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Wednesday, November 27, 2024 at 12:27 AM

Making your own broth is not as weird as it sounds

Making your own broth is not as weird as it sounds
Beef stew made with homemade beef stock is much healthier than versions made with store-bought stock, which is loaded with sodium.

By Kara Kimbrough

 

  The following two sentences by Andrew Zimmern, acclaimed TV chef and creator of many other culinary-related endeavors caused me to backtrack and reread it: 

  “I don't think there is a more soul satisfying meal than Swedish meatballs with mashed potatoes smothered in homemade beef gravy. I like to brown the meatballs in butter first, before finishing them in the oven with a little chicken stock so they stay nice and moist.”

   Come on…if that doesn’t immediately conjure up a vision of a plate of comfort food at its finest, nothing will. 

    I met or at least, attended an event at which Zimmern was hosting on the Gulf Coast several years ago. All I remember is that he and his film crew set up a seafood boil on the beach as I and a group of journalists watched as he was filmed for a TV special.  Afterwards, we were invited to sit under a tent and dine on the dinner he created. I think fried crabs were involved, but I can't be sure. 

   After that one brush with the famous chef, I haven’t followed his career closely, but his statement about meatballs, mashed potatoes and gravy grabbed and held my attention.

   Zimmern’s lengthy recipe for the meal included instructions on how to make savory beef gravy. I didn’t  make the dishes, which included chicken and beef broth. However, but it did send me in another direction and that was to make my own healthy broths.

    This is not a new idea. I’ve often hesitated to use the cartons of chicken and beef broth sold in the supermarket due to the high sodium content of both. Not to mention, the numerous questions that always popped in my mind, mainly about the way the broths were collected in the first place.

    I’m sure (or at least hope) this isn’t the case, but visions of vats of broth filled with assorted chicken and cow bones always danced in my head as I pour the commercialized broth in soups, stews and other dishes requiring the addition of broth.

    I found several recipes for homemade broth – most of them rather lengthy. I settled on a happy medium by reducing some of the ingredients and using only those that could be recycled into other dishes.

   To make chicken broth, I boiled several chicken breasts (recipes call for chicken pieces with bones, but I chose not to use those) in a large stockpot along with stalks of celery, chunks of white onion and a few carrots. After seasoning the water with whole peppercorns, dried thyme and rosemary, I let it boil for 3-4 hours (you can boil longer) until the chicken was done and the vegetables were tender. 

    Using a few cups of the broth, the now-cooked chopped chicken and vegetables and the addition of egg noodles, I had the makings of a satisfying chicken noodle soup. Even better, there was plenty of leftover chicken broth to freeze in individuals bags for later use.

    Beef broth was a little trickier, as most recipes call for “meaty stock bones cut to expose marrow.” My queasy stomach didn’t like the sound of that, so I substituted short ribs, which I boiled, also for 3-4 hours, with the same ingredients used for chicken broth. To season the broth, I used oregano, parsley and thyme. A rick beef stew was the end result of this endeavor.

    Making your own broth might seem a little extreme, but knowing the sodium content is much lower than anything you can buy in the supermarket easily makes up for the time spent making it. Plus, when you can recycle the ingredients into a hearty meal – and dispel and visions of bones and marrow – I promise it’s worth the effort.

 

Easy Crockpot Beef Stew

2 pounds beef stew meat, cut into small pieces

¼ cup all-purpose flour

½ teaspoon salt (substitute Mrs. Dash if you’d like)

½ teaspoon ground black pepper

1 ½ cups beef broth (make it yourself if you have time!)

4 regular carrots, roughly chopped or 8-10 baby carrots

3 medium potatoes, diced or half-bag of country-style hash browns (not shredded)

1 medium onion, chopped

1 stalk celery, chopped

1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce

½ teaspoon minced garlic

1 bay leaf

     Use slow cooker liner or spray bottom with non-stick spray. Place meat in slow cooker, then mix flour, salt and pepper together in a small bowl. Coat meat with flour/seasoning mixture.

    Add broth, carrots, potatoes, onion, celery, Worcestershire sauce, garlic, and bay leave; stir to combine.

    If you didn’t boil beef and vegetables to make stock, cover and cook on low for 8 hours or on high for 4 hours. If you did use the ingredients beforehand to make stock, the beef and vegetables are already cooked, so only cook on high around 1-2 hours, checking often to see if meat is completely tender and ready to eat.

Kara Kimbrough is a food and travel writer from Mississippi. Email her at [email protected].


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Comments

L Crittenden 10/28/2022 01:34 AM
I find this article and its headline, "making broth is not as weird as it sounds", very strange, and frankly, a bit, well, weird. I'm sorry. But who, at least in the US, thinks making broth is weird? It might be considered fussier or more time consuming than using premade broth from the store, though better quality, but I literally have never, in 64 years, met anyone who thought making broth from bones and scraps was weird. It's normal. It's been done for centuries, and still is, for the same reasons throughout history: it's economical, because it uses parts of animals and vegetables that are usually wasted, and because it's far healthier than using commercial broth. Not to mention it tastes far better! Even the people I've met who don't always make broth completely from scratch, make it from store bought base, a paste-like substance that gives a better flavor than bouillon cubes. Your techniques for making broth are fine, but you thinking making broth is weird, is kind of weird.