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Have you not heard of the word savory? Using foreign words that mean the same doesn't make you special... if anything it makes you look like you have your head up your butt.
Sonny, you are using the wrong tool at 7:20 to skim fat and scum off of your stock. Use an Asian style fat skimmer. They have an ultra fine metal mesh, and for some reason, water passes through the mesh trivially, but fat doesn't like to, and only does so with difficulty. Fat seems to have higher surface tension in the presence of fine steel mesh. This lets you skim the fat off with far less effort and time than it takes using a ladle.
I was taught to make stock by my grandmother, she taught us to remove the bones at the 2.5- 3 hhr mark and strip the meat from the bones. Rather than blacken the vegetables as you did, she taught us to cut them into similar sized pieces and brown them in tallow/lard/chicken fat depending on the stock. Theses where also pulled from the stock along with the bones meat and saved, from these we would make pie filling with some "fresh" vegetables and this rolled into teaching us how to make pastry. She went through two world wars and the great depression and learned the value of waste not want not from experiance. With how our modern world is going learning from our grandparents and great grandparents if possable is wise. As a side note my grandfather would put the bones in the fire and would later grind the bones mixed with the ash for the garden to grow more vegetables. Thanks your for the video making a secondary light stock was new to us and valuable knowledge, Take care, God bless one and all.
Pie filling, that sounds delicious. Thank you for you very informative post including the garden hack. 🤗❤️ P.S. I use the meat in curry sauce, it’s very delicious.
I can attest to getting beef bone cut offs for free. Went to a local butcher in the next town over and asked him if he had any cutoffs/bones he was going to toss. I explained I was going to try to make home made beef stock. He literally gave me almost 30 lbs for free, excellent cuts full of marrow. I offered him money, but all he wanted was some of my homemade stock in return. I happily gave him a bunch after.
@@Greblav If you have any local farms near you, I'd suggest you approach and just ask the farmer. They may know someone that butchers and be able to help you out. Or ask around at a local farmers market, someone is bound to know someone. Heck, even ask your co workers. Thats how I found the gentleman that hooked me up.
I learned how to do this almost 40 years ago, and i make my BeefStock about a week after Thanksgiving......to be ready for Christmas Prime Rib. I make my own Chicken Stock all through the year......but Beef Scraps and Bones have come increasingly harder for me to find.....i have a special bin in my deep freeze......when i come across them , Im ON IT!.....i gotta say SONNY.....you totally nailed this . When I learned this i was early 20's, and did MASS Quantities of Prime Rib Bones in Huge Hotel Roasting Pans that could hold 3 Boneoff Prime Ribs.....then make the stock in a 20 Gallon Tip Kettle. I got so good, suddenly it was my job.......never caught on the old timers didnt want to do the heavy lifting, or babysitting the Ovens or Kettle.......so yeah, Sonny, I DO KNOW!
Top tip, do your remouillage in a pressure cooker. It will extract all the last of the gelatin from the bones to make that second stock almost as unctuous as the first one.
pressure cookers are SICK. Bones after it just goes to paste ) Best stock i've ever ate was always from pressure cooker. It takes all flawors from meat, bones and veggies into the stock.
I argue with myself whether to use my pressure cooker (holds less, but more concentrated flavor) or the big old roasting pan. When I use the pressure cooker, I only cook for an hour-and-a-half. For this 8-hour cook, should I bump the time up by a lot? Edit: you know the pressure cooker has done its best, because if you taste the meat, there's pretty much zero flavor left in it.
@@jvallas I usually go for between 2 and three hours, three if I'm not pushed for time. That extra time is just for getting more gelatin out of the bones but I think after that you are getting rapidly diminishing returns.
@@jvallas look, I use a pressure cooker to extract all the flavors from vegetable trimmings, meat trimmings, leftover bones and cartilage. The pressure cooker forces the food to release all its vitamins, aromatic oils and nutrients into the broth without loss. I use this broth to make soups and sauces without wasting good ingredients on sauces. I cook good ingredients (tenderloins, steaks, filets, main parts of vegetables) in a cast iron skillet. And already into it I add the result of the pressure cooker to improve the taste.
oh, i think i got misunderstanding. im using Afghan Pressure Cooker "kazan". it has a lot higher pressure and after it bones simply crumble into dust if you squeeze them, since all the useful substances under pressure went into the broth.
