dcgator
Cook
I'm confused. Seems they are all the same???
I brown the bones (beef, pork, or lamb) on the stove top. Then I put the bones in a roaster, add some water/wine, a bit of vinegar, carrot, celery, bay, S&P. I then roast the bones in the oven for 8-12 hours at 250. Strain, chill, remove the fat. Stock is "jelly" and brown--such a rich beef/pork/lamb flavor...with lamb, I add rosemary and lots of mint. For turkey or chicken, I take the roasted chicken/turkey, remove as much meat as possible from the carcass, crack the big bones, add water, carrot, celery, bay, S&P, a teaball of pickling spices, and grated fennel, pop the roaster back in the oven (pan drippings in the roaster), and let that cook for 6-8 hours at 250, strain, chill, take off the fat, and then that is what goes into soup, or in the freezer for another time. I don't clarify it--although I might start doing that since I have a surplus of eggs...from my hens...I won't say how FRESH those eggs are (oops). I guess that would qualify as consumme. I can't be bothered to cook chicken, etc., on the stove anymore for broth, I prefer the depth of flavor of stock. I was sold on the beef stock in the oven after the first time I made it--the house smells so good while it is cooking! I also make it without any seasoning--equally as good. Reminds me, probably time to strain the lamb stock I was cooking overnight...
Technically...
BROTH is made from simmering meat in water.
STOCK is made from simmering bones ( and usually meat or meat scraps).
It's as simple as that.
The difference us the use of bones. Bones make for stock's fuller, richer end product.
CONSOMME is clarified broth or stock. It's clarified using a "raft" of ground meat mixed with egg whites and sometimes chopped tomatoes. The raft attracts proteins and other impurities in the liquid and thus renders it clear. Egg is used as a binder to hold the raft together.
Wow
Thanks for the detailed answer!
So if I want to make simple soup with pastina can I use stock or will it be too bland?
Wow
Thanks for the detailed answer!
So if I want to make simple soup with pastina can I use stock or will it be too bland?
The difference from a technical standpoint is, in fact, the use of bones. Colloquially, they are used interchangeably.
The use of bones makes stock a richer and more substantial liquid than broth and thus ioften preferred for soups.