Dark Turkey Stock
- Total Time
- 2 hours 30 minutes
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- Bones, leftover meat and carcass from a 15-pound turkey
- 2carrots, peeled and cut into chunks
- 1large onion, peeled and quartered
- 1stalk celery, roughly chopped
Preparation
- Step 1
Heat oven to 450 degrees. Place bones, meat and chopped or broken-up carcass in a large roasting pan, and place in the oven. Roast, stirring occasionally, for about 1 hour, or until nicely browned. Don't worry if the meat sticks to the bottom of the pan.
- Step 2
Add chopped vegetables, and roast for about 30 minutes more, stirring once or twice.
- Step 3
Remove roasting pan to stove top, and place it over one or two burners, whichever is more convenient. Turn heat to high, and barely cover the bones with water, about 8 to 10 cups (it's fine if some of the bones poke up out of the water). When water boils, turn heat down so that the liquid simmers.
- Step 4
Cook, stirring occasionally and scraping bottom of pan to loosen any bits of meat, for about 30 minutes. Cool, then strain. Refrigerate, and skim off excess fat. Then, store for up to 3 days in the refrigerator (longer if you bring the stock to a boil every second day), or up to several months in the freezer.
Private Notes
Comments
I agree about the scant vegetables. I just doubled. Also added bay leave, a bit of thyme, and a few peppercorns (stock seems flat without peppercorns).
Worked for me as written. Started with leftovers that were already well roasted, stirred once. Very flavorful stock which became turkey barley soup.
Seriously? 90 mins at 450? My carcass and meat were literally burned to a crisp, and the resulting "stock" with "browned bits" scraped from bottom of tin tasted like charcoal. I chucked that water, simmered the bones and (charred) veg in fresh water for 30 mins, and ended up with something marginally potable which I had to spike with chicken bouillon. Time-consuming and a major fail for me. I did end up with excellent soup, but it was despite, not due to, this recipe.
Time consuming, but it makes a fantastic stock. Also added peppercorns and bay leaf, plus I used chicken stock.
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