I just got the call to do a trial shift in a kitchen this week and potentially leaving a job I've been at for over a decade to finally follow my passion. Sonny's channel was a huge inspiration for me to really start trying to master the craft of cooking and I'll forever be grateful for that.
Here’s a tip: After you make your stock and freeze it in deli containers , run the container until a bit of hot water until the stock loosens, pop it into a vacuum sealer bag and seal the bag. Your stock will last many more months in the freezer because air can’t get to it.
Another tip, make very gelatious stock and put it into Tupperware. Once cool, tip it onto a chopping board, chop into cubes. Put on a plate and freeze separately. Then you can put them in a food bag and take them out one frozen stock cube at a time.
@@tomallcock3185 great tip but you can easily use cheap ice cube trays! Thanks for sharing, and, remember to label the bag with the date that you have prepared the beef cubes. Even the best prepared beef stock will degrade after 6 months, turning bitter tasting. Happy cooking!
And that is a great idea, however, I will add, reduce your stock by half. Then freeze it. If you need two cups of stock, use one cup of reduced stock and add one cup of water.
Pro Tip: If you need a fair amount of tomato paste, use a small can. Tubes are for those moments where you only need a Tbsp or two Second tip: if you have a lot of exposed marrow bones, you can leech out the blood (hume) in cold water first. This helps get rid of the gross top foam / cloudy stock
Definitely this. Its worth the extra step, although marrow bones are becoming more popular so I don't always get a lot from the butcher, it just depands on when I ask really.
In cooking school we rubbed our mirepoix with the tomato paste and baked it in the oven as well as the bones, we didn't put any paste on the bones we did blacken the onyo too.. great techniques bro you're making me want to make some up now
I made stock based upon your first stock video, stayed up until 5am keeping my eye on it, my wife thought I was insane, but loves the channel too...Best cooking channel out there.
Been cooking a long time so thought to add something here. I make my own Vietnamese beef pho broth Hanoi style so spent a year researching how its done. I even spent 3 months in SEA wandering around learning how they make their broths. The one thing i found that makes a broth richer with out compromising the flavor profile of the beef is to use a pound of chicken feet for every gallon of stock that you intend to finish with. They are extremely high in collagen which adds that desired richness. They are also inexpensive at ~$2.50/lb at most Asian groceries. I make batches of two gallons each overnight adding the aromatics for the last hour of the low simmer, then freeze it in 1/2 gallon volumes using zip-locks. I have pho bo broth when i need it.
I love seeing the number of comments about how YOU, Mr. Dude, were so fundamental in teaching people to cook! I have to add my own. I make your BBQ sauce and Rosemary salt, and experiment with both, all the time. I have friends and co-workers who are constantly asking, "when's the next time you're going to make this?" It feels amazing. Huge thank you to you, and the team!
Suggestion. When placing your fantastic liquid into a container, turn it upside down when placing it into the fridge. The next day you just need to pour out your stock as all the fat is on the bottom.
Your cooking lessons are so great! My family often eats in silence because of the concepts and best cooking practices you share with us. I apply your tips to everything I cook. Love how you reinforce your tips in each video!
This was super interesting. I started making my own chicken and beef stocks about a year ago. I make them in a 20qt pot (and sometimes also have an additional 12 qt Dutch oven going). The big different here for me is that I often throw a ton of veggies in just for the nutrients. I’ve got two little kids and sneaking micronutrients in anywhere I can is always a bonus. I ALSO tend to try to use the really gelatinous stuff for everything - soups included. Reason being that I love the mouthfeel AND love knowing everyone is getting all of that extra protein in the form of collagen. Perhaps it’s unnecessary, or maybe. Just a matter of preference. Definitely gonna try some of the other tricks though…and this fuels my desire for a vacuum sealer
This is the best beef stock video I have ever seen and I have learned a lot from it. Thank you! Can you please provide a link to the vacuum seal machine you use? Thank you.
I have never commented on anything on the internet. I love watching cooking videos. This was one of the very best cooking videos I have ever seen. The extra steps and storage options included! Great visuals and concise presentation without sacrificing anything. I will follow this recipe to the word. I can’t wait to try.
