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What Is Meat & poultry stock and How Can I Use It?

Here's everything worth knowing about meat & poultry stock and how to pick it, what it is, how to store it, and what to use instead, plus 4 recipes to cook tonight.

Key Points

  • Meat and poultry stocks are bone-based and gelatin-rich, simmered for hours to give sauces and braises body.
  • Collagen from joints and cartilage breaks down into the gelatin that makes a stock set and cling.
  • Roast bones first for a deep brown stock; skip roasting for a pale, clean white one.
  • Chicken and turkey are mild all-rounders; beef and veal go deeper; lamb and game stay assertive.
  • Chill the finished stock and lift off the solid fat cap to defat it easily.

What is meat & poultry stock?

Meat and poultry stock is the family of stocks built on the bones of land animals: beef, veal, chicken, turkey, pork, lamb, duck, and game. These are the deep, gelatin-rich stocks that give body to gravies, braises, risottos, and almost any soup that wants a backbone.

They share one trait that sets them apart from the lighter stocks. They simmer for hours, because that is how long it takes to pull collagen out of bone.

For the basics that apply to every stock here, including the stock vs broth line and why you never hard-boil it, start with the parent page. This page is about what makes the meat and poultry group its own thing.

What Gives These Stocks Their Body

The body comes from collagen. Joints, knuckles, feet, necks, and any bone heavy in cartilage release the most, breaking down over a long simmer into gelatin. That gelatin is the difference between a sauce that clings and one that runs off the spoon.

Animal matters too. Chicken and turkey give a clean, mild stock that goes with anything, while beef and veal run deeper and meatier. Pork sits in between, a little sweet and fatty.

The strong corner belongs to lamb, duck, and game, all rich and unmistakable. Save those for dishes that actually want that flavor instead of a neutral base.

White Stock vs Brown Stock

The big technique choice is whether to roast the bones first. Skip the roasting and you get a white stock: pale, clean, gently flavored, the right base when you do not want a browned taste to take over. Most chicken stock is made this way.

Roast the bones and vegetables until deep brown first, and you get a brown stock. The browning builds color and a roasted depth that carries a beef gravy. A real Homemade Onion Soup wants that brown beef stock under it.

The two big ones in this family are beef stock and chicken stock. Between them they cover most of what a home kitchen needs.

Simmer Times by Animal

Bigger, denser bones take longer to give up their collagen, so match the time to the animal. Chicken and turkey are done in about 4 to 6 hours.

Beef and veal bones want 6 to 8 hours or more to fully break down, and pork, lamb, duck, and game land in that same long range.

Hold a bare simmer the whole time, with the surface just shivering, and skim the foam and fat off the top. A hard boil churns the fat back in and turns the stock cloudy and greasy. That is the most common way home cooks ruin an otherwise good pot.

A Shepherds Pie or a braise like Peking Lamb with Leeks shows where these richer stocks earn their keep.

Choosing Among Them

For an all-purpose base, reach for chicken or turkey stock. It is mild enough to disappear into a sauce or a grain without fighting the other flavors, which is why it is the workhorse of most kitchens.

When you want the dish to taste deep and meaty, go to beef or veal, roasted brown. For a lamb stew or a game ragu, match the stock to the meat so the flavors pull together.

The mismatch to avoid is a strong lamb or game stock under a delicate dish, where it simply takes over.

Buying and Storing

For the full storage and shelf-life rundown, see the stock page, since it is the same across the whole family. In short, homemade keeps about 4 to 5 days refrigerated and freezes for up to 6 months, and cartons last months sealed but only a few days once opened.

One note specific to these richer stocks: they carry more fat than a vegetable or fish stock. Chill the stock and the fat sets into a solid cap on top that lifts off in one piece, the easiest way to defat before you use or freeze it.

Types of meat & poultry stock

Specific kinds of meat & poultry stock and the recipes that use them.

chicken stock

Chicken stock

Chicken stock is the savory liquid you get by simmering chicken bones and aromatic vegetables in water until they give up their flavor and body. It is the most-reached-for stock in any kitchen, and on this site it shows up in close to 3,000 recipes.

Soups, risottos, pan sauces, braises, a pot of plain rice: chicken stock is the quiet backbone under most of them.

