Chicken Stock

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I love making homemade stock.  I think it’s complex flavor rivals anything you can buy in a can or box.  I try to make it at least once a month and then freeze it in 2 cup Ziploc bags to have on hand for a variety of recipes.  This time I used all 6 cups of the liquid gold for chicken soup – yummy!

Necessities:

1 whole chicken, cut up (I prefer to reserve chicken breasts for cooking separately) You can buy a pre-cut up whole chicken or have your butcher chop it up for you, or you can be industrious and chop it up yourself. Alternatively, you can use  the bones from a rotissire chicken that you have pulled most of the meat off of.

2-3 whole carrots

2-3 stalks celery

2 small onions

1 shallot

2 garlic cloves

4-5 bay leaves

10 whole black peppercorns

1 ½ teaspoons sea salt

Fresh Thyme 5-6 sprigs

12 cups cold water

Method:

Begin by cleaning and roughly chopping your carrots and celery – no need to peel.  Chop the 2 small onions and shallot into quarters, and smash the garlic cloves. 

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To a 6 quart pot, add the chicken pieces or bones, herbs, seasonings, and the veggies – skins and all – this will all be strained out later.  Fill with 12 cups of cold water and bring to a boil then reduce to a simmer.  If any foam comes to the top of the pot, just skim off gently with a spoon and discard.  You will need to simmer uncovered and reduce the stock for 2 hours.  It will end up looking something like this picture.

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Remove the chicken pieces to a plate and strain the stock through a fine mesh sieve lined with cheesecloth.  If you do not have a cheesecloth it is not a big deal.  The resulting liquid should amount to 6 cups of golden stock.

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If you used a  whole chicken, after the chicken has cooled enough, discard the skin and remove the meat from the bones.  You can use the chicken for soup or a delicious chicken salad. 

As I mentioned earlier, I used this bath to make Homemade Chicken Soup.  If I’m not using the stock right away, I portion them into 2 cup Ziploc freezer bags and lay flat on a baking sheet to freeze.  Once frozen, you can store the bags upright  in the freezer and have homemade stock ready anytime.

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