I really found this video helpful! I always make chicken stock and freeze in vacuum bags. With various sizes! But I also like containers too since they are reusable. My friend was telling she hates celery in stocks never occurred to me to use leeks instead, let alone blacken the onions first! I've never made beef stock though! I think I'll ask my butcher for any beef bones next Wednesday. I was going to attempt this in my instant pot until you said LOW & SLOW. Either way works for me - I'll try your method first. Thank you!
I don't know what it is that sets you apart and elevates you above any other chef/cooking TH-cam channel I have ever watched, but your channel is amazing and you're inspiring. Love it!
Thanx Sonny...I fill regular sized ice cube trays with demi and vacuum seal 1 or 2 cubes together..Man, .you've certainly enriched my life with this stock/demi recipe alone...and in concert with your stroganoff recipe Wow!...I'm 65...been amateur cookin my whole life...thank you much dude...even my asian oyster sauce strongly benefits from using the stock ...its not only the base flavor but the mouthfeel....the collagen of course lends so much to that....both the stock and demi are such a luxury ingredients..
I did this without the tomato paste using more onions…I had some walla walla sweet onions I had to use up so I blacked some just roasted some… came out truly awesome thx so much for the tips you give us on the channel!!!
I followed your beef stock recipe a few days ago, refrigerated it overnight, saved the fat and portioned it for the freezer. The stock is amazing. I did an audible on the Remouillage by adding 4 beef ribs I couldn't fit into the stockpot. The Remouillage also came out amazing and surprisingly was nearly as gelatinous as the stock. I will definitely be doing both the stock and Remouillage from now on. In fact, I'm using the Remouillage for tomorrow night's dinner: Mushroom Bourguignon. Thanks again for this awesome technique.
Big thumbs up for this video!!! I love making stock, and you give several tricks that I'm going to use from now on! Blackening the onions and leek, I'm gonna try that. I'm accustomed to tomato paste out of a can but a tube looks way more practical here. I was always looking for more foamy stuff to take out so there were some stocks where I didn't even skim anything, that's clear now (no pun intended) The remouillage; I was cooking my bones for 12 hours before throwing in the veggies for another 4. This is a bit more work but having two different stocks instead of one(with the flavor in between those two) is probably worth it. My tip for everyone is the herb Marjoran. It's delicious. floral, and it goes very well with almost all spices, like thyme and rosemary. I discovered it a few years back and I can't for the life of me understand why I never see anyone using or even mentioning it. When I put it in my beefstock I got so many compliments and questions about that one specific flavor which nobody could identify.
Dude, your vids are awesome and from a teaching perspective it is one of your best. I make your stuff all the time but i don't have a fridge to kick! Good job man! Good job.
I made some just like you did. I used chef Jean-Pierre’s recipe. I recently added a quarter quart to some braised beef short ribs and it took the resulting sauce to an entirely different level. Definitely make this!
I follow your method, except I do add the celery and garlic. But when I make stock, I use around 20-25lbs of beef bones and cook it outdoors in a large tamale pot on my turkey fryer burner. Another secret I use is about 5lbs of chicken feet for extra gelatin. When it’s finished, I pressure can in quarts and pints. That way it’s shelf stable and ready without thawing. Last batch was just over 4 gallons. I am set for the next year.
I save all my onion skins and vegetable scraps in a freezer bag. Also save all bones from our dinners. When I have enough to make broth, I add all to a huge water canning pot and add some fresh or dried herbs from my garden. Add a couple tablespoons of apple cider vinegar and water to fill the pot. I proceed to simmer this for 48 hours or more, adding water to keep the level up. I then get my jars and lids and pressure canner, and can according to directions, hot pack. Label jars and store in proper rotation. I haven't used a lot of beef bones so I'm very excited to see if I have a local butcher. Thanks for sharing your talents. ❤
That’s what he was showing when he reduced some at the end, which Marcus licked off the plate, and which only made a blue icecube worth of Demi glacé. Normally you would reduce quite a bit more to make it worthwhile.
I have bought 2 kinds of deli containers from Amazon in the past. I need more, and I'm hoping these are the ones I preferred. I can't tell from looking at the picture, but one kind are a type of hard but very clear plastic - could break if you really tried (least fave, not flexible the way the others are). 2nd kind is very flexible and just slightly opaque. I think that's what these are. If so, they're great.