What makes it the workhorse is balance. It tastes clearly of chicken without shouting, so it slips into almost any dish without taking over. A good batch sets to a soft jelly in the fridge, the visible sign that you pulled enough gelatin out of the bones.

For how stock differs from broth in general, and why you never let a stockpot hit a rolling boil, see the parent stock page. This page is about what makes the chicken version worth doing.

What Goes in the Pot

Bones do the work here. A leftover roast carcass is the classic starting point, but the parts richest in collagen give you the most body: backs, necks, and wings.

Want a stock that sets like firm jelly? Add a few chicken feet. They are almost pure skin and cartilage over bone, which is exactly the connective tissue that turns into gelatin.

Raw bones make a cleaner, fresher stock than a stripped carcass alone. Many cooks use both: the carcass for thrift, a pound of wings or backs for richness.

Round it out with a coarse mirepoix, plus a bay leaf and a handful of parsley stems. Figure roughly two parts onion to one each of carrot and celery, all in big rough chunks. The vegetables only need to give up flavor, so they never have to look pretty.

Roast First, or Not

Most chicken stock is left pale, sometimes called white stock. You drop everything in the pot raw, which gives a light color and a clean, neutral taste that goes anywhere.

Roast the bones and vegetables first and you get brown chicken stock: deeper, nuttier, a little sweeter from the browning. It is worth the extra half hour when the stock is the main event, like a poultry French onion soup or a serious gravy.

For everyday cooking, pale stock is the sensible default.

Simmering It Down

Bring the pot up slowly and never let it boil hard. A hard boil churns the fat and fine particles back into the liquid and turns it cloudy and greasy. Hold it at a bare simmer, just a few bubbles breaking the surface.

In the first twenty minutes a gray foam rises. Skim it off. That foam is coagulated protein, and skimming it early is the difference between a clean stock and a muddy one.

Chicken stock does not need the marathon time that beef bones do. Two to four hours pulls plenty of flavor and gelatin. Past about five hours the return drops off and the taste can go flat.

Strain it, then chill it. The fat rises and sets into a firm cap you can lift off in one piece. That golden fat is schmaltz, and it is too good to throw out. Save it to roast potatoes or to start your next pot of soup.

You can taste what good stock does in a long braise like Coq Au Vin à la Slow Cooker, or carrying a whole meal in Leftover Chicken & Dumpling Casserole. It even forms the base of a white chili like Neiman Marcus Chili Blanco.

Stock Versus Broth, Chicken Edition

People use the two words loosely, and for chicken the line is especially blurry.

Stock leans on bones, so it is richer in gelatin and usually left unsalted to stay flexible. Broth leans on meat, so it comes out thinner and gets seasoned for sipping on its own. For cooking, unsalted stock gives you the most control: you salt the finished dish, not the stock.

Buying and Storing

If you buy it, reach for cartons labeled stock rather than broth when you want body, and choose low-sodium or unsalted so a reduction does not turn salty. Bouillon cubes and paste bases work in a pinch but run salty and one-note, so go easy.

Homemade keeps about four days in the fridge. For longer storage, freeze it.

Pour cooled stock into freezer bags laid flat, or into an ice cube tray for small amounts you can drop straight into a hot pan. Frozen stock holds its quality for around three months. Leave headroom in any container, since the liquid expands as it freezes.

beef stock

Beef stock

Beef stock is the deep, savory liquid you get by simmering beef bones and aromatic vegetables in water for hours until they give up their flavor and body. It is darker and far more assertive than chicken stock.

It is the base that makes a pot roast or a pan gravy taste like it took all day. Almost all good beef stock is brown stock: you roast the bones first, and that browning is where the color and the deep, meaty flavor come from.

For how stock differs from broth, and why you keep the pot below a boil, see the parent stock page. Here we focus on what beef bones in particular need.

Best Bones and Cuts

You want bones full of connective tissue and marrow. Knuckle and joint bones are heavy in collagen, which breaks down into the gelatin that gives stock its body.

Marrow bones add richness, and a piece or two of oxtail brings both meat and gelatin in one cut.

A few meaty bones matter as much as the marrow. A length of shin or a couple of short ribs carries actual beef flavor that pure marrow bones lack. The classic move is a mix: knuckles for body, oxtail or shin for taste.

If you can find them, a couple of veal bones smooth the whole pot out. Veal is milder and even richer in collagen than mature beef.

