Posted by Jack on Dec 30th 2025
Buttery Liquid Gold - Stock
Broth: An easy routine

Prep Time: 15 minutes | Cook Time: 12-24 hrs
To your health!
Ingredients
- 1 Chicken back or a bag of Chicken bones
- 1 Large onion (halved)
- 2 Carrots
- 3 Celery sticks
- Fresh herbs like parsley (optional)
Instructions
Tips
- Using an InstantPot is a great idea, we run the chicken bones for 240 min on high and then 'keep warm' for 4-12 hours.
- Make sure if you freeze your broth in a canning jar you leave at least 1” of head space. The liquid will expand as it freezes and shattered glass jars in your freezer are a real bummer. DO NOT use quart glass jars, 1.5 pint jars are the best.
- When you pull the refrigerated stock out, it will be gelatinous and this is ok! This is a sign of all the healthy gelatin in your broth. It will re-liquify as it heats up.
- Don’t have a good stockpot or crockpot? Or don’t want to leave it on the stove overnight? Set your oven to 220 degrees and put the pot in there after bringing everything to a boil.
Ideas on using your broth
- Risotto
- Rice
- Any soup
- Healthy hot sledding snack for the kids (warm up and bring in a thermos)
- We love to have a warm cup of our broth first thing in the morning before coffee -- for real, it is fantastic.
More Information
Many of you have switched your kids (or yourself) to a GAPS or similar traditional diet that emphasizes real bone broths. We love hearing all of the stories of kids with chronic illnesses that have miraculously turned around after switching to a more traditional diet based on broth, pasture raised meats and fermented foods.
We drink broth on a regular basis and have found we feel much better when we do. When I first heard about drinking broth by itself, I have to admit I thought it was more than a little kooky. After all, my idea of broth was that watery stuff that came in blue cans, BPA toxic plastic-lined cardboard boxes, or even in little cubes! Yuck, who wants to drink that?
It turns out that all that effort and cost to raise healthy chickens with strong bones and fats, pays off in spades when we make broth. Although our batches are somewhat variable, many taste ultra buttery. I find myself taking a couple of quarts on all of my long days away as it makes a quick and easy lunch.
If you don’t want to venture into drinking warm broth (basically chicken noodle soup without the noodles), you can still use the broth to make the best tasting rice, soups or number of other dishes.




