Recipe | Dash of Savory (2024)

FAQs

What does duck confit consist of? ›

Duck Confit is an adored, age-old French preparation for duck. Called Confit de Canard in French, duck legs are slow-cooked in duck fat until the meat is meltingly tender, then the skin crisped to golden perfection. This is a traditional Duck Confit recipe that's low-effort and DOESN'T require buckets of duck fat!

How do you cook precooked duck confit? ›

These tender, fall off the bone legs make for not only an exceptional meal but impressive presentation guaranteed to jazz up every meal.
  1. Preheat your oven to 350 and place the precooked confit on a tray.
  2. Cook for ~15 minutes until the meat looks tender.
  3. Broil for 5-10 minutes to crisp skin until golden brown.

What can be substituted for duck confit? ›

You can make confit with chicken, but you'll need to use another technique. Chicken has less fat than duck, so you need to add fat (in this case, we use olive oil). Here's a recipe you can try.

What oil is best for confit duck? ›

One of the key ingredients in a traditional duck confit recipe is the duck fat, which isn't easy for most home cooks to source pre-made. Rendering your own fat from the duck takes more time than most people have, so this easy recipe includes my substitute alternative for duck fat: extra virgin olive oil.

How to make a confit? ›

To confit, food must be cured in salt (when necessary) and slowly cooked in fats like duck fat, chicken fat, olive oil, or sugar syrup (most commonly used to confit fruit or citrus peels) at low temperatures.

What alcohol pairs well with duck confit? ›

Wines to serve with Duck Confit
  • Cabernet Sauvignon. The full-bodied, tannic structure of Cabernet Sauvignon is an excellent match for the rich, fatty flavours of Duck Confit. ...
  • Pinot Noir. Most wine discussions and forums agree Pinot Noir is the ultimate pairing for Duck Confit. ...
  • Chardonnay. ...
  • Champagne. ...
  • Prosecco.

Is confit duck healthy? ›

Duck confit is a good option for anyone monitoring their weight because it is low in calories. High quantities of oleic acid found in duck fat have been demonstrated to decrease cholesterol and lessen the risk of heart disease. Duck fat also has antioxidants that can help shield your cells from harm.

Why is duck confit so good? ›

Duck confit is a classic dish made by salting duck legs for a day, immersing them in fat and then cooking them at a low temperature for a long period of time. It was originally used as a preserving technique when refrigeration was not available. The result is succulent, juicy and rich.

Why is my duck confit too salty? ›

Duck confit can be refrigerated in an airtight opaque container, with legs completely submerged in fat, for up to 1 month. The duck fat from the confit can be reused at least 2 more times for subsequent batches of confit; after the third use, taste it for salinity as it will eventually become too salty.

How long can you keep duck confit in the fridge? ›

The preserved duck can be stored in the fridge for 6 months or more. When required, it is freed from its suspended animation in the solid fat, and given a quick, hot blast of cooking that crisps the skin. The best and most cost-effective way of making duck confit is to buy a whole duck.

What vegetables go well with duck confit? ›

Duck is poultry, so anything you usually have with chicken, or, turkey, would be fine. I always made a nice sage, and mushroom, stuffing, which I cooked separately. I would also have a rice pilaf, and one more veggie, like broccoli, asparagus, Brussel sprouts, creamed onions, etc.

What is traditionally served with duck confit? ›

If you thought Duck Confit on its own would already exceed your week's intake of calories, the dish is traditionally served with pommes de terre à la Sarladaise, which are slices of potatoes cooked in duck fat (thick coin-sized French fries). If you are going to indulge, you may as well do it properly.

What is the best meat for confit? ›

While confit is most commonly seen with duck or goose legs—it makes sense, considering it's a technique that stems from southwest France—it's ideal for any number of meats that are suitable for low and slow cooking. That is, any meat with a good deal of connective tissue that begs for tenderizing.

Is duck confit healthy? ›

There are several health advantages to duck confit. Monounsaturated fats, which are excellent for your heart, are abundant in duck fat. A good supply of protein, iron, and amino acids that your body needs to operate correctly is also included in duck confit.

What does confit duck taste like? ›

Duck confit, for example, has a rich, savory flavor with a hint of sweetness from the fat and spices. The slow cooking process helps to tenderize the duck and give it a melt-in-your-mouth texture. Pork confit has a similarly rich, savory flavor, and is often served with a side of potatoes or vegetables.

What is the point of confit? ›

Confit refers to the process of slow cooking and storing food in fat. Confit is a French word that means "preserved." In the confit method, meats are cooked in fat for a long time at low temperatures. This renders tough cuts like duck legs more tender, and when stored in duck fat in a cool place, they last all winter.

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