Roast for Color

This is the step that separates beef stock from a gray, weak broth.

Spread the bones in a roasting pan and roast at 450°F (230°C) until they are well browned, about 45 minutes. Add the chopped vegetables partway through so they color too. A spoonful of tomato paste smeared on near the end deepens the color and adds a quiet background savoriness.

Then deglaze. Pour off the fat, set the pan over a burner, splash in water or wine, and scrape up every brown bit stuck to the bottom. Those stuck bits are pure flavor, so tip them and the scrapings into the stockpot.

The Long Simmer

Beef bones are dense and need real time. Bring the pot up slowly, skim the foam that rises in the first half hour, then settle it to a bare simmer.

Plan on six to eight hours, longer if you can. The collagen in those big joints is slow to melt, and a stock pulled at three hours will taste thin and watery next to one that ran all afternoon.

Strain it and chill it overnight. The fat sets into a hard cap you lift off in one piece, and underneath, a good beef stock will be dark and wobble like jelly when cold.

That depth is what carries Applebee's Baked French Onion Soup, where the stock is most of the flavor. It is also the braising liquid behind Hearty Stovetop Beef Stew and Braised Short Ribs for Two.

Buying What You Cannot Make

Store beef stock rarely matches homemade, since most cartons are thin and lightly colored.

Choose one labeled stock rather than broth, go for low-sodium so you can reduce it, and expect to boost it. A splash of soy or a spoon of tomato paste plus a hard reduction will give a weak carton more backbone.

Better-than-bouillon style concentrated bases beat thin cartons for flavor per dollar, though they run salty. Glace de viande, a heavily reduced stock sold as a paste, is the most intense option of all and a little goes a long way.

Storing It

Homemade beef stock keeps about four to five days in the fridge, a touch longer than poultry stock because it is so dense.

Freeze the rest. Bags laid flat thaw fast, and stock frozen into cubes drops straight into a pan to finish a sauce. It holds well for around three months.

Reduce a batch hard before freezing and you get little pucks of concentrate that take up almost no room and rebuild into a quick gravy in minutes.

Turkey stock

Turkey stock is the savory liquid you get by simmering a turkey carcass and aromatic vegetables in water until the bones give up their flavor and body.

For most cooks it is a once-a-year project: the stripped frame from the holiday bird, turned into the base for soup and gravy instead of going in the trash.

It tastes like a richer, slightly gamier chicken stock. The bigger bones and the roasted skin give it more body and a deeper, more savory edge than a bird that went into the pot raw.

For the general stock rules, including the no-hard-boil one, see the parent stock page. This page is about putting that holiday carcass to work.

From Carcass to Pot

The morning after the feast, break the picked-over carcass into a few pieces so it fits your biggest pot. Throw in the neck and any wing tips or bones left on the platter.

Because the bird was already roasted, half the flavor work is done. Those browned bones give you a brown stock without a second trip to the oven.

Toss in a quartered onion with a couple of carrots and some celery, then a bay leaf and a few peppercorns.

If you saved the giblets and did not use them in gravy, the heart and gizzard add depth here. Leave the liver out, since it turns the stock bitter.

Cover everything with cold water and bring it up slowly.

Simmer and Skim

Skim the foam that rises in the first half hour, then hold a bare simmer. Turkey bones sit between chicken and beef, so give them longer than a chicken carcass: about three to four hours pulls full flavor and a good amount of gelatin from those big frame bones.

Strain it through a fine sieve and chill it. A strong batch sets to a soft jelly and throws a firm fat cap you can lift off the next day. Save a little of that turkey fat to start the soup or to enrich the gravy.

Soup and Gravy

This is what the stock was made for. The classic next-day move is soup, where the stock and the shredded leftover meat carry the whole bowl, as in Leftover Turkey Barley Soup.

It is also the liquid that turns a roux into real gravy, and the moisture that brings stuffing together. A pot pie leans on it for both the filling sauce and the flavor, like this Leftover Turkey Pot Pie.

If you are baking the dressing on the side, a ladle of homemade stock beats water every time. The Sausage, Apple & Cranberry Turkey Stuffing is a good place to spend it.

Buying and Storing

Turkey stock is hard to buy outside the weeks around the holidays, so most cooks make their own or reach for chicken stock as the stand-in. Chicken is the closest swap by far, just a shade lighter in flavor.

