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                                                    Jose Souto - Trio of Duck with Glazed Apple and Cranberry,
                                            
                    
                    There are many species of wild duck to choose from. The main ones are teal, wigeon and, the most common, mallard. Here’s a way of trying all three, very simply. (Read here for information on different duck species.)
For the past few years, I have had the pleasure of doing demonstrations on the Wild Suffolk stage at the Aldeburgh Food & Drink Festival, a celebration of all things wild in the region.
The night before the show, all the chefs attend a dinner. It’s here that two of the organisers, Mike Warner and David Grimwood, invite all those in attendance to a duck shoot the following morning.
Most of the assembled celebrity chefs accepted the invitation last year, so we found ourselves heading to a nearby woodland lake at 5am the following day. We assembled in the show car park, waiting for Mike and David to pick us up.
A short drive later, we arrived and, in hushed tones, our hosts explained how the shoot would progress. Each non-shooting person was paired with a seasoned shooter and we were ushered toward the lake.
Around the lake, there were a selection of hides, each one containing a bench for two people. We took our places in the dark. When we heard a whistle blow, we could stand up and shoot at ducks coming in. After a few shots — and after the ducks had left — the whistle would sound again and we were told that we should lower our guns and sit back down until more ducks had arrived.
As I took my seat with my companion, we waited with bated breath. Then, out of the gloom, ducks started to pour in, one after the other. We could hear them, but they were hard to make out with the added cloaking of the surrounding trees.
As the light came up, the whistle was blown and off we went. There was an explosion of ducks that lifted from the water — so many that it was hard to pick a target. Many of the less experienced Guns aimed at groups of ducks, as opposed to locking on to one target. It’s a tempting but bad tactic. You can see many, but hit none.
That morning, we bagged a good selection of ducks that were used in the demonstrations during the two days of the festival, with a few left to take home.
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