Today more than ever wise grocery shopping is a must.
One of the best values I have found is using 100% of a Costco rotisserie chicken. After you have eaten all you enjoy why not make chicken stock? The below is what I do and you can do it too! One of the many ways to save your money.
Enjoy!
Enjoy!
I clean the chicken of almost all the fat. We don’t eat the legs so I leave the legs and wings on it. (You can still use the carcass if you clean it better than I do). It’s those ribs and bones that make an awesome stock.
My recipe in my words.
Note: after refrigerating overnight you will notice the stock will be gelled slightly.
Immerse the chicken in a pot of cold water. I add lots of celery tops and some celery stalks too, maybe two carrots some salt and dried parsley (if fresh I would add it). When it comes to a boil and turn it down and let it cook for 2 hours or more. I keep push ing the chicken down and turning it over. I leave a lid tilted on it.
When it is room temperature I remove the carcass and There is usually enough chicken on the carcass to pull off and add to the soup. I strain the broth.
I allow it to cool completely before I refrigerate it.
I haven’t used a bay leave to it but since reading Barbara’s post I would consider adding g a bay leaf to the original recipe I mentioned. Hope this helps😘
I recently used a larger pot and used two carcasses. After I strained it I allowed it to stay in refrigerator overnight.
I’ve made two pots of vegetable soup with it and it was delicious. Below is vegetable soup.
I also froze 2 quarts so when I want to make soup again. If needed after frozen I wouldn’t hesitate to add some canned chicken broth or better than bouillon to the frozen one if it needed it.