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Started By
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How do you make your chicken stock?
Posted on 9/30/24 at 1:10 pm
Posted on 9/30/24 at 1:10 pm
The last few times I have smoked chickens, I throw the carcass in a pot with onions, garlic, celery, and peppercorns and make sure everything is submerged and simmer for quite a few hours. It usually yields about 4 quarts. It comes out great so don’t plan on changing much, but do any of yall have some good tricks to enhance it?
Posted on 9/30/24 at 1:29 pm to Tiger328
Adding parsley is the only thing I do that you don't.
Posted on 9/30/24 at 1:33 pm to Tiger328
quote:
smoked chickens, I throw the carcass in a pot with onions, garlic, celery,
Throw all that in a roasting pan and roast it for 30-45 minutes. Then go to your stock pot and proceed as you normally do...
This post was edited on 9/30/24 at 1:36 pm
Posted on 9/30/24 at 1:39 pm to Tiger328
I do basically the same thing but will cook it down much longer. Generally up to about 12 hours of simmering on the stove to really concentrate it and when done and cooled off in the fridge it will form a fat cap I remove and the liquid under the fat cap will become a gel that is packed with flavor.
Far superior to a simple chicken stock.
Far superior to a simple chicken stock.
Posted on 9/30/24 at 1:55 pm to Tiger328
Get a chicken just the way it came out the factory
Posted on 9/30/24 at 2:12 pm to Tiger328
Leftover chicken
onion
bellpepper
celery
carrot
salt
pepper
maybe parsley
Simmer for a couple hours, longer the better if I have time. I try to use the leftover parts of the vegetables as well so sometimes the broth gets different quantities.
I normally do 12 cups of water to that, and itll yield about 8 after simmering. Its a little thicker than box stock.
onion
bellpepper
celery
carrot
salt
pepper
maybe parsley
Simmer for a couple hours, longer the better if I have time. I try to use the leftover parts of the vegetables as well so sometimes the broth gets different quantities.
I normally do 12 cups of water to that, and itll yield about 8 after simmering. Its a little thicker than box stock.
Posted on 9/30/24 at 2:18 pm to Tiger328
I've always squeezed a lemon in mine, then throw the rind in. Some say the rind turns bitter, but I've never noticed it in mine. I just figured it needed a little acid to it.
Smoked chicken stock is some of the best stock EVER. Great for gumbo and jambalaya.
Smoked chicken stock is some of the best stock EVER. Great for gumbo and jambalaya.
Posted on 9/30/24 at 2:28 pm to Tiger328
Pick 3 or 4 rotisserie chickens from Sam's. Dump all of the skin/bones/drippings, everything that is not meat into a large pot and bring to a boil. I add just cayenne and kosher salt. Once boiling I bring it down to low for a couple hours and let it sit on the stove to cool. Strain all junk from the pot and place the stock in the fridge overnight. Take it out the next day and skim away the fat from the top. Perfect for gumbo/soups every time.
Posted on 9/30/24 at 3:02 pm to Tiger328
Been putting mine in a crockpot set to low for 24hrs. Add celery tops, onion, bell pepper scraps, and a bay leaf.
This post was edited on 9/30/24 at 3:03 pm
Posted on 9/30/24 at 3:41 pm to Tiger328
Throw some chicken bones and scraps in water and simmer it a while. I don’t bother to make a big fuss about it. It’s stock who cares.
Posted on 9/30/24 at 4:03 pm to FutureCorridor49
Bake or smoke chicken.
Carcass said chicken, eat skin while doing the task (wife doesn't like chicken skin so yay more for me and the dogs).
Place carcass remains in oven with onions celery bell pepper garlic (occasionally carrots too). Roast at 450 or so until carcass is roasted to your liking.
Deglaze with some white wine and chicken bouillon stock.
Place everything in an instapot + water and fresh herbs. High pressure for 2 hours.
Cool down in ice bath. Remove fat after set.
