Recipe

Chicken Stock with Mexican Twist

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Chicken Stock with Mexican Twist

Photo by ChezSuzanne

  • This recipe was entered in the contest for Your Best Chicken Broth
  • A&M's Testing Notes: ChezSuzanne's unique extra ingredients yielded a delicious stock; the orange added a bright note without shouting citrus, and chipotle and serrano brought a discernible back heat without being...

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  • Chef

    ChezSuzanne's Notes: I used to make chicken stock most weekends to use for the following week but got out of the habit several months ago, so this contest has been a great motivator to get back to basics. The...

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Serves 6 quarts

  1. Wash the chicken pieces well to remove any blood. Heat up the oil in the pot you will use to make your broth. Brown the chicken pieces well taking care not to burn. Don't crowd the pieces or you'll end up doing more steaming than browning, so do this in shifts, removing chicken pieces as they complete browning on all sides.

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  2. Pour out any fat from the pot and lightly wipe with a paper towel. Fill the pot with water and put in the browned chicken pieces. Bring to a gentle simmer, removing any foam that occurs with a spoon. Once the foaming stops, add all the veggies, herbs and peppers.

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  3. Simmer on low heat to keep the broth at barely a simmer for about 3 hours.

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  4. I create an ice bath in a small sink I have in my kitchen by putting a lot of ice in the sink and placing an empty pot in it. Strain the broth into the pot using a chinois strainer, pushing the solids into the sides and bottom of the strainer to get all the flavor packed broth out.

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  5. Discard the cooked chicken parts and veggies, salt the ice in the ice bath and add water to the ice to chill the soup as quickly as possible. I store the soup in 1 quart ziplok baggies that I stack on a large plate in my freezer and thaw as needed through the week.

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  6. If you don't want the spicy flavor to be added, just follow this recipe and omit the peppers. For an even more gentle flavor, omit the peppercorns.

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5 Comments on Chicken Stock with Mexican Twist

Img_0336 Reply

Wanted you to know the editors left out my comment about thoroughly drying the chicken pieces after washing them if you go with the stove top browning method. Essential to add to your posted recipe if you want less splatter & better browning. But honestly, the oven is the way to go as you can read by all the other entries that use this method. So happy I could help with another success for you in food52. Wish I could have been at the get together recently in the bay area; I'm just a little far away, but with advance notice it's do-able in the future! Mangia Bene!

Chocolate_peppermint_truffle_cookies_032 Reply

AntoniaJames is planning another potluck for mid to late April as per her recent post on the potluck link. It would be great if you could come!! And yes, on your comment I agree. I had left that out. It is indeed essential to have completely dry chicken before browning from both a splattering perspective and also you will not get quite the same browning effect on the skin. I'm trying roasting next time.

186003_1004761561_1198459_n Reply

I have admitted that I am a lazy cook...so... could I use a roasted supermarket chicken instead of sauteeing a chicken. I know, I know...I hate it when someone starts a sentence with "can I change... "

Chocolate_peppermint_truffle_cookies_032 Reply

I know for a fact that you can do it this way as I've done this myself a couple times. I still browned it in the pan for a bit to get it really nice a brown with just a little oil. I found that if I didn't do that the chicken flavor (for me) wasn't in balance with the dried chipotle pepper. I was looking for a broth that was clearly still a chicken broth with a hint of chipotle, not the other way around. Doing it this way is faster overall too for days we ALL feel lazy :-)

Wedding_pictures_162 Reply

This sounds great, and I love your freezing idea.

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