Wednesday, May 25, 2011

How I Boil a Chicken

I've mentioned in recipes before about how I use meat from when I boil a chicken (in like curries, etc.), but I've never actually told you what I do to boil a chicken.

So, here is what I do...

1) At about 8:00 in the EVENING, I put a chicken in a pot and add 4 quarts of water and a splash of vinegar.




















2) I bring it to a boil. It will start to foam, and I will scoop off the foam. Then, I will cover it (somewhat ajar) and let it simmer OVERNIGHT.




















3) When I wake up in the morning, I drain the broth into another pot.




















4) I put that pot of broth in the fridge and let it sit there for the ENTIRE DAY.




















5) With the chicken, I dump it from the pot onto a plate.




















6) Then I separate the bone / scraps from the meat. I throw the bones / scraps away.




















7) I separate the chicken meat into four sections and put it on tin foil.




















8) I wrap them up and put them in the freezer and then take them out whenever I need them.




















9) Now, back to the broth. At the END OF THE DAY (or into the next day if I forget about it or don't feel like doing it at night), I take the broth out of the fridge. The fat will be hardened at the top. I scrape the fat off and throw it in the garbage.




















10) Then, I pour the broth into jars, being careful not to overfill the jars (because I have overfilled the jars many, many times before and they will BREAK when frozen if they are overfilled. Believe me. I know.). So, for a jar that holds 4 cups, I will generally fill it with only 2 cups of broth. I put them in the freezer as well and take them out when needed. I yield around 3 quarts (12 cups) of broth.




















Pretty good deal for the price of one chicken.

10 comments:

Anonymous said...

Have you ever tried baking the chicken first? Then you can have a yummy roasted chicken meal, still save the extra meat, and then boil the carcass with an onion, celery stalk, and carrot to make stock. A baked chicken is so much prettier than a boiled one... I will try it your way, though. Thanks for the info and pictures!

Goofy Mama said...

No, I haven't done it that way. I'm just following how Sally Fallon does it in Nourishing Traditions.

Nicole said...

I also boil whole chickens almost just as you do but when i boil i add onion and celery to the pot. I cant tell that the chicken tastes any different but the stock is really good with the added flavors! :D

Anonymous said...

I think you're overcookIng your bird!

http://www.thesustainablekitchen.com/skblog/?p=1558

Remember Tonya the Chef from playgroup? Mother to Joaquin?  She taught me how to cook a chicken, very similar but different cooking duration.

1. Rinse bird; put in pot covered w cold water.

2. Bring to almost boil. Cook for 15 min or so (remove grossness/foam)

3. Turn off heat & cover pot. Chx cooked thru in 1 hr or less.

4. Use chx meat and throw bones & a glug of vinegar back into pot.

5. Gently cook BELOW a simmer for 1-4 hours.

This yields a gelatinous broth--it is liquid when I put in fridge and next AM I scrape off the fat (and save--very norshing trad) and it is jello-y.

Also: crock pot chx is awesome/e-z and is a bit "overcooking" of a chxbut so easy.

1. Rinse bird. Salt bird. Put breast-side down in crock pot.

2. Cook on HIGH 1 hour. Then switch to LOW 2-3 hours.

3. Eat chx. Pour liquid gold into container & refrigerate. Very thick solid jello broth results.

Anyway--thanks for sharing! Love your pix.  Do a taste test and see if less cook time is better or worse, or how texture is affected.

Goofy Mama said...

Strabby - I make the chicken according to what Sally Fallon does in Nourishing Traditions (and she says to simmer the bird for 6-24 hours!). And the reason she does this, I imagine but I'm not sure on this because she never actually says WHY she does it this way, is for getting the optimal nutrients into the broth. And I honestly never noticed it tasting bad/overdone. It just tastes like chicken.

But here's a question: Why do you save the fat that you scrape off? What do you use it for?

Anonymous said...

If you're tight on freezer space, you can also put your chicken broth in a gallon freezer bag. Lay flat in the freezer (like on a cookie sheet) for an hour or two, and then stuff it in where you will.

Lisa said...

i used to follow sally's recs, but i thought the chicken was pretty darn dry. so now i bake the chicken first, take off meat, and throw bones in w/ water/vinegar, onions, carrots, celery. i actually cook the broth for about 48 hours. mostly because i am lazy and dread the clean up, but i have also read that it makes a super nutrient dense broth.

Anonymous said...

I bake the bird on low heat (250 for several hours) because of what Dr. Mercola says about cooked protein (causes cancer when overcooked, and most of it is). Then I remove the meat, saving the carcass for cooking broth. I make the broth similar to how you make yours, but I add onion and sea salt, too. I do not discard the fat. Sometimes the fat does gross me out, though. I have been adding chicken feet or extra necks to the broth, and this makes it extremely gelatinous.

Anonymous said...

I freeze my broth in plastic containers that fot neatly together (gladware or something like that) and can fill all the way to the top. I know exactly how much is in each container, so it is easy to take out and use for recipes. I put the broth in the containers cold, so that the plastic does not seep into the broth, then straight into the freezer.

This is such an interesting conversation--I love hearing how everyone goes about this process!

Anonymous said...

One more comment! America's Test Kitchen has an awesome recipe for boiling chicken, and it is almost like boiling eggs--putting the chicken in the water after you've turned off the boil, then checking the temp with a thermometer and pulling it out at a certain temp (165, I think). Can't remember the exact details, but chicken is extremely moist and delicious. They also did a taste test on broth recipes and found that onion gives all the flavor to broth and all the other vegetables are unnecessary for flavor. I am sure they add nutrition, but personally, I would rather eat the carrots and celery than overcook them in my broth.

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