Carcass is not a dirty word - make your own soup stock!

in food •  6 years ago  (edited)

NSFV - Not Safe For Vegetarians/Vegans

With all due respect to my wife, who detests the word "carcass" and has requested on many occasions that I refrain from using it, carcass is a great word and I will speak it proudly. Or write it proudly, as it were. Bird may be the word, but today, the word is carcass.



If you bake or otherwise cook whole chickens (or any other kind of bird, or really any meat with bones in it), hopefully you are already saving the carcasses and bones in the freezer. If you are not, please start doing this. One of the true joys in life is making your own soup stocks, and subsequently making amazing soups with same. I wish there was a way to share the scents of my kitchen with you right now.

You do need a stock pot. Don't think you can just use your largest regular pot and make do. Stocks are the kind of thing that it makes more sense to make large batches of and freeze, and a stock pot allows you to do just that. I currently have the carcasses of four whole chickens in my stockpot, plus some pork sausage links that I had forgotten about in my freezer.


As you can see, there is plenty of room to maneuver still :) This would have already overfilled my tallest "normal" pot. You will notice there are some large-ish chunks of meat cooking down in the stock. I don't worry about cleaning all the meat off the bone when I am cleaning up after a chicken dinner. I leave some meat on there knowing it will just make the eventual stock that much richer.

Making a soup stock is also a great way to use up vegetables that are getting old. Anything you have laying around, chop it into large chunks and toss it in the stock. In the above there is celery, onion, carrot, bell peppers and garlic. I just smash the garlic to remove the peel and toss it in without chopping it further, it will basically dissolve into the broth by the end.

Toss in some herbs and spices. I threw in some cloves and whole peppercorns, some dried lavender, bay leaves and oregano that I harvested last summer, some Himalayan pink salt (so delicious! If you think salt is salt is salt is salt, branch out and try some of the various salt varietals out there. Himalayan pink rock salt is seriously delicious). I think I threw in some cumin and curie powder.



Basically the point is, none of this is a precise science. Just throw what you have in your kitchen in the way of veggies into a pot with enough water to cover the carcass(es) and bones you have saved in the freezer, and simmer it down slow. Add herbs and spices to taste. One thing you definitely want to remember is to add a good amount of vinegar - it helps get all the good stuff out of the marrow in the bones. I use unfiltered raw cider vinegar because I love the taste, but any kind of vinegar works for this.

You can cook it down for a long time. I like to leave it simmering down on low heat overnight! I just strain it at the end through a colander with vertical slits (instead of holes) and freeze it in 64 oz plastic tubs that we buy yogurt in.

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Stock making is something I always want to actually do. Good job putting it out there to encourage folks. Also, carcass is a pretty funny word; I’ve been asked to not say it before too.

I love this!! I know, silly to get so excited for a post about stock... but really, I have an unhealthy love for stock. I feel like I have conquered the world when I turn that old, ugly carcass into some liquid gold.

I have no idea why more people don’t do this, it’s so good for you and saves you a ton of money.

Try some chickens Indian way :)

That looks pretty tasty. I never could make a good soup though. I always tend to over or under season it.

Haha I get it. Some words have a bad sound. Things that are describes as ropy always kind of grossed me out lol.

I always had an issue with bland soups before I started making my own soup stock. The stock is the key man! It is pretty much impossible to make a bland soup if you are starting with a homemade soup stock. Err on the side of not overseasoning the stock itself, it is always possible to add more herbs and spices to the eventual soups you make. But if you start with chicken carcasses and whatever beef and pork (or whatever) bones you have saved and let them cook down for a minimum of 24 hours with whatever random veggies you have laying around, the resulting stock is guaranteed to up your soup game by several levels. And not just soups! Slow cooking beef or pork roasts in your homemade stock results in the most tender, amazing meat you have ever had. Cooking beans in your stock results in the best beans ever. Seriously, stocks are a miracle and I wish it hadn't taken me most of my adult life to realize it. I don't throw away a single scrap of meat or bone now and I always have frozen soup stock on hand. Good luck!

Yeah I will have to give it a try next time I have a chicken.

Start calling it a skeleton...see what happens, LOL! I actually pressure cook my stock. It is quicker that way, and I get enough calcium etc out of the carcass, that the bones become soft.

My dachshunds LOVE me when I make stock, because they get to eat the bones once they cool! Everybody is happy. I refrigerate my stock overnight. This allows me to remove any fat from the top of the kettle, before I use, or freeze, the stock.

Nice, I don't have a pressure cooker but eventually will get one I am sure. I don't mind having the big stock pot going for a day or two though, I love the way it makes my house smelL :)

Look at garage sales. I have picked up three 16 quart pressure cookers that way. I have three smaller electric pressure cookers, two were from thrift shops. Very handy.

The nutrition in the broth is better with the quick cooking, and the smell with steam behind it (sadly not steemit, LOL) is sublime.

I made beans last night, in one hour in the pressure cooker, from dried beans, and they were perfect!