Western Living Magazine
This Galiano Island Cabin Brings Two Families Together Outdoors
6 Homes with Beautiful Window Seats
Inside a Light-Filled West Vancouver Waterfront Home Built for Serious Fun
Recipe: Dry-Aged Duck Breast with Beet Pavé, Rainbow Chard and Blackberry Jus
The Wine List: 3 Garden-Inspired Summer Pairings
How to Set a Wildly Beautiful Outdoor Table
The Best Okanagan Wineries for Architecture Lovers
Inside the $100-Million Reinvention of Fairmont Jasper Park Lodge
This Remote Texada Island Retreat Has Tiny Homes, Treehouses and a Forest Spa
The Unsettling Wallpaper in A24’s ‘Backrooms’ Has a Very Vancouver Backstory
New in Stores: 11 Home Decor Finds We Love Right Now
These Designer Dads Share What They Really Want For Father’s Day
Photos: Western Living Designers of the Year Finalists Reveal Party 2026
The 2026 Western Living People’s Choice Awards: Voting Is Now Open
Announcing the Finalists for the 2026 Western Living Designers of the Year Awards
Chef Harris Sakalis pairs crisp-skinned duck with jewel-toned beets, tender rainbow chard and a tart-sweet blackberry sauce.
Serves 2
Begin with the beetroot pavé. Preheat oven to 350°F. Peel the beets and slice on a mandolin around 2 cm thick.
Cover a small pan with parchment paper and lay out all the beet slices in layers, ensuring that the slices overlap each other and that you end up with a flat layout of beet. Season each layer with clarified butter, salt and pepper and leaves of fresh thyme. Cover with parchment paper and cook for 1 hour or until soft in the centre. Remove from oven, place a weight on the beets to keep them pressed down, then set in the fridge to cool. When completely cold, flip the pan over and cut the beet pavé into your desired shape. Set aside.
For the duck stock, roast duck bones or duck wings in a preheated 350°F oven for 30 minutes. In a pot, sauté the mirepoix (diced onions, carrots and celery) in olive oil. Add tomato paste and the roasted bones/wings. Bundle peppercorns, bay leaves, thyme and rosemary into cheesecloth (a bouquet garni). Fill the pot with water enough to cover the bones and add the bouquet garni. Simmer on medium heat for 1½ hours. Strain and reduce down to half.
Remove duck from fridge 30 minutes before cooking. Score skin in a crosshatch pattern without cutting into the meat. Season generously with salt and pepper.
Place duck skin-side-down in a cold pan. Cook over medium-low heat for 8 to 10 minutes until fat is rendered and skin is crisp. Flip, add thyme and garlic if using, and cook 2 to 3 minutes more for medium-rare. Rest skin-side-up for 5 to 7 minutes.
To prepare the chard, slice the thickest part of the stem and blanch and shock the whole leaves. In a sauté pan with warm olive oil, add shallots and chard and sauté for 3 to 4 minutes. Squeeze over with lemon juice and season to taste with salt and pepper.
To prepare the blackberry jus, sauté shallot until soft. Add blackberries and wine and reduce by half. Add duck stock or and simmer, reducing further until glossy. Strain and return to pan. Whisk in cold butter and honey, and season to taste.
After duck has rested, slice on a diagonal bias against the grain.
Pool a small amount of the blackberry jus on the plate and set one piece of chard in the middle of the plate on top of the jus. Set a slice of the beetroot pavé to the left, with a slice of the duck on the right, touching the jus. Decorate with one or two blackberries.
READ MORE:
Kristi Alexandra is the managing editor, food and culture, at Canada Wide Media. She loves food, travel, film and wine (but most of all, writing about them for Vancouver Magazine, Western Living and BCBusiness). Send any food and culture-related pitches to her at [email protected].
Are you over 18 years of age?
Get the latest headlines delivered to your inbox 3 times a week.