Homemade keeps about four days in the fridge. Beyond that, freeze it in flat bags or in cubes you can drop into a pan.

It holds for around three months frozen, which is handy: make a big batch from the holiday bird and you have soup base into late winter. Leave a little headroom in the container, since stock expands as it freezes.

Pork stock

Pork stock is the savory liquid you get by simmering pork bones and aromatic vegetables in water until they give up their flavor and body.

It is rounder and a little sweeter than beef stock, with a soft richness that comes from how readily pork fat and collagen melt into the pot.

Old cookbooks dismissed it as too greasy for stock, but that is a fixable problem, and modern cooks lean on pork stock hard. It is the soul of a bowl of ramen and the quiet depth under a pot of beans or braised greens.

For the general rules that apply to every stock, see the parent stock page. This page covers what pork bones do that others do not.

Best Bones and Cuts

Pork is generous with the parts that make great stock. Trotters (pig's feet) are almost pure skin and cartilage, so they load the pot with gelatin and give you a stock that sets like firm jelly.

Neck bones and country-style rib bones are cheap and meaty, adding real pork flavor. Smoked ham hocks are the secret weapon: one hock turns a plain pot of stock into a smoky, savory base that makes beans and collards taste like they simmered all day.

A common, balanced batch is a couple of neck bones for flavor plus one trotter for body. Add a smoked hock when you want that ham-bone backbone.

Lean Toward Clean or Rich

You get to choose how the stock reads.

For a clean, light pork stock in the Japanese style, simmer the bones gently and skim hard, and you get a clear, golden liquid.

For tonkotsu, the famously milky ramen broth, you do the opposite. You boil pork bones hard for many hours so the fat and collagen emulsify into the water and turn it opaque and creamy. That is the one case where a rolling boil is the goal rather than the mistake.

Most home cooking wants the clean version. Bring the pot up slowly, skim the heavy foam that pork throws in the first half hour, and hold a gentle simmer.

Simmer and Skim the Fat

Pork bones give up flavor in three to four hours, and trotters or hocks can go longer for more gelatin. The real work is managing the fat, since pork renders a lot of it.

Skim during the simmer, then chill the strained stock so the fat sets into a firm cap you can lift off cleanly. That step alone answers the old greasiness complaint.

Cajun and Southern cooking put it to work, where a smoky pork base carries a skillet of Dirty Rice or moistens the cornbread stuffing in Cajun Stuffed Pork Chops. It is also the natural braising liquid for beans, lentils, and hearty greens.

Substitutes

Nothing matches pork stock cleanly, since its sweet, fatty character is its own thing. Chicken stock is the most neutral stand-in and will not fight the dish, though it loses the pork depth.

For the smoky ham-hock flavor specifically, a little chicken stock plus a chunk of bacon or a smoked turkey wing gets you most of the way. Beef stock is too assertive and pulls the dish in a different direction.

Buying and Storing

Pork stock is rare on store shelves, so most cooks make it or substitute. The closest shortcut is to simmer a leftover ham bone in water, which gives a quick, smoky pork stock with almost no effort.

Homemade keeps about four days in the fridge once the fat cap has done its sealing work. To hold it longer, freeze it in flat bags or cubes for around three months. Leave headroom, since the liquid expands as it freezes.

Lamb stock

Lamb stock is the savory liquid you get by simmering lamb bones and aromatic vegetables in water until they give up their flavor and body. It is the most assertive of the common meat stocks, with a distinct gamey, slightly sweet character that tastes unmistakably of lamb.

That strong flavor is the whole point and also the catch. Lamb stock is wonderful under a lamb braise or a hearty soup, but it is too particular to use as an all-purpose base the way you would chicken stock.

For the rules that apply to every stock, like keeping the pot below a boil, see the parent stock page. This page is about handling lamb's flavor and its fat.

Best Bones and the Roast

Neck, shank, and shoulder bones make the best lamb stock. They carry plenty of meat and connective tissue, so you get both deep flavor and the collagen that gives the stock body.

Roast the bones first.

A spell at 425°F (220°C) until they are well browned tames the raw muttony edge and builds a deeper, rounder flavor, the same way roasting helps beef bones.

Roast a handful of vegetables alongside, and lean into aromatics that suit lamb: a head of garlic, a sprig of rosemary, a couple of bay leaves. These stand up to the meat instead of getting buried by it.

