Bone broth
marsia1234
Posts: 40 Member
Anyone heard of bone broth??
What way do you make it? When do you have it??
Thanks!
What way do you make it? When do you have it??
Thanks!
0
Replies
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soup base0
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My grandmom used to make it every sunday. With noodles or little shape pasta.
Put bones and also some meat into a big pot with cold water and add some whole black pepper. Cook very slow, on a low heat and for a long time. (She used to even for 2-3 hours to get more flavour from the bones) about an hour before finishing add some root vegetables and parsley. Done. I used to work in hospitality too and I'm restaurants they usually roast bones with some meat and oil and make broth from that.0 -
I make my own stock. Chicken feet didn't sell very well (at all, except for me), so they give me the feet and stuff for practically nothing. Twenty cents.
It seems like a big deal when you first start, but once you're used to doing it, it's nothing. So very easy. The first time is the hardest. After that, it gets easier and easier.
I save my onion scraps in a baggie in the freezer and that works well for me. People say buying fresh onion is better, though. I like using the bits. Since they'd be tossed, anyway, it's like I'm getting something for nothing.
Basically, you just throw the bones (feet, necks, backs) and veggie scraps (or fresh) in and let it simmer, scraping the scum off the top as it forms. I strain mine through cheesecloth (twice, because I'm anal like that) when I'm done and store it in baggies. I sit them up straight until they get kinda slushy, then I flatten them out so they freeze flat (saves room in the freezer.) Some of the bags aren't measured, but some are. So often, you need one cup, so I bag up a bunch of one cup bags.
Many people let it cool in the pot and revoke the fat the next day and save that to use. If you need tallow, it's a great idea.
I always think that Alton Brown is the best place to start for any dish because he's easy and fun. Here's the recipe from "Good Eats" - http://www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/alton-brown/chicken-stock-recipe.html
Homemade stock is 1000 times better than the stuff in those boxes in the store. I don't know WHY they don't (or can't) make it well, but they don't. That stuff is practically useless.
Everything made with stock tastes better when you use your own.4 -
dead thing soup. Extremely good for you.
Get some beef bone or a chicken carcass - put it in a crook pot, add water, veg herbs and seasoning.
Cook it for 48hrs.
Strain the juice (stock). Stick it in a container in the fridge - should last a good few days - or freeze it.
Put the stock in a cup and heat in the microwave, then drink it.
Or you can use the stock in cooking.
It's an acquired taste, but worth the hassle.
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Will definitely be making this, heard it's meant to be great for digestion and collegen!0
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My mom has been making chicken soup this way, and my grandmother before her, and my great-grandmother before her, for generations. Chicken bones (and some meat), veggies, let cook, then skim everything off except the broth. It's a staple in my diet.1
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marsia1234 wrote: »Anyone heard of bone broth??
What way do you make it? When do you have it??
Thanks!
It's fad that preys on the ignorant. It's called stock and has been made for hundreds of years. It's no wonder it's generally extolled by Paleo dieters and it's sold at a premium
Actually bone broth is cooked much longer than stock, at least 24 hours, until the bones are soft, to strip the marrow. The broth when cooled will actually jelly from the marrow.
Stock, I make that all the time and I agree with the above that homemade stock will make everything taste better.
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quiltlovinlisa wrote: »marsia1234 wrote: »Anyone heard of bone broth??
What way do you make it? When do you have it??
Thanks!
It's fad that preys on the ignorant. It's called stock and has been made for hundreds of years. It's no wonder it's generally extolled by Paleo dieters and it's sold at a premium
Actually bone broth is cooked much longer than stock, at least 24 hours, until the bones are soft, to strip the marrow. The broth when cooled will actually jelly from the marrow.
Stock, I make that all the time and I agree with the above that homemade stock will make everything taste better.