Carcass said chicken, eat skin while doing the task (wife doesn't like chicken skin so yay more for me and the dogs).
Place carcass remains in oven with onions celery bell pepper garlic (occasionally carrots too). Roast at 450 or so until carcass is roasted to your liking.
Deglaze with some white wine and chicken bouillon stock.
Place everything in an instapot + water and fresh herbs. High pressure for 2 hours.
Cool down in ice bath. Remove fat after set.
Posted on 9/30/24 at 4:06 pm to Tiger328
put all the crap in a pot , bring it to a boil, then transfer pot to oven at 200 and let it sit all night
Posted on 9/30/24 at 4:22 pm to kengel2
From everything Ive read and learned, bell peppers shouldnt be put in stock because of the bitterness.
I dont put much salt in my stock but i do put some extra herbs usually, parsley, thyme, bay leaves.
I dont put much salt in my stock but i do put some extra herbs usually, parsley, thyme, bay leaves.
Posted on 9/30/24 at 8:22 pm to rutiger
quote:
From everything Ive read and learned, bell peppers shouldnt be put in stock because of the bitterness.
Hmm, I never heard that but I never really looked either. The stuff I make doesn't taste bitter so maybe it's not enough to matter. I just use the tops and bottoms that weren't used for cooking really. I do cut out all the white and seeds.
Posted on 9/30/24 at 11:08 pm to Tiger328
Instant Pot. Get a basket where you can pull out all the solids at the end of the cook. That stock is insanely good and rich. I'm not sure where this recipe came from (maybe Nom Nom Paleo).
Chicken Bones (whatever fits in the basket, usually 2 chickens worth)
3 Large Carrots
1 Large Onion, quartered skin on
1 Bay leaf
3 celery sticks
Handful of fresh parsley
2 tsp ground pepper
1 tsp salt
2 tbsp garlic
3 tbsp apple cider vinegar
Water
Place all ingredients into pot. Pour in apple cider vinegar and cover with water. Secure lid, press manual button. Press the "+" button to increase display to 90 minutes. Make sure pressure valve on top is closed. Once complete, quick release the pressure valve.
Chicken Bones (whatever fits in the basket, usually 2 chickens worth)
3 Large Carrots
1 Large Onion, quartered skin on
1 Bay leaf
3 celery sticks
Handful of fresh parsley
2 tsp ground pepper
1 tsp salt
2 tbsp garlic
3 tbsp apple cider vinegar
Water
Place all ingredients into pot. Pour in apple cider vinegar and cover with water. Secure lid, press manual button. Press the "+" button to increase display to 90 minutes. Make sure pressure valve on top is closed. Once complete, quick release the pressure valve.
Posted on 10/1/24 at 11:48 am to kengel2
quote:
Hmm, I never heard that but I never really looked either. The stuff I make doesn't taste bitter so maybe it's not enough to matter. I just use the tops and bottoms that weren't used for cooking really. I do cut out all the white and seeds.
Yep this is all I do.
Also to counter this, I've also heard never put carrots in stock because they make the stock overtly sweet (which makes sense, but still dumb)
Posted on 10/1/24 at 12:13 pm to rutiger
quote:
bell peppers shouldnt be put in stock because of the bitterness
I thought it would make it milky. I have no clue if I imagined hearing this or not but I dont keep pepper scraps because of it.
Posted on 10/1/24 at 4:56 pm to Tiger328
I don't typicallty keep chicken stock. But when I have to cook a big gumbo and need it I will use rotisserie chickens from Sam's. Reserve meat, roast bones for about 20 minutes then simmer them off for a couple hours along with all my vegetable scraps and a pack of turkey necks.
Posted on 10/1/24 at 5:31 pm to CHEDBALLZ
Add a pigs foot or chicken feet for gelatin.
Posted on 10/1/24 at 6:09 pm to Tiger328
I prefer using a big hen. Into a pot raw with onions, celery, carrots and water to cover. Simmer slow for hours. Season with salt to taste.
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