chicken stock
original recipe
ingredients
- 1 chicken carcass
- 2 celery ribs, chopped
- 2 large carrots, chopped
- 1 onion, quartered
- 3 cloves garlic, crushed
- 4 sprigs fresh thyme
- 2 bay leaves
- Parsley stems
- 10 peppercorns, optional
instructions
- Strip the chicken carcass of meat: Use your hands to pull and peel the meat
off the bones. Transfer the meat to a container and keep in the fridge. Use
it in soup, chicken chicken salad, or to top a bed of greens.
- Make the stock: Into a large stock pot or Dutch oven add the chicken carcass
– bones, skin and any random bits. Add the chopped celery, carrots, onion,
garlic, thyme, bay leaves, parsley stems and peppercorns if using.
- Cover with water and simmer: Pour 10 cups of cold water over the ingredients
in the stockpot and turn the heat to medium, just until it begins to have a
low boil, then reduce to medium low (or whatever temp you need to keep the
stove at for a gentle simmer). You want the stock to simmer and never boil.
Boiling can cause the fat and proteins to emulsify and give you dark, greasy
stock.
- Skim the stock: Push the ingredients down to make sure they are submerged in
the water and let the stock simmer on medium low for the next 3 hours. Cover
with a lid. Check every 45 minutes or so and use a spoon to skim any foam
that may form off the surface. This is not an exact science. If you lose
track of time, and it simmers for 4 hours that’s Ok. You’ll just have a more
concentrated stock and might need to add water. If you’re short on time and
you only have 2 hours then you’ll just have a lighter stock. That’s Ok too.
There is no room for perfectionists in stock making!
- Strain the stock: Layer a fine mesh strainer with cheesecloth. Set it over a
large bowl, then ladle the stock into the lined strainer. Press on the
solids to release any additional liquid. When it’s done you should have
between 5 and 6 cups of stock depending upon how much it has reduced.
- Use, store or freeze: Transfer the stock to small containers so it cools
down faster. Let it cool completely then cover and transfer to the fridge.
Once stock sits in the fridge for a few hours or overnight a fat layer will
form on the top. Go ahead and remove that fat layer. The stock will be
gelatinous and wobbly when cold. that’s a good thing. Use it within 5 days
or freeze it for up to six months.