Monday, June 25, 2012

Back to Basics: Chicken Stock

Chicken Stock


This post is unusual in that it's not a finished dish, it's an ingredient.

It occurred to me the other day that one Crazy Foodie Stunts quality I failed to note in my braised chicken recipe I profiled this past April was the use of homemade chicken stock. It wasn't a conscious decision because making my own stock has become so common, I completely forgot about it. The last time I bought chicken stock at the store was better than two years ago yet I use it all the time.

In speaking to other food blogger friends in the past couple of months, I've discovered that many are intimidated by chicken stock, as I've seen it on several "foodie bucket lists" but it's very easy to make. All it takes is time.

Chicken stock is comprised of standard mirepoix ingredients simmered with chicken bones over the course of several hours. It serves as the base for many soups and sauces, so it is very versatile. When they're on sale, I buy whole chickens and cook them and then save the carcass and freeze it. Now that the summer grilling season is upon us, might I suggest a beer can chicken? I like them for backyard barbecues because there's lots of jokes to be had with a can of beer up the chicken's backside or during cooler weather, roasting is always a possibility. Or you can break the chicken down into usable parts before cooking. This is a great way to use parts of the chicken many home cooks would discard.

I used the last of my remaining chicken stock for the risotto I published earlier, so the timing was right to demonstrate it here.

The Challenge

Making an ingredient that is often taken for granted and can easily be bought at any local supermarket at home.

The Source

I use a recipe from allrecipes.com as a starting point but have adapted it over time. Ingredients in italics are either substitutions or additions

Ingredients

2 1/2 pounds chicken bones 1 to 2 leftover chicken carcasses (with giblets, if available)
1/4 cup olive oil
2 red onions, coarsely sliced
1 stalk celery cut into 1-inch lengths
2 carrots, diced 4 baby carrots
8 cups water, or as needed
1 head garlic, halved
1/2 teaspoon dried thyme 2-3 sprigs fresh thyme
1/2 teaspoon dried parsley 1 bunch fresh parsley stems*
1/2 teaspoon dried basil 1-2 fresh basil leaves
4 teaspoons kosher salt**
1 tablespoon cracked black peppercorns
1 bay leaf

Method

1. Preheat the oven to 450 degrees F (220 degrees C). Arrange the chicken bones on a baking sheet. Roast for about 45 minutes in the preheated oven, or until well browned.***

2. Heat the olive oil in a stock pot over medium heat. Add the onions, celery and carrots; cook and stir until browned. If they scorch, just add a bit of water and scrape up all the bits.


3. Add the roasted chicken bones to the pot, and fill with enough water to cover the bones by 2 inches. Bring to a boil, and add the garlic, thyme, parsley, basil, salt, and pepper. Reduce heat to low, and simmer uncovered for 2 hours or more. Add more water if needed.


4. Strain out all of the solids from the broth, drain off the fat, and refrigerate overnight. You can also remove the fat after it has chilled. The stock will be thick. Use full strength for soups and gravies, or dilute with water for a milder flavor.

Skimming the coagulated fat from the top after refrigeration

NOTES:

* I picked this up from page 22 of Michael Chiarello's Casual Cooking by Michael Chiarello with Janet Fletcher. Chef Chiarello advises using only the stems, not the leaves because the leaves can leave a green hue to your stock.

** I usually brine my chickens before I cook them, so the salt from the chicken is absorbed by the water. I recommend using very little salt regardless, as this isn't a finished dish and more salt can be added to each dish prepared with the stock.

***I find this step unnecessary if using leftover cooked chickens.

Successful?

Yes and no. I was successful in making my own chicken stock however, I wanted to document the process with a little more detail, but I misplaced my camera for about 18 hours in the middle of simmering the stock.

Ultimately, final judgement on this batch will be made when dishes are prepared using it.

Now I'm off to the supermarket to buy more chickens because I don't have any more carcasses in reserve!

13 comments:

  1. Homemade stock is really the best! I haven't made any in a while, though. Yours looks so rich and deep with flavor - I've never tried oven roasting the bones like that before, but will have to try it next time!

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  2. Haha! Too bad camera is misplaced during cooking. When I cook it's so chaotic that I lose a lot of things too. :-) homemade stock is always better. Can't wait to see what you will cook with it!

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  3. I've heard homemade stock is wonderful, yours look delicious! Your right about hesitations to make it, mainly a time constraint-one day!

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  4. I cant wait to make these! They sound sooo good.

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  5. I always use fresh herbs in my chicken stock, too...which reminds me, I don't have any in the freezer! But I'm going to have to wait till after the 100ยบ days pass!

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  6. Fantastic post. I'm surprised more bloggers don't focus on such basics. Thanks for the reminder! :)

    ~Kate

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  7. Homemade chicken stock is the best!

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  8. Love homemade stock. I have this habit of forgetting it's there though. We have three freezers so I think I need to up it's rotation to one of the more used freezers so I don't forget. The taste of homemade stock kicks store bought stock's butt every single time.

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  9. Great "how to." I recently tried my hand at making vegetable stock and now I wonder why I ever used store-bought!

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  10. Great recipe! There's nothing better than homemade chicken stock.

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  11. I love homemade stock. New to your blog and happy to follow :)

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  12. Hi Indianist, that's the best compliment I've been given regarding my foos in a long time. Thank you!

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