Lol, no. Bone broth is a marketing term
How long was the below cooked for? It's apparently not faddish bone broth since it wasn't cooked 24 hrs+, which is silliness anyways
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My stock gels and I only cook it for a few hours. Occasionally it'll simmer all day if I put it on early enough but no more than that. I tried the bone broth thing twice (cooking it for excessive amounts of time once with a small amount of vinegar to "demineralize the bones" and the second time without) and frankly it was revolting -- such a waste of good bones!
Make a regular stock, IMO.
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I meant to write, my understanding from the people i know that make "bone broth" is that (insert whatever i wrote above) is the difference. I'm making no claims what-so-ever on any claimed advantages to consuming nor I am debating the validity of the term.
As I stated above, I agree that whatever you make at home, soups, stews, pot pies or anything else that needs broth, will taste so much better with homemade stock.0 -
Mom used to make it and I never liked it. We usually had it cold, molded and filled with meat and stuff (google aspic).
I thought that was the reason for my aversion since I don't like meat, so I tried it hot and without meat and I still didn't like it. Turns out it's the marrow, I just can't take its taste. It sure can look interesting though.
The broth itself is nothing special. If you don't like it you are not missing much. It has trace minerals and gelatin, all of which you can get quite easily without having to leave the stove on for 2 days. If you do like it though, plain bone broth is fairly low in calories so you'll get to enjoy a decent serving.0 -
Are you guys talking about stock/broths or are you talking about aspics?
I haven't had an aspic in probably 30 years. Are they back, under a different name?0 -
I just made some this past week -
6 Leg/thigh quarters, 2 onions quartered, 4 celery ribs, 4-5 carrots, bay leaves, poultry seasoning, salt & pepper. Covered with water then simmered about 4-5 hours.
Strained, pulled all meat and put in freezer for soups or casseroles. Gave the bones & scraps & vegetables to my chickens to eat. After refrigerating overnight I separated the fat & bagged the stock for later use (which was beautifully gelled).0 -
I make mine with carrots, celery, onions, garlic, apple cider vinegar, poblano peppers, jalapeno peppers and of course, CHICKEN FEET! I cook it on the stove top on low for 24 hours. It is so gelatinous that it looks like Jell-O when cooled. And tastes likes Chicken Caldo. I freeze into individual servings & drink it at least once a day, if not twice a day. The benefits of bone broth are never ending. Enjoy!0
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I save all my chicken bones and carcasses in the freezer and then I dump them into a crock pot with water and cook them until the bones soften. I usually do it for 24 hours because that is what is convenient for me. Mash it around to get marrow out of the softened bones and then strain and discard the big chunks. Save it in the freezer. You can use it for lots of stuff like boiling rice or quinoa, many savory recipes that call for water, and of course making soup.0
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I make a gallon of stock every week, but I have never heard of cooking it >24hrs. Do you have your gas stove on all night while you sleep and when you're away at work, or do you put it in an electric slow cooker or something like that? I don't think I'd sleep well knowing the gas is on. Never leave the house with the gas on, either.
I do soak the bones in an acidic solution (apple cider vinegar or lemon juice with water) for a day or more before cooking, though. Anyone else do that? Mine gels, too, at ~6hrs cooking.2 -
"Bone Broth" makes me laugh... an obvious attempt by someone with a marketing degree to label something cooks and chefs have been making for hundreds if not thousands of years... it is simply beef/chicken/lamb/bison/ etc... etc.. soup stock... the number of ways to "render" the nutrients from the bones and add flavor are numerous however ideally your "soup bones" should be simmered in a large stockpot for at least 24 hours...I add basic aromatics depending on the bones... I will use carrots Onions and celery along with a bay leaf or two, or three or four... with "red meat" and rosemary and thyme with poultry... along with sea salt and black pepper... I will let that simmer with about 16 cups of water to start... and begin about 7 in the morning so I can revisit it the next morning... as the day progresses I add water to account for the evaporation... once it is all done I strain the stock through cheese cloth.. then stick it in the fridge to firm up the fat so I can skim that off before "canning" the stock for future use...( I usually use a 2 cup Rubbermaid container) I will use it for home made soup, sauces and gravies...
the benefits I will leave to readers to research... soup stock ought to be an important part of everyone's diet. for such a small investment (stockpot). and a few hours over the weekend...and some inexpensive ingredients, it is an excellent source of nutrition...