Managing the Fat

Lamb fat is the part to watch.

It carries the strongest flavor and, unlike beef or chicken fat, it firms up waxy and can coat the mouth if you leave too much in.

Skim hard during the simmer. Then chill the strained stock so the fat sets into a solid cap, and lift off all of it. A defatted lamb stock tastes clean and rich rather than greasy or sheepy.

Bring the pot up slowly and hold a gentle simmer. Lamb bones need about three to four hours, longer for the big shank and neck bones, which give up their gelatin slowly.

How to Use It

Lamb stock belongs in lamb dishes. There it doubles down on the flavor already in the pot, the braising liquid that turns tough cuts meltingly tender in something like Italian Braised Lamb & Potatoes.

It also gives backbone to a rustic soup, carrying the lentils and herbs in Lamb, Lentil, & Rosemary Soup. Reduce it down and it becomes a glossy pan sauce for roast lamb or chops.

Pair it with bold, warm flavors that match its strength: garlic, rosemary, mint, cumin, and the spices of North African and Middle Eastern cooking.

Substitutes

Because lamb flavor is so specific, there is no close swap. If you are out of lamb stock, beef stock is the nearest stand-in, since it brings comparable depth even though it misses the gamey note.

For a lighter dish, chicken stock keeps things neutral and lets the other ingredients lead, but it will not reinforce the lamb the way the real thing does.

Buying and Storing

Lamb stock is almost impossible to find on store shelves, so this is a make-it-yourself ingredient. The good news is that lamb bones are cheap, and a roast lamb dinner leaves you exactly the bones to start a batch.

Homemade keeps about four days in the fridge, sealed under its fat cap. To hold it longer, freeze it in flat bags or in cubes for around three months. Leave headroom, since the liquid expands as it freezes.

Duck stock

Duck stock is the savory liquid you get by simmering a duck carcass and aromatic vegetables in water until they give up their flavor and body.

It is the richest and fattiest of the poultry stocks, with a deep, dark flavor closer to a light beef stock than to chicken.

That richness is the draw. A spoonful of reduced duck stock carries a pan sauce or a plate of rice in a way chicken stock cannot, which is why it shows up in restaurant cooking far more than in home kitchens.

For the rules common to every stock, like never letting it boil hard, see the parent stock page. Here we cover the duck carcass, its giblets, and what to do with all that fat.

From Carcass to Pot

After a roast duck dinner you have the makings of stock: the picked frame, plus the neck and any wing tips. The giblets tucked inside the bird, the heart and gizzard, add real depth, so simmer them in too.

Leave out the liver, which turns the pot bitter.

If your carcass is already roasted, you have a head start on a brown stock. For raw bones, roast them at 425°F (220°C) until well browned first, the same move that gives beef stock its color and depth.

Build the pot with the usual aromatics, and a star anise or a strip of orange peel plays beautifully against duck if you are heading in a Chinese or French direction.

The Fat Is the Prize

Duck is fatty, and that fat is worth more than the stock to many cooks. As the stock simmers, a deep layer of fat rises to the top.

Chill the strained stock and the fat sets into a thick, golden cap you lift off in one piece. Do not throw it out. That is rendered duck fat, the gold standard for roasting potatoes and crisping up confit, and it keeps for weeks in the fridge.

Underneath, a good duck stock should be dark and set to a firm jelly, since duck bones are rich in collagen.

Simmering and Using It

Skim the foam in the first half hour, then hold a bare simmer for three to four hours. A roasted carcass gives up its flavor a little faster than raw bones.

Duck stock loves to be reduced. Cooked down hard it becomes a glossy, intense sauce base for the duck itself, the backbone of a classic preparation like Long Island Duck with Grapefruit.

It also carries bold braises, standing up to chiles and aromatics in a dish such as Braised Duck (Or Mussels) With Red Curry. And it makes an extraordinary pot of rice or risotto when you cook the grains in it instead of water.

Substitutes and Storage

There is no exact swap for duck. The closest is a rich, well-reduced chicken stock with a little extra chicken fat or a spoon of duck fat stirred in to mimic the body and flavor.

Lamb or beef stock can stand in for color and richness in a braise, though each brings its own flavor rather than duck's.

Homemade duck stock keeps about four days in the fridge under its fat cap. Freeze the rest in flat bags or cubes for around three months, and leave headroom since it expands as it freezes.

