Duck Legs, Butter Masala Sauce

Duck Legs, Butter Masala Sauce

Duck Legs, Butter Masala Sauce
🦆 🧈 🍅
White Rice, Pomegranate Arils, Cashews

This vibrant bowl pairs succulent duck legs with a silky butter masala sauce, served over fluffy white rice and finished with lively garnishes. Jewel-like pomegranate arils add sweet-tart brightness, cashews contribute satisfying nutty crunch, and fresh cilantro brings a final lift of herbal freshness. The colors alone make the dish striking on the plate, while the flavors come together in a harmonious balance of savory, tangy, creamy, and crisp.

The beauty of this recipe is how quickly it comes together. The duck legs—found in the refrigerated section at Costco—are fully cooked using the sous vide method. Vacuum-sealed and cooked to a precise time and temperature, they simply need to be reheated before serving, making them perfect for an easy but impressive meal.

Gymkhana—the celebrated Indian restaurant from London—recently opened a location in Las Vegas and has begun selling their premium sauces in the United States. They are even offering one of their jaunty serving dishes from Burleigh Pottery as well. Naturally, I couldn’t resist.

Duck Legs, Butter Masala SauceThis dish brings together two of my recent recipes:

Back in January I shared my Butter Masala Chicken Bowl with Green Herb Chutney and Yogurt using Gymkhana’s superb Butter Masala Mild Simmer Sauce. Then in February I posted Char Siu Duck Legs over Braised Cabbage after discovering those convenient sous vide duck legs at Costco. This new recipe combines those two ideas: the richly spiced butter masala sauce paired with succulent duck legs and steamed white rice.

Duck Legs, Butter Masala Sauce

The result is both comforting and elegant. The warm spices and gentle creaminess of the sauce complement the natural depth of the duck, while the rice provides a soft, neutral base. Pomegranate arils and cashews add sparkle and texture, so each bite offers something a little different. It’s a quick dish that feels thoughtfully composed—and looks beautiful when served.

Duck Legs, Butter Masala Sauce Recipe

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Lemon Chicken Orzo Soup

Lemon Chicken Orzo Soup

Lemon Chicken Orzo Soup
🍋  🐓 🍲 🥕 🌿
With Carrots, Dill, and Parmesan

Bright with lemon and fresh dill, this comforting chicken dish falls somewhere between a hearty soup and a light stew. Everything comes together easily in one pot, making it a good choice for serving a crowd.

For our recent dinner party, we started with a goat cheese and vegetable salad dressed with an orange-balsamic vinaigrette—served alongside homemade artisan bread—then followed with the hot soup as a second course for a relaxed, satisfying meal. A chilled glass of Petit Chablis Domaine L. Chatelain 2024 was a perfect match, its crisp citrus and mineral notes complementing the lemony broth and fresh dill.

Lemon Chicken Orzo Soup

Lemon Chicken Orzo Soup Recipe

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Seaweed Soup with Pork and Tofu (Miyeok Guk)

Seaweed Soup with Pork and Tofu (Miyeok Guk)

Miyeok Guk
🥣 🌊 🥢
Seaweed Soup
with Pork and Tofu

Miyeok guk is one of those quietly meaningful Korean soups that carries far more significance than its simple ingredients might suggest. In South Korea, it is traditionally eaten on birthdays to honor mothers, since seaweed soup is commonly served to women after childbirth for its nourishing and restorative qualities.

In Korean, guk simply means soup, and it’s a fundamental part of everyday meals — savory broths that accompany rice at the table. Classic miyeok guk is most often made with thinly sliced beef, though some coastal versions use mussels. The version here is a personal variation rather than a traditional preparation, with ground pork adding a savory backbone that pairs nicely with the clear broth, garlic, and sesame.

Seaweed Soup with Pork and Tofu (Miyeok Guk)

The dried seaweed (miyeok, often sold as wakame) unfurls into silky ribbons as it simmers, lending a gentle ocean note to the soup. Traditional miyeok guk usually relies on water, beef broth, or a Korean anchovy-kelp stock for its base. In this recipe, I add a small spoonful of hondashi — a Japanese-style dashi powder — as a quick way to bring extra umami to the broth.

