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Nutrition Facts

Serving Size 1 cups 549g

Recipe makes 8 cups)

The following items or measurements are not included below:

turkey carcass

Calories 54
Calories from Fat 4 (8%)
Amount Per Serving %DV
Total Fat 0.5g 0%
Saturated Fat 0.2g 0%
Monounsaturated Fat 0.1g
Polyunsaturated Fat 0.2g
Trans Fat 0.0g
Cholesterol 0mg 0%
Sodium 41mg 1%
Potassium 304mg 8%
Total Carbohydrate 13.4g 4%
Dietary Fiber 4.6g 18%
Sugars 2.4g
Protein 2.0g 3%

how is this calculated?

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Lovin' those Leftovers!

highcotton

Rescued Turkey Stock

Recipe #24576 | 4½ hours | 20 min prep | add private note
Lennie

By: Lennie
Apr 8, 2002

I call this "rescued", because so many people throw away the turkey carcass after a big meal. Don't! Rescue it! Making stock is not hard or complicated. You'll be rewarded with delicious soup, and an amazing aroma will fill your home as you make the stock. And you don't even have to make soup right away — just freeze the stock!

8 cups (change servings and units)

Ingredients

Directions

  1. 1
    First, you need a turkey carcass, stripped of all its meat; if you're lucky, you'll be at someone's home and they'll be throwing it away-- that's the time to shout, I'll take it!
  2. 2
    You will also likely discover that you'll be able to rescue a lot of meat off the carcass; this is a bonus, since you now have the meat for the soup as well.
  3. 3
    Try to make the stock the day after the turkey was cooked, but if you have to wait another day or so, that's okay; it'll taste best, though, if you can get to it soon.
  4. 4
    Let's get started; first, get out a large pot.
  5. 5
    Next, start to strip off any meat clinging to the carcass; put this in a container and set aside; note that this is a hands-on job and you will get a little messy; that's okay, both your hands and your counter wash up easily.
  6. 6
    As you are stripping off the meat (don't fret, you won't get it ALL, some stubbornly clings to the bones and that's okay, it too flavours the stock), continue to break up the bones and put them in the pot; also put in the pot any turkey skin and all the other assorted"bits" that aren't edible meat.
  7. 7
    When you have the pot full of bones, pour the cold water over and turn heat to high; bring to a boil.
  8. 8
    Now wash up and prepare the veggies and parsley; make sure to leave the onion skin ON as it gives your stock a lovely rich colour.
  9. 9
    When the stock comes to a boil, add all remaining ingredients and turn heat down to a lightly bubbling simmer, the type where the bubbles barely break the surface.
  10. 10
    Now let it simmer for 3 to 4 hours, stirring every once in a while.
  11. 11
    I much prefer letting it reduce down to where I'll only get 7 or 8 cups of stock; I find the flavour much better and stronger, even if I have to add water when making the soup.
  12. 12
    If you only let it simmer till you have about 12 cups of stock, it will be ready sooner but the flavour is much weaker.
  13. 13
    Once you feel your stock is ready, strain it through a fine-meshed sieve into a large bowl; if your sieve is not fine, line it first with cheesecloth; discard the bones and veggies you used to make the stock, all their goodness is now in your stock.
  14. 14
    Refrigerate stock, covered, for several hours or preferably overnight; then you can either make soup the next day, or freeze the stock; make sure you skim off the solidified fat before you either make soup or freeze the stock.

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Featured Reviews for This Recipe

From: learningtolikecooking

On Nov 6, 2009

Awesome! The only thing I would recommend are those cheesecloth bags you can get to put stuffing in. Put the carcass and veggies and spices in a new cheesecloth bag and seal it up. It's so easy to just pull the bag out when the stock is done - no straining required!

0 people found this review helpful

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  • From: LaurelAnn

    On Oct 29, 2009

    SO easy to make! Great way to use all the "parts" of the turkey. I made the stock then made Creamy WIld-Rice Soup with Smoked Turkey (#55855). Delicious! I will absolutely use this recipe now with all future turkey carcasses!

    0 people found this review helpful

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    From: Ann Marie F

    On Nov 23, 2002

    This is wonderful. I used chicken. I never thought to add thyme to stock. I love it. Thank you. To the reviewer who said it turned to jello in the refrigerator, nothing went went wrong. That's natural for poultry. If I want to make soup right away without waiting for it to get cold, I pour it through a fine sieve into a fat separator while it's still hot. That's a cup with the spout coming from the bottom. After the fat rises to the top, you pour the stock back into the pan and discard the fat that had risen to the top. With poultry I like the fat separator because I find it difficult to separate the fat from the "jello" without losing any of the valuable "jello". Plus I usually want to make soup right away. The house smells too good to wait till the next day. I freeze onion peelings, carrot ends, both ends of green onions, parsley stems - just keep adding to a plastic bag in the freezer. Then dump the bag into the pot with the bones when making any kind of stock. Strain out the vegetables with the bones and discard.

    43 people found this review helpful

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  • From: Jan Marie

    On Dec 27, 2002

    I made this stock immediately after cleaning up dishes from Christmas. My husband loves to make small soups for himself, adding his own special ingredients (usuall hot stuff) that no one else likes. At any rate, we chilled the stock in cake pans (8 1/2 / 13) and then cut the gelled stock in squares, frezing them individually in zip-lock bags. Now we can make single serving meals, graveys, etc. at will. Thanks for sharing!

    36 people found this review helpful

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  • Read all 79 reviews

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