Calf broth

Calf broth is veal stock by another name. You make it by simmering veal bones and trimmings with aromatic vegetables until the bones give up their collagen. It sits between a light chicken stock and a deep beef stock in body and flavor.

The thing that makes it special is how clean and neutral it tastes. Calf bones carry a lot of cartilage, so the broth turns rich and faintly sticky on the lips from gelatin. The meat flavor itself stays mild.

That mix of body and mildness is exactly why classical kitchens reach for it as a sauce base. For the general method, mirepoix and bouquet garni, see the parent stock page.

Why Cooks Reach for It

Veal stock is the backbone of French sauce work because it adds body without shouting. Reduce it and it goes glossy and coats a spoon, which is why it underpins demi-glace, pan sauces, and braising liquids. The mild flavor lets the wine and pan drippings lead.

Use it anywhere you want a sauce with weight but not a strong beefy note. It carries a delicate Potato-Cream Soup with Smoked Trout without fighting the fish, and it gives a slow braise like Master Crockpot Pepper Steak more depth than water ever could.

Getting the Most From It

Roast the bones first if you want a brown stock with color and a deeper taste. Leave them pale for a white stock when you need a sauce to stay light.

Either way, keep it at a bare simmer rather than a rolling boil, or the fat and proteins emulsify and the broth turns cloudy. Skim the gray foam in the first half hour, since calf bones throw a lot of it early.

Salt at the end, after reducing. Reduction concentrates everything, including any salt you added too soon.

Substitutes

Beef stock is the closest stand-in, though it tastes stronger and less refined, so use a bit less or cut it with water. Chicken stock works when you want something lighter, but it lacks the gelatin that makes veal stock cling to a sauce.

In a pinch, add a split chicken foot or a piece of pork skin to chicken stock for extra body. It will not match true calf broth, but it gets you closer than chicken bones alone.

Buying & Storage

Ask a butcher for veal knuckle and shank bones, the joints with the most cartilage. A mix of meaty and joint bones gives both flavor and body. Pale, fresh-smelling bones are what you want; pass on any that look dry or gray.

A good batch sets to a firm jelly when cold. That wobble is the sign you pulled enough gelatin from the bones.

Cooled stock keeps three to four days in the fridge and freezes for months. Freeze it in an ice cube tray for small splashes, or in jars left with headroom for sauces.

Caribou stock

Caribou stock is a game stock made by simmering caribou bones, usually from a leg or shoulder, with vegetables and herbs. Caribou is the wild North American cousin of reindeer, and its bones give a lean, clean-tasting stock that carries a quiet wild edge without much fat.

This is a stock of the north. In Alaska, northern Canada, and across the subarctic, a caribou taken in fall becomes meat for the winter, and the bones go into the pot rather than the bin. The result is a thin but deeply savory liquid built for sauces and braises.

Compared with venison stock, caribou runs milder and a touch sweeter, since caribou meat is less musky than most deer.

How to Use It

Reach for caribou stock when you are cooking the rest of the animal. It is the right base for braising caribou shanks, for a stew of the tougher cuts, or for any sauce meant to go back over wild game.

A classic move is to build a red-wine pan sauce on it, the way Bordelaise Sauce for Game does, where the lean stock takes on the shallot and wine without muddying them.

It also stands in for beef stock in a winter soup when you want something gamier and less fatty.

Cooking & Pairing

Roast the bones hard before simmering. Lean game bones carry little fat to brown, so a deep roast in a hot oven is where most of the color and flavor come from.

Caribou loves the flavors of the cold country it comes from. Juniper, bay, black pepper, and a few crushed allspice berries suit it, and a splash of red wine or a spoon of red-currant jelly rounds the gaminess.

The usual mistake is treating it like beef stock and skipping the skim. Because it is so lean, the little fat there is rises fast and can taste tallowy if left in, so skim early and often, then chill and lift the cap before use.

Substitutes

Venison stock is the natural stand-in and the closest in character, just a little stronger and more musky. Elk or moose stock works the same way if you have it.

Failing any game stock, use a good beef stock and add a few juniper berries and a strip of orange peel while it warms, which nudges it toward the wild side. It will not be caribou, but it suits game dishes far better than plain beef stock alone.

