Customizable Homemade Chicken Stock Recipe - Bessie Bakes (2024)

Jump to Recipe Print Recipe

Making homemade chicken stock is one of those get-back-to-basics recipes that elevates so many dishes. Today I’ll show you how to make stock from leftover bones, basic aromatics, and leftover ingredients with multiple options to customize your batch!

Customizable Homemade Chicken Stock Recipe - Bessie Bakes (1)

Restaurants make their own stock as a base to soups, sauces, and an array of dishes to add a depth of flavor that’s hard to replicate from store-bought broth.

Bone Broth vs Chicken Stock vs Chicken Broth

Having become a bone broth aficionado for the last few years, I’ve come to learn the differences between stock and bone broth. Chicken stock is more related to bone broth in that you simmer bones and aromatics for hours.

The difference is rich bone broth often requires more bones than stock and needs to be gently simmered for 12-24 hours to extract as much collagen as possible to increase the nutritional value. The more gelatinous it is when it’s cooled, the better.

Chicken stock can be simmered for as little as 3 hours or up to 8 hours. Stock generally doesn’t require as many bones unless you’re really wanting to up the amount of collagen in your stock.

Basically, they are the same thing with slight variations.

Chicken broth on the other hand is a quick version of the two above that won’t pack as much flavor because you aren’t simmering bones for hours. The flavor comes from simmering the meat and aromatics.

Can I speed up the cooking process for stock?

Absolutely! I have tested lots of bone broth recipes over the years and the same rules apply to stock. An Instant Pot or pressure cooker will be your best friend for cooking incredibly flavored broth in less than 3 hours!

Check out my Instant Pot Bone Broth recipe here. It’s very similar to this recipe but you use more bones to make the broth.

What if I can’t be by the stove for so many hours?

In this case, the slow cooker will be your best bet for slowly simmering your stock without having to babysit it. You can increase the time to 8-12 hours if you want to cook it all day or overnight.

The only downside is the size of the crockpot may not be as big as a stock pot, so your recipe will make less broth. But it’s still the best option so that you don’t have to worry about leaving the house or being away from your kitchen while it’s cooking.

What kind of bones do you use?

You can use a whole chicken carcass or a combination of bones from leftover chicken wings, thighs, and breasts.

Or you can buy a pre-cooked rotisserie chicken and save the bones. You freeze the bones in a container or freezer bag for up to one month.

Can I cook the meat on the bones in the stock too?

Yes you can, but you’ll need to remove the meat when it’s cooked through, let it rest for at least 10 minutes, then cut or pull the meat off of the bones. You’ll want to add the bones back to the broth to finish simmering.

I love to roast my own chicken. enjoy it for dinner, then save the bones for stock to really stretch a dollar and make good use of all ingredients.

Check out my Upside Down Roasted Chicken Recipe for a mouth-watering recipe!

Customizable Homemade Chicken Stock Recipe - Bessie Bakes (2)

To get started, simply crush the garlic and leave the skins on. Chop the carrots into halves or thirds. Quarter the onions and leave the skins on.

Customizable Homemade Chicken Stock Recipe - Bessie Bakes (3)

Now add the bones to a large stock pot, instant pot, or slow cooker. Add filtered water (if possible) and the aromatics from the photo above, along with peppercorns and herbs.

Customizable Homemade Chicken Stock Recipe - Bessie Bakes (4)

Partially cover the pot with a lid and bring the water to a gentle simmer. Lower the heat to low and keep the lid on but only partially covering the pot.

Customizable Homemade Chicken Stock Recipe - Bessie Bakes (5)

After three hours the stock will look like the photo below. If you’d like to simmer it for more than 3 hours or up to 8 hours, you’ll need to remove some of the foam that rises to the top.

If the water level lowers during longer simmering, you can add more water back to the pot. See the recipe card for instructions on cooking the stock in an Instant Pot or slow cooker.

Customizable Homemade Chicken Stock Recipe - Bessie Bakes (6)

Storing the Stock

You can pour the stock into mason jars and use a tea strainer to remove any solids from the stock. Leave one inch of space from the top to allow for expansion when you freeze your stock, otherwise the glass could crack in the freezer. Cover with the mason jar lid when it’s cooled.

