Consomme
- Total Time
- 7 hours, plus overnight refrigeration
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 4 to 5pounds beef bones (shin, neck o knuckle)
- 2pounds stewing beef, cubed
- 1½pounds stewing veal, cubed (or a veal knuckle bone)
- 2pounds uncooked chicken parts (backs, necks, wings or drumsticks)
- 4leeks
- 1large onion, studded with 2 whole cloves
- 1cup diced turnip
- 1cup diced carrot
- 2ribs celery, chopped coarse
- 1bay leaf, crumbled
- 1teaspoon thyme
- ½teaspoon savory
- ¼teaspoon blade mace
- 2teaspoons salt
- 10whole peppercorns
- 3½ to 4quarts water (to cover barely)
- 1pound ground lean beef
- 3egg whites
- 1leek, shredded
- 1carrot, shredded
- 3quarts stock from preceding recipe
- 1teaspoon dried thyme
To Clarify the Consomme
Preparation
To Clarify the Consomme
- Step 1
Preheat oven to 400 degrees.
- Step 2
Put bones and meat in large baking pan and roast for 1½ to 2 hours, or until nicely browned.
- Step 3
Put vegetables and seasonings into large stockpot. Add browned meat and bones. Rinse baking pan several times with some of water, scraping to loosen all browning, and add rinsings and remaining water to stockpot.
- Step 4
Bring stock to boil slowly, reduce heat and simmer, covered, for 3½ hours.
- Step 5
Strain broth through double cheesecloth or bouillon strainer and refrigerate overnight. Residual meats, if combined with fresh vegetables in aggressively seasoned sauce -with, say, plenty of Madeira and Worchestershire sauce - will make quite good pot pies for freezing.
- Step 6
Mix first 4 ingredients thoroughly and stir into cold stock.
- Step 7
Bring stock slowly to boiling point, stirring frequently. Do not let it come to full boil; simmer very gently, uncovered, for 40 minutes. Add thyme and simmer 10 minutes more. Remove from heat, allow to settle and cool for 10 minutes and strain through double cheesecloth or bouillon strainer. (The residual solids can be used for pet food.)
- Step 8
Reheat clarified consomme, check for salt, and serve piping hot in demitasses or small bouillon cups.
Private Notes
Comments
The concomme turned out amazing, but you absolutely cannot use the residual solids as pet food - leeks, even in small quantities, can be poisonous for dogs.
Why have three years passed, and still these questions remain unanswered?
@Edmund M In reply to myself, I see my comment was unfair—the answers are in the recipe. For clarification on the second question, the ground beef is mixed with the egg whites, leek and carrot in step six.
How long do you cook the stock?
Does the ground beef go in the oven with the 'bones.'. A novice.
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