Buying & Storage

You will not find caribou stock on a shelf; it comes from a hunter's freezer. Save the leg and neck bones when you butcher, since the joints hold the most connective tissue and give the stock its body.

Like any stock, treat it gently once made. It keeps three to four days in the fridge and several months frozen.

A lean game stock sets only to a soft jelly, not a firm one. So do not judge it by how stiff it gets cold; judge it by the depth when you reduce a ladle in a pan.

Ham broth

Ham broth is the savory liquid you get from simmering a leftover ham bone or smoked hock in water with a few vegetables. It comes out smoky and salty with a faint cured sweetness, carrying that pork flavor straight into whatever you cook next.

It is less a from-scratch project than a way to use up a bone that still has meat clinging to it. After a holiday ham, that bone is the prize. A couple of hours in a pot turns it into a base with far more character than plain stock.

The one thing to watch is salt, which cured ham brings in spades. Everything below comes back to that.

How to Use It

Ham broth was made for beans and greens. It is the classic base for split pea soup and navy bean soup, and for a pot of collards or kale that needs backbone. The pork salt and smoke season the pot for you.

That makes it the natural liquid for a hearty bowl like Easy Ham, Bean & Tomato Soup, where the broth pulls the beans and tomato into one savory whole. Use it in place of water when you cook dried beans or lentils, or to moisten a pan of cornbread dressing.

Cooking & Pairing

Taste before you season anything. A ham bone can push a broth past salty on its own, so hold off on salt until the very end, if you add any at all.

Lean on black pepper and bay instead, with a splash of vinegar at the finish to cut the richness and wake up the pork flavor.

It pairs naturally with beans, potatoes, cabbage, and smoky greens. The common mistake is salting the dish early out of habit.

By the time the broth reduces, that early salt has nowhere to go, and a good pot of soup turns inedible. If a batch comes out too salty anyway, stretch it with water or unsalted stock and add more beans or potatoes to soak it up.

Substitutes

No other liquid quite copies the smoke-and-salt of a real ham bone. The closest swap is chicken stock with a smoked hock, a chunk of bacon, or a smoked turkey wing simmered in it.

A spoonful of smoked paprika or a drop of liquid smoke in plain stock fakes the smoke but not the body. For a vegetarian version, smoked salt and a sheet of kombu give you savory depth without the pork.

Buying & Storage

You usually do not buy ham broth; you make it from a bone you already have. A meaty bone or a couple of smoked hocks give the richest result, so save them in the freezer until you have enough to fill a pot.

Because it is salty, ham broth keeps a little longer than most. It holds four to five days in the fridge and freezes for months.

The fat sets in a firm cap on top when chilled. That cap protects the broth and lifts off easily if you want to skim it before using.

Venison stock

Venison stock is the dark, lean stock you get from deer bones, simmered down with vegetables and a handful of woodsy herbs. It is the most assertive of the common game stocks: deep brown and very lean, and openly gamey in a way that beef stock never is.

That intensity is the point. A small amount of venison stock can carry a whole sauce, so it tends to get reduced hard and used as a concentrate rather than ladled out like chicken broth.

Where caribou stock is mild and faintly sweet, venison leans musky and forest-floor savory. If you want a sauce that tastes unmistakably of wild deer, this is the base.

How to Use It

Venison stock exists mostly to make sauces for venison. Reduce it with red wine and shallots for a pan sauce over loin or chops, or use it as the braising liquid for the tough cuts that need hours of low heat.

It is the backbone of a dish like Venison Osso Buco with Tomatoes, Olives, & Herbs, where the deep stock stands up to the tomato and olive without getting lost. It also enriches a venison chili or a hearty bean and barley soup when plain water would taste flat.

Cooking & Pairing

Roast the bones until they are genuinely dark, then deglaze the roasting pan and pour those browned bits into the pot. With so little fat in deer bones, that roasting is where the depth and color are made, and a timid roast gives a pale, weak stock.

Juniper is the signature partner. A few crushed berries, along with bay, thyme, black peppercorns, and a strip of orange peel, frame the gaminess and keep it from turning livery.

The classic error is letting it boil. A hard boil churns the small amount of fat into the liquid and clouds it, and on a strong stock like this the result tastes greasy and muddy. Keep it at a slow simmer and skim the surface as scum gathers.

