Why should you invest the effort into making a good stock? Besides that you're getting a two-for-one with the ingredients you buy, also because if you have good stock, then you'll almost definitely have good soup. Incidentally, you can frequently get "soup bones" at the grocery store or from a butcher for a really low price if you ask.
Ingredients:
- Bones with meat scraps from one or two chickens, raw or cooked;
- Three to four quarts of water;
- Two or three medium sized carrots, scrubbed and cut into chunks;
- Two to four ribs of celery (with leaves), washed and cut into chunks;
- One or two onions, roughly chopped;
- Several cloves of garlic, crushed and peeled (2-8 depending on taste);
- Several (3-6) bay leaves;
- A small handful (15-25) black peppercorns, whole;
- About a tablespoon of (good) salt;
- Several sprigs of fresh herbs, particularly parsley, thyme, oregano, and rosemary, stems included;
- The peels of several potatoes that were scrubbed well before being peeled.
- Combine all of the ingredients in a large pot that has a lid. Be sure to use enough water to cover all of the meat at least.
- Heat to a boil.
- Cover and simmer for several (3-6) hours.
- Skim the fat and strain out the ingredients, retaining only the liquid.
- For a darker, more richly flavorful stock (though this isn't always desired), you can begin by browning the bones and meat more thoroughly in the large cooking pot (stock pot) or by broiling them under the broiler. This step is optional and makes a darker brown stock with a more caramelized, cooked flavor.
- To release more of the marrow into the stock, which is quite good for you, break the bones first, particularly the larger ones.
- Add mushrooms or mushroom stumps for a heartier flavor.
- Add sliced ginger for zest and greater depth of flavor. In Chinese medicine, ginger stimulates and aids digestion.
- Add flavorful seeds like fennel seeds, but don't overdo it.
- Include other vegetables like sweet peppers or combine bones from other kinds of meats for a more complex stock.
- Add semi-medicinal fruit or herbs such as goji berries or elder berries/blossoms. These, in particular, can have a great effect on boosting the immune system, something that chicken stock is already well known for. Do not add herbs that you're unfamiliar with, however, as this could possibly be dangerous!
- For more gelatin and flavor in the stock, though it will make it fattier as well, include the chicken skin with the bones while you boil it. Most of the additional fat can be skimmed off at the end.
- Include giblets in your stockpot for a richer, meatier flavor.
- Use your stock to make delicious soups like homemade chicken noodle soup from scratch!
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