Anybody care to share their tried and true homemade broth recipe? Thanks!
What kind? Chicken, beef, fish?
It's all basically the same method.
Chicken: use a chicken or chicken parts--2-3 lbs.
Beef: ask butcher for a few bones and I throw in a small piece of chuck, too.
Fish: fish bones, a few mild fish fillets--for shrimp, use shrimp shells
Add to large stock pot with a gallon of water, an onion or two, celery-again 1 or 2 pieces, ditto the carrots, a few sprigs of parsley if you have it. I throw in a few whole peppers and just a few teaspoons of salt (working on my sodium intake). Bring to boil, reduce to a simmer for at least an hour, maybe 2. You have to taste to see if you've developed enough flavor.
I strain the broth thru cheesecloth and depending on what I need it for, I may further clarify it by using the eggshell method.
I always make extra broth when I'm making chicken and dumplings or vegetable beef soup.
Yes, you just throw a whole chicken (or breasts, legs, whatever) into the pot of water and simmer until cooked. I like to add in veggie scraps such as carrot peels, the ends of celery with the leaves on them, and onion. I don't cut up veggies specifically to flavor the stock/broth because I'm frugal.After your chicken is done, you can debone it and then add the bones to yet another pot of water (again with more veggies if you want) and get another big batch of broth.
When I simmer a whole chicken I usually freeze the meat after I shred it to add to homemade soup, for chicken salad, or whatever. I also use it to make chicken and dumplings (which is a good meal to make on the same day you cook the chicken and make the broth because it's multitasking and you can use the veggie peels for the broth but cut up the veggies for the chicken & dumplings).
Strain your broth, allow it to cool which makes the fat rise to the top, then skim the fat off. I store mine in the freezer in ziplocks and plastic containers.
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Add to large stock pot with a gallon of water, an onion or two, celery-again 1 or 2 pieces, ditto the carrots, a few sprigs of parsley if you have it. I throw in a few whole peppers and just a few teaspoons of salt (working on my sodium intake). Bring to boil, reduce to a simmer for at least an hour, maybe 2. You have to taste to see if you've developed enough flavor.
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