Homemade Stock

"Saving all the odds and ends in the freezer while doing your daily cooking will give you an endless supply of stocks to cook with. You will not waste even those parts of the vegetables or meat that you paid for (usually by the pound), and will never again need to buy canned stocks. This will save you money and allows you to control the contents of your stocks. All the vegetables I have listed in the ingredients list are just ideas of things to save in your bag. You do not need each and every one of them to make a stock. Everything is optional. When you peel carrots or anything else, wash them first. It is rather difficult to wash peelings. I do not recommend strong flavored herbs like cilantro or vegetables that could color your stock strangely like beets. Note: In order for the recipe to post, I had to include measurements, but you don't need measurements. Just use what you have saved in your bags using more or less of whatever is there."
 
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photo by karen photo by karen
photo by karen
photo by karen photo by karen
photo by Starrynews photo by Starrynews
photo by Nourished Homestead photo by Nourished Homestead
photo by karen photo by karen
Ready In:
2hrs 5mins
Ingredients:
23
Yields:
4 quarts
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ingredients

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directions

  • Save a gallon freezer bag in your freezer.
  • Wash all stock ingredients well before peeling.
  • As you use your vegetables, chicken, or beef, save the peels, ends, leaves, skins, wing tips etc and place them in separate bags in your freezer. Keep a vegetable bag, a chicken bag and a beef bag. Your vegetable bag will fill the fastest and beef the slowest.
  • Once you have a full bag of mixed vegetables, place them all in a large stockpot or a crock pot.
  • Pour the water over your ingredients and add the bay leaf, peppercorns and any other herb or spice that you desire.
  • If you don't have much garlic or parsley in your freezer bag, then add more if desired. If you have too much, it is not necessary to use it all. Just use what you desire for the flavor you wish to achieve.
  • If making meat stock, add meat pieces and bones to the vegetables.
  • If using a stockpot, bring to boil; reduce heat and simmer for 2 hours until vegetables are very soft.
  • If using a crock pot, cover and cook on low overnight or for 6 to 8 hours.
  • Strain stock through a colander to remove vegetables and herbs.
  • Strain stock again through doubled layers of cheesecloth to remove all other small particles if desired.
  • Stock can be reduced even further if desired or place in quart freezer bags, date and note the contents.
  • Stock can be kept up to 6 months in your freezer.
  • For Vegetarian and Vegan omit the beef and chicken.

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Reviews

  1. I have been doing my veggie stock this way for a few months & figured I'd give a review! I LOVE to do this for a few reasons. One, it's cheap. Actually, it's free since all you use for this stock you usually just toss. Two, it's more natural, nutritional (I imagine), pure, and flavorful. There are no preservatives or things you can't pronounce in there. Super low sodium, too! Three, you can really modify the stock. Have an over abundance of tomatoes in your garden? Make a stock - it'd go great to cook with rice, etc. Since I like a stronger onion flavor I just add an extra "layer" or two off my onions when I peel them. Four, you can use veggies and scraps that were previously WASTED. Got some veggies in the fridge that are about to go bad? Toss them in the stock freezer bag! I NEVER EVER waste veggies now simply b/c I didn't use them in time. I put all my scraps in this, including ones I wouldn't necessarily eat. For example, I toss the onion skins but still add that tough outer layer of the onion to this; normall it'd just get trashed/wasted. I add the middles of peppers when I gut them - seeds and all. I've even tossed a few fruit items in there - don't be scared to try it (just don't get carried away)!! I usually cook it all in the crockpot overnight, line my strainer with paper towels, and drain. This prevents the seeds and parts from falling through. Depending on what I have in that batch, sometimes I don't use paper towels but rather strain then blend. I've never actually seen this recipe posted but it's SUCH an easy method that one should really try it rather than buying stock. Plus, you always have so much on hand you'll find yourself adding your stock to things you normally wouldn't. Adds flavor and nutrients! Thanks for sharing!!
     
  2. The ONLY downside to this (outside of your friends thinking you are bonkers for freezing your garbage) is it will never be the same - and that really isn't a down side is it? The ingredients will most always vary in selection, but amount also changes too. What is a given though is the wonderful flavor from such a simple recipe. I've enjoyed what I've made and really can't wait for the summer veggies to come calling (always hated throwing out the corn cob, seemed like there was just too much goodness left). You are only limited to your imagination on this one. THANK YOU!!
     
  3. Awesome idea!!!! I use every bit of my veggies now, no waste.. What a great money saver and I never have to worry about not having stock on hand. And it's fun to make.. :) Thanks so much.
     
  4. Fantastic idea and super easy! I have been using all of the spices and onion skins, carrots, celery, leeks, parsnips, garlic and mushrooms. Thanks for sharing.
     
  5. this is great. i cook on low in the crock pot for 20-24 hours or until the chicken bones break easily. thanks so much for posting!
     
