Though the thread title refers to the famous duck in Beijing, I notice that the thread is far more diverse so I'll discuss all of my meals in Beijing here. But let's start with Peking Duck. With only five days planned for Beijing, we decided to have only one duck dinner, and I spent countless hours attempting to distinguish one from the other . . . almost to the point of insanity. You would have thought my life depended on which Beijing restaurant I chose for Peking duck. But after all of this consideration, we chose the popular and highly regarded Da Dong over a couple of other very popular and highly regarded spots. We were very pleased.
Da Dong has a few locations in Beijings. I'm not sure if all are like the branch we visited, but you might say that this one is a bit garish, not unlike many modern Chinese restaurants, including Lao You Ju in Chicago:

Each of the Peking duck restaurants in Beijing boasts about its own cooking method, woods used, etc. Da Dong prides itself on its traditional preparation, hanging the ducks in a brick oven and roasting the duck over peach, apple and jujube woods. Here you get a view of Da Dong's oven (and some of the wood used), as well as ducks hanging outside of the oven:


Da Dong also claims to roast its duck a little longer than other places, which it claims results in a slightly leaner duck with crispier skin.
Well, what do you think of this? Look crispy enough to you?


The skin was crisp and remarkably brittle, like thin peanut brittle for lack of a better comparison, with an audible cracking sound. More importantly, the duck and all of the condiments were outstanding. The duck was served with ultra-thin, almost translucent pancakes, as well as a hollow, sesame studded bao:



In the middle of the three pictures, you get a great view of the thinness of the pancake. And the bao was far thinner than the thick bao you might be familiar with from Sun Wah. I appreciated how neither the pancake nor the bao interfered with preciously limited stomach space.
The duck skin was served immediately, and with sugar for dipping. I understand this is traditional, although I've previously only encountered it at Ming Hin in Chicago. I dipped a few of the pieces of skin in the sugar, but I still prefer the crispy skin with the other condiments, places inside a pancake or bao.
Speaking of condiments, Da Dong serves its duck with (clockwise from upper left in the picture immediately below) radish, finely minced raw garlic, sugar, hoisin sauce, scallions, and a couple of pickled vegetables . . . I think the first one was radish.

Here's one of Da Dong's duck slicers hard at work on our duck:

At Da Dong, the Peking Duck is served in two courses (assuming you don't consider the skin and meat to be separate courses - they're served at almost the same time). The second course is a duck soup, which was adequate but not particularly rich or interesting.

I was far more impressed with the tableware used to hold your chopsticks and soup spoon:

One cannot make a dinner of duck alone. Well, I suppose you could, but why! We added a couple of dishes. But ordering took some time. Da Dong's menu was more like War and Peace:

One of the dishes we eventually selected was a terrific plate of sauteed bamboo shoots with potherb mustard (greens):

We also enjoyed an excellent braised eggplant dish which featured plenty of garlic and star anise:

Dessert was complimentary, magnificent strawberries on ice. These were the best strawberries I had ever tasted. I was stunned.

Da Dong was fantastic in terms of food. The Peking Duck in particular was easily the best I've ever tasted. The skin was so flavorful, crisp and just perfect. The meat, while leaner than almost all others I've tried, was nonetheless plenty moist and also fantastic. Service was lacking (I had heard that about the particular location we visited) but we were in no hurry and enjoyed taking in the whole experience.
As I noted above, we had decided to have only one meal of Peking duck. But then some poor planning set in. We had decided to visit a Beijing acrobatics show (an absolute must in my opinion, with the crowd as entertaining as the show itself). And though we were aware that Beijing is not a late town -- restaurants generally shut down by 9pm -- we didn't properly factor our hunger into our planning. So we exited the acrobatics show and were turned away from one restaurant after the other.
We finally arrived at Quanjude, the original Peking duck restaurant in Beijing (it opened in the 1860s and originated Peking duck, so I'm sad to break it to you that Peking duck is not quite the ancient Chinese dish you might have imagined). Unfortunately, Quanjude was just closing but one of their English-speaking staff walked us to a nearby restaurant owned by Quanjude that also served Quanjude's duck.
So much for having Peking duck only one. This duck was an excellent comparison as it was far fattier than the Da Dong duck:

It was served with pancakes that were considerably thicker than the ones at Da Dong, along with hoisin, scallion and very thick cucumber spears:

Here's a rolled pancake - you can tell just how much thicker it is than at Da Dong:

Like at Da Dong, the second course was a duck soup, equally unimpressive in my opinion:

We only ordered one extra dish, a sauteed broccoli that was much better than it might appear in this picture (thanks to it retaining perfect texture):

And I loved the tea, as good as I tasted on this trip:

Overall, this version of Peking Duck was very good, but the skin was not as delicious and nowhere near as crisp as at Da Dong. And it was just a bit too fatty for me. And although Da Dong's duck was far leaner, it was also more flavorful. I wouldn't speculate that this is exactly what the duck would taste like at Quanjude, but I would have no concerns in recommending a visit to Da Dong.
Of course, there are a few other highly esteemed Peking duck restaurants in Beijing. But duck is not limited to restaurants. For example, this picture is from a store at the Beijing airport (and this wasn't the only store we passed selling bagged or boxed ducks):

Don't worry, cooking instructions (including instructions for making the duck edible

) are also in English:

I'll have more on Beijing (and the rest of my China trip) in other posts.
Last edited by
BR on November 16th, 2015, 9:06 pm, edited 1 time in total.