Refrigerate and use the stock within three days or freeze for one month.

Customizable Homemade Chicken Stock Recipe - Bessie Bakes (7)
Customizable Homemade Chicken Stock Recipe - Bessie Bakes (8)

Enjoy this broth on its own in a cup or use it to cook rice, risotto, sauces, etc.!

Customizable Homemade Chicken Stock Recipe - Bessie Bakes (9)

Freeze broth into ice cubes

A simple way to freeze this stock is to freeze them into ice cubes! Once the cubes are frozen, remove them from the ice cube tray and store in a container or freezer bag.

This takes up less space in your freezer and when you are ready to use it, you can thaw only a small portion of broth at once.

Customizable Homemade Chicken Stock Recipe - Bessie Bakes (10)

Recipes to make with homemade stock

Easy Greek Lemon Chicken Soup

Customizable Homemade Chicken Stock Recipe - Bessie Bakes (11)

White Bean Chicken Meatball Soup with Pesto

Customizable Homemade Chicken Stock Recipe - Bessie Bakes (12)

Or check out this post with 5 soup recipes to pair with sourdough bread

Customizable Homemade Chicken Stock Recipe - Bessie Bakes (13)

Don’t forget to save your chicken bones and make flavorful stock at home. So many dishes will be elevated with it and you’ll save money too!

Bon Appetit Ya’ll,

Leslie O.

Homemade stock is easy to make, delicious, and nourishing and it's a great way to use leftover bones and vegetable scraps and aromatics. This recipe is customizable so you can use what you have at home.

5 from 1 vote

Print Pin Rate

Course: Soup

Cuisine: American

Prep Time: 10 minutes minutes

Cook Time: 3 hours hours

Servings: 8 cups

Author: Bessie Bakes

Equipment

  • Large Stock Pot

  • Or use an Instant Pot to speed up cooking time

  • Or a Crock Pot to safely cook it all day or overnight without having to watch it

Ingredients

  • 1 Chicken carcass from one whole chicken
  • filtered water the amount will differ based on the size of your pot
  • 3 whole carrots cut into thirds, keep skins on
  • 2 small onions or 1 large one, quartered with skins on
  • 5 garlic cloves crushed with skins on
  • 2 sprigs fresh rosemary kept whole
  • fresh thyme sprigs 4-7 sprigs kept whole
  • 1 tsp whole peppercorns

See ingredient substitutions in the recipe notes below

    Instructions

    Cooking stock on the stove top

    • Add the chicken carcass and any other wings or thigh bones you have, carrots, crushed garlic with skins, quartered onions with skins, fresh rosemary, fresh thyme, whole peppercorns to a large stock pot.

    • Add filtered water (if possible) to just below the top of the pan, leaving a little room at the top so it doesn't boil over.

    • Place on the stove top on medium-high heat and partially cover with a lid to allow the water to come to a gentle simmer.

    • Once it comes to a simmer lower the heat to low and keep the pot partially covered.

    • Simmer for as little as 3 hours or up to 8 hours for best flavor in your stock.

    If you simmer for more than 3 hours

    • If you simmer for more than 3 hours, you may need to skim the surface of the foam that rises to the top a couple of times. You can use a hand-held sifter to catch the foam easily. You can also use a spoon if you don't have a hand-held sifter.

    • If the water level lowers due to simmering, add some more water while it's simmering.

    Storing the stock

    • Strain the bones and ingredients from the pot.

    • You can pour the stock into mason jars if you have them. I like using a tea strainer when pouring in the stock to strain out any solids from the liquid.

      Use the stock within 3 days of refrigerating.

    Freezing the stock

    • Freeze in mason jars but make sure to let the broth cool down before freezing. Also leave an inch of empty space at the top of the jar to allow for expansion, otherwise the glass jar could crack in the freezer.

      Or you can freeze your broth into ice cubes so you'll have smaller servings to thaw when you need it. Once the cubes are frozen, remove them from the ice cube tray and store in a container or freezer bag.

      This takes up less space in your freezer and when you are ready to use it, you can thaw only a small portion of broth at once.

    Instant Pot instructions (the panel buttons may vary based on your model)

    • Add the chicken bones and all other ingredients to the pot. Fill the pot with filtered water all the way up to the fill line, and no more.

