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Re: Stock Question

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Therese, when we make stock at our house, we regularly leave it for hours at

a time, at room temperature-- generally the pot will sit on the stove for a

few days, turned on low when we are home, until it is eventually made into

soup and eaten, or frozen. I wouldn't worry about it, as long as you get it

hot again.

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  • 1 year later...

On 1/30/07, Marc <wmupton@...> wrote:

> so apparently i have a defective range.. I woke up this morning to my

> chicken stock at a hard boil for at least an hour or two maybe more

> after having it simmer for 10 hours or so.

> Is the stock still good to eat???

I would use it. It might not gel as well as usual and it might be

higher in free glutamate, which could be a drawback if your very

sensitive, but I have accidentally overboiled my stock a number of

times in the past and never considered it a reason not to use it.

Also, NT has recipes for reduction sauces which use probably a lot

more boiling than what happened to your stock.

Chris

--

The Truth About Cholesterol

Find Out What Your Doctor Isn't Telling You:

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> > so apparently i have a defective range.. I woke up this morning

to my

> > chicken stock at a hard boil for at least an hour or two maybe

more

> > after having it simmer for 10 hours or so.

>

> > Is the stock still good to eat???

>

> I would use it. It might not gel as well as usual and it might be

> higher in free glutamate, which could be a drawback if your very

> sensitive, but I have accidentally overboiled my stock a number of

> times in the past and never considered it a reason not to use it.

> Also, NT has recipes for reduction sauces which use probably a lot

> more boiling than what happened to your stock.

>

> Chris

From a culinary perspective, when you boil stock, you emulsify the

fats in the liquid, making a cloudier, fatty, and less palatable

finished product. A stock sauce tastes better if the stock has less

fat and then it is finished with butter. To clarify it more, you can

cook egg whites in the finished stock, and remove them. You will see

how the cooked protein of the egg white grabs impurities in the

stock, and it's a good use for leftover egg whites if you eat raw

yolks. Even better, you can chill the stock and scrape off the fat

(schmaltz is good) and then heat the stock and clarify. The egg

whites also help remove bone particles if on occaision you have added

too much acid and cooked too long, until the bones descintigrate.

Desh

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  • 3 years later...

I would definitely give it another round. If you wanted to wait, you could put

it in a freezer bag and add some more bones to it as you collect them. If you

want to keep going, don't overdo the water. Just make a small batch.

Kathy

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I always save the chicken bones and freeze them until I have enough to make a

stock. Bones makes a delicious and healthy stock, but be sure to add vinegar to

the water to help break the bones down so you can get all of the wonderful

minerals and nutrients from them. from Farm On Wheels

(http://www.farmonwheels.net/) is actually the one who first told me that people

never through their bones away, but would instead make stock from them. If you

make a stock just from bones, plus carrots, onion and celery, I'd be sure to let

it cook for 24 hours so the bones have a good amount of time to break down. When

I make my stock by the time it's done most of my bones will easily break apart

in my hands and I'll have a very dark, rich broth leftover.

Therese Asmus

www.artistta.blogspot.com

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