The Best Chicken Stock

Chicken Stock is the foundation for building many recipes. This classic preparation yields a clean fresh stock you’ll never get from a box or can.

Chicken Stock
The Best Chicken Stock: 5 pounds chicken, 1 pound onion, 1/2 pound carrot, 1/2 pound celery, 1 tsp black peppercorns, 1 bouquet garni, 16 cups water.

Hundreds of recipes use Chicken Stock for their foundations and flavoring. Soups and stews and braises. Rice and pasta and grains. Gravy and sauces and glazes. These are only a few items that require or benefit from great stock. With stock being such an important foundation in cooking, we should sometimes make an effort to avoid the shelf stabilized offerings from the grocery stores. Once you make a really good stock from scratch, you’ll be blown away with how incredible it is.

There’s grocery store stock, easy homemade stock, and classic French cuisine stock. Easy homemade stock is a simple matter of tossing a bunch of celery, carrots, onion, and leftover chicken parts in a pot, covering it with water and simmering for an hour or so. It’s better than the boxed stuff but I’d call this more of a broth. It’s a relatively easy method to quickly extract a lot of flavor – like making tea.

The classic French cuisine stock, ala Escoffier, is something a little different. A great stock should contain a lot of gelatin, be clear of particulates, void of any fat or oil, and flavorful but not overly so.

In this case, we’re making a white stock. A white stock uses raw chicken bones. A brown stock, on the other hand, may use beef or veal bones in addition to the chicken and the bones would first be roasted.

Chicken wings and backbone are the best parts of the chicken to contribute lots of gelatin to the stock. You want whole wings here, not the stuff sold as ‘buffalo wings’. The wing tips, in particular, are high in gelatin. Gelatin gives your stock body.

To reduce the particulates, and the fat and oil in the stock, I like to blanch the chicken first. Toss all the chicken parts in your stock pot and cover them with water. Bring to a boil then drain and thoroughly rinse the chicken under cold water. Dumping out all the water and rinsing the chicken real good is going to avoid a lot of floating scum and particulates. This is all in an effort to make the cleanest, clearest stock we can. Bonus points for removing all the skin, too!

Chicken Stock
Simmer the chicken at a temperature range of 180-190Ā°F – you shouldn’t see any bubbles. Use a temperature probe with high and low alarms for best results.

Add the chicken back to the pot and cover with 16 cups of water. Heat the pot over medium-low heat and maintain a temperature between 180-190Ā°F. A temperature probe with high and low temp alarms is great for this. If you don’t have a thermometer, just make sure the water never comes to a simmer. This is a low and slow three-hour process to extract vitamins and minerals from the chicken bones.

The classic mirepoix for chicken stock is two parts onion, one part celery, and one part carrot. Peel and cut the onions in half and chop the washed celery and peeled carrots into chunks. Bouquet garni is a French culinary term used to describe a little bundle of herbs. The bouquet garni for this stock is made of leek, celery leaves, thyme, parsley stalks, and bay leaf. Bundle them together and tie them up with a little string. If you have whole clove in your spice draw you can poke a few into the onions. Continue to simmer the stock for one hour more after adding the vegetables.

Bouquet Garni
Bouquet garni is a French culinary term used to describe a little bundle of herbs. The bouquet garni for this stock is made of leek, celery leaves, thyme, parsley stalks, and bay leaf.
Bouquet Garni
Bundle the herbs together and tie them up with a little string.

After four hours of very low simmering, use tongs to gently remove all the solids from the stock pot. They’ve given all they have to offer so you can simply discard them. Kitchen tip: I place this sort of waste in a plastic shopping bag then store it in the freezer until trash day. This prevents a stinky garbage can. Once you’ve removed as much of the solids as possible, strain the stock into a large bowl or heatproof container. Refrigerate immediately then freeze one quart portions in freezer-proof ziptop bags.

Chicken Stock
After simmering the chicken for three hours, add the onions, carrots, celery, black peppercorns, and bouquet garni. Simmer for one more hour.

This method for making a classic French stock requires a lot more time and money than buying a few boxes of the stuff off your grocer’s shelf. At some point though, I hope you’ll set some time and money aside to make this. It’s truly remarkable how clean and fresh a properly prepared chicken stock can be. I’m excited to start creating dishes with the many gallons I’ve made while researching this recipe! #ChickenStockMarket

Chicken Stock
Chicken Stock is the foundation for building many recipes. This classic preparation yields a clean fresh stock you’ll never get from a box or can.

The Best Chicken Stock

0.0 from 0 votes
Recipe by Anthony Course: IngredientCuisine: FrenchDifficulty: Moderate
Servings

3

Quarts
Prep time

45

minutes
Cooking time

4

hours 
Total time

4

hours 

45

minutes

Chicken Stock is the foundation for building many recipes. This classic preparation yields a clean fresh stock you’ll never get from a box or can.

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Ingredients

  • 3 lbs Whole Chicken Wings

  • 2 lbs Chicken Parts mostly bones

  • 16 cups Cold Water

  • 1 Bouquet Garni

  • 1 lb Onions

  • 1/2 lb Carrot

  • 1/2 lb Celery

  • 4 Cloves

  • 1 tsp Black Peppercorns

  • BOUQUET GARNI
  • 3 inches Leek

  • 2-3 Celery Leaves

  • 5-6 Sprigs of Fresh Thyme

  • 5-6 Parsley Stems

  • 2 Bay Leaves

Directions

  • Place chicken parts in a large stockpot and cover with water. Bring water to a boil then drain and rinse the chicken. Fill the pot with water and rinse the chicken several times until the water runs mostly clear.
  • Optional step – once the chicken is cool enough to work with, remove as much skin and fat as possible. Rinse thoroughly to wash away excess bits. This will reduce the amount of fat in the stock and result in a much cleaner flavor.
  • Return the pot to the stove top with the chicken. Gently add 16 cups cold water so as not to disturb the chicken. Insert a temperature probe on the inside of the pot to constantly monitor temperature. Add Bouquet Garni and 1 tsp Black Peppercorns. Heat over medium – medium-low to stabilize the temp between 180Ā°-190Ā°F. Maintain temp for 3 hours. Use the handle of a long wooden spoon to gently move the chicken around once an hour to promote circulation.
  • Half the onions and remove the skins. Insert cloves in the flesh of the onion. Chop celery and carrots into 2-inch pieces. Place vegetables in the stockpot. Cook for one more hour.
  • Use tongs to transfer large bits of chicken and vegetables from the pot to a large bowl. Prepare another large bowl or heatproof container with a strainer or chinois. Pour the stock through the strainer and discard any leftover bits.
  • Immediately transfer the chicken stock to the refrigerator. Freeze stock in quart size ziptop bags made for the freezer.

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3 Comments

  1. Sandi Schneider

    5 stars
    The stock is wonderful. I froze a few batches to use when needed. Another tip: freeze some of broth
    in ice cube trays. When frozen, bag them in freezer bags and you have access to smaller amounts for
    other recipes.

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