    • Place the lid on and turn to secure it. Make sure it's sealed. Flip the knob towards "sealing" to seal in the pressure.

    • Press "pressure cook". Turn the time to 2 hours or 120 minutes. The instant pot should say "on" at this point. This means that the pot is heating up and pressurizing. This should take about 30 minutes. Once the instant pot is up to temperature, it will start timing the 2-hour pressure cooking, so you will know how long this will take.

    • Once the instant pot is done with the cooking process, the heat will turn off. At this point, you will need to release the pressure from the pot. However, I do NOT recommend releasing the pressure manually from the pressure knob. Instead, allow the pressure to release naturally, which takes 10-25 minutes, but will keep steam/broth from shooting all over your ceiling!

    • When the silver knob drops next to the knob, the pressure has released. Remove the lid and strain out all of the ingredients.

    Slow Cooker Instructions

    • Add the chicken carcass and additional ingredients to the crock pot. Pour in enough water to almost the top of the pot.

    • Secure the lid on the crock pot and set the cooking time to low heat for 8 hours or high heat for 4 hours.

    • Remove the lid and skim the foam from the surface with a handheld flour sifter or a spoon.

    Notes

    Swap out ingredients:

    If you don’t have onions you can use:

    • 3-5 whole shallots cut in half with skins on.
    • A bundle of green onions. Use the entire thing in the pot.

    If you don’t have fresh rosemary or thyme:

    • Fresh parsley (you can also use all three if you have these on hand).

    Use vegetable scraps in your broth

    • Keep your onion skins, garlic skins, and carrot skins from previous uses and freeze them in a container. Add the extra vegetable scraps to the pot for extra flavor.

    Extra add-ons for more bold flavor

    • Lemongrass stalk
    • Large slice of fresh ginger

    Tried this Recipe? Tag me Today!Mention @Bessie.Bakes or tag #BessieBakes!

    If you’d like to see more recipes, please subscribe to my blog in the form below!

    Share114

    Pin762

    Tweet

    Email

    Customizable Homemade Chicken Stock Recipe - Bessie Bakes (2024)

    FAQs

    How to jazz up chicken stock? ›

    Cook a few ounces of chopped vegetables (onions, leeks, celery, and fennel all work) per quart of stock if you've got the time, or take a peek in your fridge for shortcuts: If you've got lingering roasted carrots, caramelized onions, or browned mushrooms, they can all be tossed in to add robust savoriness.

    How do you upgrade chicken stock? ›

    Throw In Extra Aromatics

    The base of most stocks are flavorful aromatics, like onion, carrot, and celery. An easy way to punch up the lackluster flavor of boxed stocks is by adding more of those basics. An onion sliced in half, plus a few chunks of carrots and celery can go a long way in flavoring store-bought stocks.

    What is the difference between chicken broth and chicken stock recipe? ›

    Stock is generally made from bones, and broth is generally made from flesh. In both cases, they are often supported with aromatic vegetables, but in the case of stock, left unseasoned for maximum flexibility in recipes, whereas broth will usually contain at least salt and pepper.

    How do you make homemade stock more flavorful? ›

    How to Make Broth More Flavorful
    1. Add herbs and spices. Herbs and spices add aroma, flavor, and intensity to soup broth. ...
    2. Add acidic ingredients. ...
    3. Pack in umami flavor. ...
    4. Roast the ingredients first. ...
    5. Let it evaporate and cook longer. ...
    6. Skim excess fat.
    Jun 28, 2023

    Why can't you boil chicken stock? ›

    The hotter you cook the stock, the faster you convert collagen into gelatin. Cooking low and slow gives you good conversion while preventing fat, minerals and other gunk from emulsifying into your stock. Boiled stock will be cloudy, greasy and have a lower yield.

    Should you start chicken stock in hot or cold water? ›

    Easy chicken stock

    Place the chicken carcasses, garlic, vegetables, herbs and peppercorns in a large, deep-bottomed pan. Add the cold water and bring to the boil, skim, then turn the heat down to a simmer. Continue to simmer gently for 3-4 hours, skimming as necessary, then pass the stock through a fine sieve.