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Tweaks

  1. What a wonderful way to use up ALL the trimmings from preparing veggies. I do make recipe #235039 but never thought of adding onion skins and all those other trimmings from preparing veggies (usually go to compost bin). Great seasoning suggestions too. I made your broth using a variety of potato peelings (lots of them), carrot, broccoli, cauliflower, celery, green and yellow beans, onion skins (lots of them), tomatoes, and mushroom trimmings with bay leaf, peppercorns, thyme and basil for seasonings. I used potato water saved from boiling potatoes instead of the water too. I have always saved odd bits of leftover cooked veggies, gravy, cooked meats, etc. in an empty plastic ice cream container. When it gets full it is time to make soup so I will use your broth and add the leftovers from the ice cream container. I come from a 'waste not want not' era and this is really a good recipe to follow that guideline. Will use this formula recipe all the time. Thanks for posting.
     

RECIPE SUBMITTED BY

<p>Click here to get to chat: http://koach.com/index.php?id=chatlogin&amp;client=web&amp;chan=%23Recipezaar The picture above is of me, but is not a very recent one. It was taken during a very sweet time of my life many years ago. The face is mostly the same, but atlas....everything has aged by about 20 years. I am a little heavier, my hair is not permed anymore and is straight with a slight wave to it, almost to my waist with a touch of grey at my temples. I like the picture because it reflects me and my love of the beautiful Colorado Rocky Mountains near Wellington Lake. I am grandma to Xavier Pryce (aka Zavy) who is 7, his&nbsp;little brother, Rylan James, who is 6 and Baby Wyatt who will be 3 in December.&nbsp; They and their momma are the light of my heart. I enjoy hosting a chat room called #Recipezaar on koach.com, named after the old site.&nbsp; Many people don't know this, but I was Recipezaar's first paid employee when Food.com was Recipezaar and Gay and Troy owned it.&nbsp; I am finding it difficult to spend as much time here as I used to.&nbsp; I am retired now and spend my days watch my grandsons while their momma works.&nbsp; Trying to spend time on the computer with 3 rowdy, hyper little boys in the house can be frustrating and sometimes even impossible unless their momma is home to keep an eye on things while grandma indulges herself on the computer.I wish I was as witty a writer as some of the others here on food.com, but I am afraid that all of my creativity and talent goes into my cooking, but I will give this my best shot anyway. I am a single mother to one 25 year old daughter (Alicia) and grandma to Xavier Pryce, Rylan James and Wyatt William. They all still live with me, so I am pretty much the boy's other parent.&nbsp; Cooking is never a chore for me. I collect cookbooks and am an avid reader of anything but have a particular love of horror novels. Stephen King and Dean Koontz are my favorite authors. Although I have degree in office management and graduated with a 3.8 GPA, I must be Food's worst spelling member so please excuse me if you notice it in my posts and if you notice it in my recipes, then my thanks in advance for editing the recipe to be spelled correctly if you have done so. My screen name is pretty simple and easy to remember, but sometimes people do ask me why it says Karen from Colorado instead of Karen from California. It used to be Karen IN Colorado until I moved here to Southern California to be near my sister, Morti, after our parent's deaths in 1996 and 97 and the loss of my job in Colorado in 2002. I tried Karen In California after moving, but it just didn't seem like me so I changed it to Karen FROM Colorado which will always be home to me no matter where my address is at the time. I was born there and will always love that bright and beautiful state. Especially my beloved Rocky Mountains where I spent so much of my time while living there all of my life. If you find yourself using one of my recipes as your dinner tonight, please feel free to change it to suit your own tastes. I will not mind in the least. It is what I would do if the recipe were posted by you. Your ideas might be much better then mine and just might make the recipe even better then I thought it was when I posted it. Please do mention the changes and results in your review even if the change didn't work out like you thought it might. I truly do welcome the feedback and promise not to jump all over you if you make this your practice. All I ask is that you not re-submit my recipe as yours with those changes unless they are major changes. Mind if I ask for an inspired by recipe whatever by Karen From Colorado if you do find yourself changing a recipe so much that it becomes a different dish? I have no secrets, so if there is anything else you wish to know about me, then never feel afraid to ask me. I will let you know if your question is too personal. Most likely the only thing I will not give out to most people is my address, phone number and my last name. My thoughts on controversial threads as a forum host: Often (very often), I would wish to post my thoughts and disgust about certain topics just as many others do in these forums. I, too, have an opinion most times and would love to blast certain people with them despite the fact that my opinion is just one more in a vast sea of opinions. 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Thank you for posting it so that I may experience something new whether in cooking it or in tasting it. You did me the favor by posting the recipe so that I could make it. I have prepared and enjoyed foods that I would never have tried before if people like you had not shared your recipe. You deserve the thanks. Not me for eating it. If I gave you a cup of coffee, you would most likely say thank you. If I said thank you for the thank you, it kind of throws off the whole exchange. I appreciate your for taking the time to view and read my profile. Your taking that time shows an interest in my ideas and in me as a person and I take that as the greatest compliment possible on Food.com. ****************************************************** I didn't have potatoes, so I substituted rice. I didn't have paprika, so I used another spice. I didn't have tomato sauce, I used tomato paste; A whole can, not a half can - I don't believe in waste. A friend gave me the recipe; she said you couldn't beat it. There must be something wrong with her, I couldn't even eat it!</p>
 
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