Apr 23, 2007

Bonding with Stock... Recipe Tuesday

Karl Elvis mentioned making stock. And I like making stock. It's a great base, and when you make it yourself, you know just what went into it so you've got control over the flavors that are or aren't added. There's nothing I just plain dislike as much as I dislike using a mediocre stock. Unfortunately, most canned stocks are just that, so I'm going to be making stock next week.

Here's the recipe I'm going to be using

Basic Beef Stock

5 pounds bare rendering bones, sawed into 2" pieces (you can also use bones from steaks or trimmings from roasts, whatever you happen to have. You can request bones from the butcher at your local friendly butcher shop [we've got one in town], or just ask at the local grocery. They should be cheap)
1 pound carrots, rough chopped into 1/2" pieces
3 yellow onions, rough chopped
1 pound celery, rough chopped

Roast your bones. Now, no bad jokes. Set the oven to 400, place the bones down on a pan that you've put foil into, roast them until they're toasted brown, but not black. Should take about 1/2 an hour to 1 hour, and you flip it while roasting so you get a good overall color.
Put the roasted bones into the bottom of a big soup or stock pot. Cover with enough water so the bones are completely submerged by at least an inch. Bring to a boil. Skim the foam. Drop the heat to medium, throw in the veggies. Let this simmer for at least 6 hours, with 12 hours being preferred.
If you've got a crock pot, put the bones in the bottom of the crock pot, add water to cover. Set to 'High' for 1 hour. At the end of 1 hour, skim any foam, pour in the veggies and fill the pot with water. Set it on 'Low' and let it go for a full 24 hours.
At the end of the cook time, let it cool. Float some bags of ice in it, or set it into an ice chest filled with ice. Don't just set it in the fridge, you'll heat everything in there up. Get it cooled down* your favorite way. Strain it.
When you're done cooling and straining, put it into freezer containers, ice cube trays (2 or 3 stock cubes and I say you have a pan sauce!) bags, whatever you need to do. It'll keep in the freezer for 6 months, and it's a heck of a lot cheaper than buying stock.
You can also do a bit of what I've been known to do. I'll boil down the stock with the veggies in it for a good long while, get it really concentrated. Strain and freeze above, but it's super-concentrated. Then you just have to pull out an ice cube of it, add 2 cups of water and voila! Stock that doesn't take up nearly as much freezer room.

*Just as an aside, I have been thinking of this. The little hand-held blenders have taken off like hotcakes. They should make a 'cooler' about that same size, with a refrigerated coil encased in something that's foodsafe. Easy cool down for leftovers and soups and such. Someone should get on that. There. A free invention for someone.

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