Substitutes

Caribou stock, elk, or moose stock are the closest matches, each a little milder than deer. Any of them slots into a venison recipe with no real change.

If you have no game stock at all, reduce beef stock by a third to concentrate it, then steep a few juniper berries and a splash of red wine in it.

That gives you the weight and a hint of the wild note. It still cannot match true venison stock for character.

Buying & Storage

There is no store version; venison stock comes from a deer you or a friend brought home. The neck and leg bones are best, since they carry the most connective tissue and turn the lean stock a little richer.

Once made, it behaves like any stock. It keeps three to four days in the fridge and freezes for several months, and small portions make sense because you use it in such small amounts.

Reduce a batch to a syrupy glaze before freezing. Then you have an instant sauce starter for the next time venison is on the menu.

Wildfowl stock

Wildfowl stock is poultry stock made from wild birds: the carcasses, wings, and necks of duck, goose, pheasant, partridge, or grouse simmered with vegetables and herbs. It tastes like chicken stock that grew up outdoors, darker and gamier, with a richness that comes from birds that actually fly and forage.

Unlike the lean four-legged game stocks, wildfowl can be fatty, especially wild duck and goose. That fat is both the reward and the thing you manage, because too much of it left in turns the stock heavy and dull.

Treat it as the wild cousin of chicken stock: same idea, stronger personality.

How to Use It

Wildfowl stock is built to go back into bird dishes. Use it to braise legs and thighs, to moisten a wild-game stuffing, or as the liquid for a deeply savory game-bird soup or risotto.

It is exactly the base a recipe like Braised Game Birds wants, where the stock and the birds share the same flavor and reinforce each other. It also makes a serious gravy for a roast pheasant or duck, far better than anything from a can.

Cooking & Pairing

Roast the carcasses first for a brown stock with real depth, and toss in the giblets, minus the liver, for extra body. The liver turns a stock bitter, so keep it back for pate instead.

These birds love autumn flavors. Thyme, bay, juniper, a few peppercorns, and a strip of orange or a splash of port suit the gamey-sweet character, and a little apple or mushroom in the pot deepens it further.

The big mistake is leaving the fat in. Wild duck and goose render a lot of it, so simmer gently rather than boiling, and skim while it cooks. Chill the finished stock and lift off the firm fat cap before you use it.

Save that fat. It is gold for roasting potatoes.

Substitutes

Chicken stock is the everyday stand-in, and a duck stock or turkey stock gets you closer to the dark, fatty richness. For more game character, simmer a few mushrooms and a little juniper in chicken stock.

If you want the gamiest result without wild birds, a stock from roasted chicken wings plus a couple of duck legs splits the difference. None of these match true wildfowl stock, but they all beat plain water under a game bird.

Buying & Storage

Wildfowl stock is a hunter's or a serious cook's project; you make it from carcasses you have saved, not something you buy. Freeze the picked-over frames after a roast duck or pheasant dinner until you have enough to fill a pot.

Cooled stock keeps three to four days in the fridge and several months in the freezer. The fat cap that forms on top seals the stock as it chills, so leave it in place for storage and remove it only when you are ready to cook.

Quick facts

Where to find meat & poultry stock: Meat & poultry stock is usually found in the canned goods section or aisle of the grocery store or supermarket.

In Chinese
肉类股票
British (UK) term
Meat & poultry stock
en français
bouillon de viande
en español
caldo de carne

Recipes using meat & poultry stock

There are 4 recipes that contain this ingredient.

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Peking Lamb with Leeks

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Peking lamb with leeks stir-fries velveted lamb in savory brown bean sauce with Shao Hsing wine, dried chilies, and Chinese mushrooms. Triple-fried for crisp edges, soft centers, and deep wok flavor.

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Soupa Fasolakia Freska(Krema)

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Velvety Greek cream of green bean soup pureed with carrots and onion, thickened with a buttery roux, and finished with a swirl of butter. Serve with crunchy croutons for a comforting Mediterranean bowl.

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Lamb Phyllo Rolls

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Lamb phyllo rolls stuffed with cinnamon-spiced ground lamb, myzithra, and feta, wrapped in flaky pastry and dusted with powdered sugar. A Greek savory-sweet showstopper.

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Shepherds Pie

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Traditional British shepherd's pie made from leftover roast lamb or beef, bound in gravy and topped with mashed potatoes. Old-school comfort food done properly.

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