Cubes of firm tofu are added at the end to heat through, holding their shape while taking on the flavor of the soup. Together, the tender tofu and pleasantly chewy seaweed create a satisfying contrast that gives each spoonful layered texture. Finished with a generous grind of black pepper and a drizzle of toasted sesame oil, the soup is excellent alongside steamed white rice or enjoyed on its own as a warm, savory bowl.

Seaweed Soup Recipe

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Lao Gan Ma Cheese Bread

Lao Gan Ma Cheese Bread

Lao Gan Ma Cheese Bread

Few condiments have traveled from a rural kitchen in China to pantries around the world quite like Lao Gan Ma. The name translates to “Old Godmother,” a nod to its founder, Tao Huabi, who began selling her chili sauce from a humble noodle shop in Guiyang in the 1980s. Legend has it that customers loved her house-made chili condiment so much they began buying it by the jar. What started as a small operation grew into a national phenomenon and eventually a global pantry staple.

Lao Gan Ma isn’t just heat. It’s complexity. The version I’m using layers dried chiles into soybean oil along with bits of kohlrabi, peanuts, and bean curd, creating a condiment that is as much about texture as it is about spice. The crunch comes not only from chili flakes but from vegetables and nuts suspended in vivid red oil. It delivers warmth, salt, subtle sweetness, and contrast in a single spoonful.

Lao Gan Ma Cheese Bread

Cheddar already brings sharpness and salt. When you fold this sauce into a dough, something interesting happens. The peanuts echo the natural nuttiness of aged cheese, while the kohlrabi adds delicate texture throughout the crumb. As the bread bakes, the chili oil warms and perfumes the loaf with a gentle toastiness. Cheese-heavy breads can sometimes feel dense, but the heat and crunch keep each slice animated and balanced. The result isn’t a “spicy bread.” It’s a savory, textured loaf with character — familiar yet unexpected.

There’s something compelling about combining a Chinese chili condiment born in Guizhou with a classic American cheddar loaf. It’s not fusion for the sake of novelty — it’s flavor logic. Both ingredients thrive on salt, warmth, and slow baking. A slice toasted, the edges crackling and the cheese re-melting, might be the best argument yet for keeping a jar of Lao Gan Ma within arm’s reach. Served with a small scoop of ricotta on top, it’s just heavenly.

Lunar New Year, Bellagio Las Vegas
Lunar New Year, Bellagio Las Vegas

And because I’m sharing this loaf as part of my Lunar New Year recipes in February, it feels especially fitting. Lunar New Year celebrations center on gathering, sharing, and ushering in good fortune around the table. While this cheddar bread is not traditional, the inclusion of Lao Gan Ma nods to Chinese pantry flavors in a way that feels thoughtful and delicious rather than purely symbolic.

It’s a small bridge between cultures — a familiar American-style loaf layered with warmth, texture, and gentle heat from a beloved Chinese condiment — perfect for a season that celebrates renewal, connection, and the joy of sharing food across generations and borders.

Lao Gan Ma Cheese Bread Recipe

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Char Siu Duck Legs over Braised Cabbage

Char Siu Duck Leg over Braised Cabbage
Char Siu Duck Legs over Braised Cabbage
🦆 🥬 🦆 🥬 🦆
Celebrating the Lunar New Year

The year turns. The celebration continues…

Food is central to 🧧 Lunar New Year because the holiday is rooted in family reunion, symbolism, and wishes for the year ahead. The celebration isn’t just about marking a date — it’s about expressing hope, gratitude, and continuity through the shared table.

Lunar New Year, Bellagio Las Vegas
Lunar New Year, Bellagio Las Vegas

Char siu — literally “fork roasted” — is the Cantonese barbecue style known for its glossy, caramelized finish and sweet-savory depth. While traditionally associated with pork, the same lacquered glaze works beautifully with duck, where the rendered skin takes on a deep mahogany sheen and delicate crispness.

I served the duck over wedges of green cabbage slowly braised with sliced carrots and sweet onion in olive oil and chicken stock, then finished under the broiler so the vegetables picked up their own smoky edges.

The char on the cabbage mirrors the roasted notes of the duck, while the hearty winter vegetables anchor the dish in the season. A scattering of fresh cilantro sprigs brightens the plate and adds a fresh, herbal contrast. With poultry long associated with unity and celebration, it feels like a thoughtful festive way to mark the Lunar New Year.

Char Siu Duck And Cabbage Recipes

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