This homemade duck sauce recipe is fresh, preservative-free, and you can customize it to your own tastes. Best of all, it’s made with real ingredients, no high fructose corn syrup, and much more flavor than those little packets!
Chinese duck sauce, hot mustard, a bowl of crispy fried noodles, and a pot of hot tea were always served when guests were seated at the Chinese restaurants I worked at in the 80s, and I worked in many of them. For takeout/takeaway orders, we threw a few packets into the bag.
We have shown you how to cook many of your favorite Chinese restaurant dishes. But what about making your own condiments? In this recipe, we’ll show you exactly how to make duck sauce at home.
What is Duck Sauce?
Duck sauce is a condiment popular in Chinese-American takeout restaurants, often served with fried items such as egg rolls, crab rangoon, or wonton strips/fried noodles. It’s usually a thin, jelly-like consistency, orange in color, and has a sweet and sour flavor that contrasts with those savory fried flavors.
There are different variations of duck sauce served in restaurants and sold in jars at grocery stores. Some common ingredients include plums, apricots, peaches, sugar, vinegar, and salt.
But if you ever look closely at the ingredients on a duck sauce packet, you’ll see why you’d want to make your own! Lots of high fructose corn syrup, artificial coloring, and preservatives.
Why Is It Called Duck Sauce?
There are different stories about the name “duck sauce.”
Some say that the sauce was served with deep fried pressed duck, also known as wor shu opp in Cantonese.
The name may also have been derived from a traditional Chinese sour plum duck dish (one of my all-time favorite childhood dishes), as it also has a sour plum flavor.
Whatever the origin, the name stuck, and it became the go-to sauce to serve with fried food.
Is It the Same as Plum Sauce?
Chinese restaurants buy ready-made duck sauce in 5 gallon buckets. I remember the familiar red letters and logo on the buckets of Wah Yoan Duck Sauce in all the Chinese restaurants I worked in. They had a lock on the duck sauce market!
Wah Yoan doesn’t have a direct-to-consumer product or brand that I know of, but plum sauce brands like Koon Chun make a product that’s quite similar.
That said, I think it’s best to make your own duck sauce at home!
What Do People Eat with Duck Sauce?
Duck sauce is served on the side with fried and barbecued dishes like:
- Chinese Takeout Egg Rolls
- Cream Cheese Wontons
- Shrimp Toast
- Fried Chicken Wings
- Chinese BBQ Spareribs
But I have seen people put dollops of duck sauce and hot mustard onto their pork fried rice and even on their shrimp with lobster sauce!
Try this duck sauce recipe, and you’ll never look at those plastic packets the same way again!
Duck Sauce: Recipe Instructions
In a small bowl, mix the sugar and hot water until the sugar is dissolved. Add the apricot preserves.
Remove pit from the pickled plum and add to the bowl. The plum is very soft and should fall apart. Then add ½ teaspoon liquid from the pickled plum jar, soy sauce and rice vinegar.
Mix everything together with a fork until the duck sauce is well-combined. Let the sauce sit for 5 minutes and mix again.
This salted pickled plum is a secret key ingredient that most recipes you see on the internet miss! It makes a huge difference in taste and and gives our duck sauce recipe its authentic flavor.
Feel free to adjust this duck sauce recipe to your own tastes.
Add more sugar or apricot preserves if you like the sauce sweeter. Add more rice vinegar if you like your sauce slightly tart. Thin it out further with a little bit of hot water if you’d like a thinner consistency!
How to Make Duck Sauce
Ingredients
- 2 teaspoons sugar
- 1 ½ tablespoons hot water
- 3 tablespoons apricot preserves
- 1 salted pickled plum
- ½ teaspoon liquid from salted pickled plum jar
- 1/8 teaspoon soy sauce
- 1/4 teaspoon rice vinegar
Instructions
- In a small bowl, mix the sugar and hot water until the sugar is dissolved. Add the apricot preserves.
- Remove pit from the pickled plum and add to the bowl. The plum is very soft and should fall apart. Then add ½ teaspoon liquid from the pickled plum jar, soy sauce and rice vinegar.
- Mix everything together with a fork until the duck sauce is well-combined. Let the sauce sit for 5 minutes and mix again.
Tips & Notes:
nutrition facts
There seems to be two TYPES of egg roll ‘skins’, one that is very SMOOTH, THIN, and VERY CRISP, the other has a BUBBLY SURFACE that may be a bit thicker, but much more appropriate to use a ‘chip’ for dipping into my Asian Salsa.
what is the (brand) name of won ton or egg roll wrappers that form the ‘bubbly’ surface vs. the think “crisp” very smooth surface on some types of egg rolls. I am trying to fry the wonton or egg roll skins to use as “chips” for my Asian Salsa.
Thank you for your attention to my questions, I truly enjoy ALL of your recipes, THANK YOU so very much for SHARING your great recipes!!!
Hi Donna, yes, there are spring roll wrappers that are used in our spring roll recipes which are thin, smooth, and very crispy when fried. There are egg roll wrappers used in our egg roll recipes that most Chinese takeout restaurants serve which bubble up when fried. Wonton skins are also thicker and also bubble up when fried. What you are looking for to serve as “chips” are the traditional thicker egg roll wrappers or wonton wrappers. Twin marquis is a good brand and Nagoya is found in many supermarkets.
Do you serve Duck Sauce Hot or cold?
Hi Carole, usually it’s served cold.
So I had to make this to go with the Chinese roast pork sandwich, and since apricot preserves aren’t a popular jam in my house, I Googled up a recipe to make jam from the copious dries apricots that I DO have. The other challenge for me was not having preserved plums, but I have a huge container of li hing powder, so I used about 1/2 tsp to see how it worked. Tbh, I’m not sure if it’s a suitable replacement since I can’t do a taste comparison, nor have I had duck sauce in recent memory, but it tasted good?
So now I have a bunch of jars of yummy homemade preserves, and a new use for li hing powder. So it was a more interesting recipe than intended.
Thanks for sharing that Home Cook :)
Hi Bill,
I’m really looking forward to trying this recipe. I do have a few questions.
The first is the table spoons of apricot preserves. Are the level or rounded tablespoons?
Next, you know those little packets of duck sauce you get with your egg rolls when you order from a restaurant. How many of those packets would you say you get out of this recipe? It would be nice to know so that I can adjust the recipe to pretty much make only what I need.
Last, how long can this duck sauce be stored in the refrigerator? It would be easier to make a larger batch and just have it ready when I need it.
Side thought, how do you think ginger would work in this recipe?
Hi Scott, the tablespoons should be flat, but as you know, usually there is a little more than a flattened tablespoon if we measure quickly ;-) No idea of the equivalent to the duck sauce packets lol but you’ll know if it was enough after the first time you make it. The sauce should store for a few weeks in the fridge or longer, as long as all of your utensils, jars, etc. are clean and disinfected. As for ginger, it’s totally up to you and what you prefer. Happy cooking!