    What adds flavor to a stock? ›

    The most basic version of vegetable stock only requires a few simple ingredients, such as carrots, celery, onions, and garlic. Most recipes will also recommend adding mushrooms, parsley, thyme, bay leaves, peppercorns, and salt for additional flavor.

    Does chicken stock get better the longer you cook it? ›

    Cook it too long, though, and you get into a case of seriously diminishing returns. Throughout my testing, I tasted my stocks as they cooked, and I generally found about one and a half hours to be a reasonable endpoint—plenty of time for a flavorful, rich broth, but not so long that it's a major commitment to make it.

    What has more flavor chicken stock for chicken broth? ›

    As a result, stock is usually a healthier product, delivering a richer mouth feel and deeper flavor than broth. Stock is a versatile culinary tool that can deliver taste to any number of dishes. Darker in color and more concentrated in flavor than broth, it's ideal for use in soups, rice, sauces and more.

    Is bouillon the same as stock? ›

    In the UK "bouillon" is a word mostly used by chefs. It's really a French loanword, but it means the same as "stock". Ordinary people (who are not chefs) just call it "stock". "Broth" can mean the same, but it can also be used for a specific kind of soup, with vegetables and/or meat, plus a thin/clear stock base.

    What happens if you use chicken stock instead of chicken broth? ›

    “In general, stock and broth can be used interchangeably. However, there are times when it is more advantageous to choose one over the other,” Hill admits. Because stock is made from bones, it will infuse any recipe with stronger chicken flavor than broth.

    Which is stronger chicken broth or stock? ›

    Broth is a culinary enhancer that provides flavor in a liquid form, made by simmering meat in water. It is well-seasoned and maintains a relatively thin and liquid consistency. It is significantly thinner and more flavorful than stock.

    What ingredient should not be added to a stock? ›

    Avoid adding salt if reducing the stock later. For brown stocks, caramelize the ingredients for added color, flavor and complexity. This can be done for any type of stock including meats, poultry, fish and vegetable. Always start with cold water.

    What is the most important ingredient in a stock? ›

    Nourishing Element – The most important ingredient of a stock. This is where the flavor, nutrients, color, and most often gelatin come from. Gelatin is an essential part of a stock that is produced when the connective tissue in the bones break down. Gelatin is what gives a stock its body.

    What are the 5 seasonings that can be used for making stock? ›

    5 Ingredients to Add to Your Stocks
    • Bones. Chicken and pork bones are often used in preparing stocks as they're easy to find. ...
    • Vegetable scraps. If you've been throwing away scraps from tomatoes, onion peels, and the tops (or bottoms) of certain vegetables, stop. ...
    • Apple cider vinegar. ...
    • Something spicy. ...
    • Herbs.

    How do you make chicken bone broth taste better? ›

    Carrots, onions, garlic, celery, peppers, mushrooms, and tomatoes are just some of the vegetables you can add to your bone broth to give it added flavor and nutritional value.

    What is the best use of chicken stock? ›

    You can use it in soups, sauces, stews, curries, risottos – the possibilities really are endless. There is something reassuring about knowing you have your freezer stocked with good stock.

    How to season water like chicken stock? ›

    Store-bought stock especially tends to have a lot of added salt, so if you're switching to water you're probably going to have to add more salt than you're used to adding. Consider introducing flavor boosters, like a splash of white wine, an old Parm rind, a splash of soy sauce, or a dollop of miso paste into the mix.

    How do you fix bland chicken soup? ›

    Herbs add a fresh note to a bland chicken soup. Add a sprig or two and let them steep as the soup simmers for 10 to 30 minutes, or chop the herbs and toss them in for near-immediate color and flavor.

    Top Articles
    Latest Posts
    Article information

    Author: Carlyn Walter

    Last Updated:

    Views: 6121

    Rating: 5 / 5 (70 voted)

    Reviews: 93% of readers found this page helpful

    Author information

    Name: Carlyn Walter

    Birthday: 1996-01-03

    Address: Suite 452 40815 Denyse Extensions, Sengermouth, OR 42374

    Phone: +8501809515404

    Job: Manufacturing Technician

    Hobby: Table tennis, Archery, Vacation, Metal detecting, Yo-yoing, Crocheting, Creative writing

    Introduction: My name is Carlyn Walter, I am a lively, glamorous, healthy, clean, powerful, calm, combative person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.