BONE Broth... Hilarious...0 -
one word if you are going to use poultry... it is important to crack open the bones to allow the marrow to escape. I will usually use the dull side of a knife and just crack them open on the cutting board, before tossing them in the pot... and it isn't necessary to sacrifice a whole chicken ... a pack of chicken wings is just as good... or a pack of chicken thighs with the meat taken off... the key is to get at the marrow.
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I try to crack any bones I am using. I always make stock out of the ham hock as well. Never try to totally clean the bone when cooking a ham, just boil that sucker. I like to add carrots, onions and celery for extra flavor as well. You want to expose the marrow to the boiling liquid for the best flavor for sure.0
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i make stock automatically any time there are bones. beef and pork i freeze in 2-cup-or-more batches, for soups and whatever. with chicken stock, most of it gets frozen in ice-cube trays and then baggied.
and my grocery store frequently sells dirt-cheap packages of chicken 'breast bones' or something. forget what they call it, but it's clearly the leftover parts when they're splitting and deboning the breasts. they must whack off the cartilage at the tip of the breastbone in the process of doing that.
so it's not actually bone, just these scraps of chicken tenderloin meat with a little cartilage and tendon in it. that stuff makes an incredible broth. practically no fat at all, and the best flavour.
i don't do commercial/pre-packaged stock/broth at all, so i can't compare.1 -
Don't let the complex things about breaking bones and marrow and 24 hours scare you. Most of us just make a more pedestrian cross between a stock and a broth and don't worry if it's clear or cloudy.
Mine includes bony chicken scraps raw or cooked, eaten off of, whatever. Skin, meat, cartilage, etc., whatever's attached to the bones goes in, too. If there's a lot of fat in the resulting stock, I just refrigerate it and take the disk of fat off.
Just the other day took a summer's worth of chicken bones & parsley stems from the freezer turned into a stock. Also a ham bone. Ended up with 30 cups of chicken stock/broth and 6 cups of ham stock/broth.
For flavoring, I used parsley stems, a handful of bay leaves (buy this by the ounce from a spice merchant), and a mess of peppercorns.
If I'm doing more than one pot or have the oven on for other things, I let it simmer in the oven for several hours (ca. 4 hours or so) at any temp hot enough to boil it -- preferably less than 350F.
The chicken stock goes in all sorts of things from chicken soup to risotto. The ham stock is great for making "instant" bean soup with canned beans.
Turkey necks make SPECTACULAR stock!
To my mind, the boxed broths from the supermarket just taste like salt.1 -
I love homemade stock but don't like the smell in the house. How do you all deal with that?0
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Bone broth is just a new name for stock. Properly made stock gels when it's cool. It's not hard to make at all.1
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Um, yeah, it's just stock. I never understand how anyone made soups without having made stock. It's a basic thing we're taught here in cooking class at about age 9. This whole 'bone broth' fad is clever marketing1
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We make a huge batch of chicken stock in the fall, out of spent laying hens from our farmette. I have a pressure canner so the resulting stock gets defatted, then preserved in pint and quart jars. Very handy.
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So much smug superiority in this thread!
Yea, "bone broth"... it's *kitten* HILARIOUS!!!!!! /s
I have only seen people talking about the benefits of preparing and eating it, not "marketing" it. Maybe the term "bone broth" is new and faddish, but who cares? Language evolves. I don't really see the reason to insult OP or anybody else who cares to call it bone broth or anybody who didn't grow up with parents who cooked from scratch or sent them to cooking school.
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