Happy Wednesday...and happy ALMOST Thanksgiving!
I hope not many of you are reading this here in the US, because that would mean you're off enjoying your Thanksgiving vacation :) I know I'm enjoying my break in sunny Arizona!
BUT...
I wanted to take a break from my break to remind you of this savings tip brough to you way back HERE.
I believe one huge part of living a fun, cheap, or free lifestyle is finding creative ways to reuse things. Did you know your turkey carcass can give you enough stock to last you for months? It's true!
Enjoy :)
How to make your own stock from a turkey carcass
I posted THIS post around Thanksgiving, but it's time to add more details. I had never thought about saving my chicken or turkey carcasses to make stock until I watched my MIL do it. Turns out, it's a great money saver and a great way to use every literal part of your bird! I found THIS article that explains in detail how to do this. Enjoy the pictures below, taken at my MIL's house at Thanksgiving.
After cooking a turkey for Thanksgiving or Christmas, you'll find yourself with a leftover carcass.
This can be turned into literally gallons of delicious homemade turkey stock that can be reduced
or frozen and used for months afterwards. Learn how to cook sensational turkey stock from scratch
using the bones and turkey carcass.
This can be turned into literally gallons of delicious homemade turkey stock that can be reduced
or frozen and used for months afterwards. Learn how to cook sensational turkey stock from scratch
using the bones and turkey carcass.
Instructions
Things You'll Need:
- Big stainless steel or ceramic soup pot
- Fine mesh strainer
- Big stainless steel bowl or another big pot
- Ice cubes
- Oven mitts
- Freezer safe food containers
- 1. Roast the turkey rather than fry it, if possible. Roasted turkey has an incredible flavor when turned into stock.
2. When serving the turkey, take most of the meat off the bones (including the meat on the leg and wings). Serve the meat, but reserve the bones, cartilage and skin, along with the carcass, for the stock. See Tips for a tip about making stock with turkey meat.
7. Turn the heat down low enough to sustain a gentle simmer while the lid is partially on. Simmer, partially covered, for two hours or longer. (You can cook the stock overnight if you wish. Just make sure you turn down the heat and cover the stock pot tightly so it doesn't lose too much water. Check once after about half an hour to make sure it's not boiling.)
8. Fill a sink full of ice cubes and water a few inches high. This is to cool the stock rapidly once it's done. Rapid cooling helps assure that bacteria doesn't contaminate the stock as it might if it slowly cooled.
9. Prop a wire mesh strainer or fine mesh sieve securely over a large stainless steel bowl or another large pot, or have another adult hold it. With a ladle or a stainless steel measuring cup, pour cups of the broth slowly through the strainer. This is safer than pouring that huge pot all at once through the strainer.
10. Wearing oven mitts, put the bowl carefully in the sink of ice water. Stir the stock around for a few minutes. Let it rest for another ten minutes or so.
11. When the turkey stock is lukewarm, use immediately or pour it into freezer safe food containers and freeze. Or reduce the stock with salt and refrigerate. If you prefer a low-fat stock, stick the stock, still in the bowl, into the refrigerator and skim the layer of fat off the next day.
12. If you do cook the stock for only two hours, there is still more goodness to be gotten from the bones and carcass. Wash the pot out and refill it with stock and water, and repeat the process.
13. Use the stock in soups, gravies, and turkey pot pie, seasoning the stock as the recipes request.