Just wanted to drop a line and say I love your channel. You seem like such a regular, approachable dude, so it's refreshing to see genuine people on YT versus all of the made-up personalities and characters. Haven't tried this method for beef stock, but I did do your 24 brisket and it was the best piece of meat I've ever cooked! That technique was incredible, although my energy bill hates you for it! I know I should be asking this in the brisket video, but is there any shortcut or cheat to cutting down the oven cook-time by using a sous vide, which is more energy efficient?
I was told that salt prevents the bones from breaking down as well and adding to the stock, and to use a couple glugs of vinegar for the opposite effect....or wine.
I am making this right now and our house has smelled crazy good all day with the scent of this amazing stock. Thank you for the amazing tutorial Sonny!
If you're making something like Phở or a consommé this works nicely. Mind you, I roast bones for Phở too, and if you keep the stock at a bare simmer and skim it every so often, the clarity ends up wonderful anyway
Been watching your vids alot lately. Do you recommend any good stick blenders for home use. With whisk attachment is fine. Mainly for making sauces and milkshakes. Hummus. Things like that
@thatdudecancook, A question for you. I put bones, trimmed fat, other ingredients into a pressure cooker after roasting and I think it gets more flavor out of everything than boiling, but I never tried simmering this way. I also reduce it down to next to nothing before freezing so I basically have bullion. I often try to do it fast with higher heat just to get it done. Low heat seems like it would produce better flavor, so I'll try your method. Would you say that pressure cooking to make stock is inherently bad? Have you ever tried it? I notice after pressure cooking chicken bones for a long time you can crush them with your fingers. then I have cooked more to get the marrow extracted, but I never tested to see if it tasted good. just presumed it did and added it to the original batch of stock.
Great recipe! About the fat: use it as a substitute for butter on your next slice of bread. I've made a similar broth, using deer bones. They came as 3€ per 1kg.
One thing I learned a long time ago was when you first add the liquid is to add a tiny amount (1 teaspoon per 5 litres) of apple cider vinegar to help extract the extra collagen and minerals from the bones. Especially when doing chicken foot/neck.
I'm making this right now and my kitchen smells ridiculously good! I have made beef stock before, but I don't think I put enough bones/meat, and I haven't tried using roasted tomato paste so I'm curious how that's going to turn out.
I make my own stocks but I was missing the tomato paste element and charring the vegetables. Quick question for chicken stock...same process? Charring and tomato paste?
I tend to use tomato paste only for beef bone, especially if reducing for a Demi glacé. If making a brown chicken stock you could add a smidgen, but not too much.
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Jesus loves you and may God bless you
Have you not heard of the word savory? Using foreign words that mean the same doesn't make you special... if anything it makes you look like you have your head up your butt.
Sonny, you are using the wrong tool at 7:20 to skim fat and scum off of your stock. Use an Asian style fat skimmer. They have an ultra fine metal mesh, and for some reason, water passes through the mesh trivially, but fat doesn't like to, and only does so with difficulty. Fat seems to have higher surface tension in the presence of fine steel mesh. This lets you skim the fat off with far less effort and time than it takes using a ladle.
Your genuine passion and energy has gotten me into cooking, which has had a huge impact on my physical and mental health. Thank you.
Did you make lobster?
Best comment posted
This truly means the world to me, it honestly keeps me doing this job.
Dang. Your enthusiasm makes me want to do the same 😂😁
That's AWESOME!! It only gets better from here! Love, peace,and great health to you!!❤✌💪
I was taught to make stock by my grandmother, she taught us to remove the bones at the 2.5- 3 hhr mark and strip the meat from the bones. Rather than blacken the vegetables as you did, she taught us to cut them into similar sized pieces and brown them in tallow/lard/chicken fat depending on the stock. Theses where also pulled from the stock along with the bones meat and saved, from these we would make pie filling with some "fresh" vegetables and this rolled into teaching us how to make pastry. She went through two world wars and the great depression and learned the value of waste not want not from experiance. With how our modern world is going learning from our grandparents and great grandparents if possable is wise. As a side note my grandfather would put the bones in the fire and would later grind the bones mixed with the ash for the garden to grow more vegetables. Thanks your for the video making a secondary light stock was new to us and valuable knowledge, Take care, God bless one and all.
The old timers knew how to use everything.
Pie filling, that sounds delicious. Thank you for you very informative post including the garden hack. 🤗❤️ P.S. I use the meat in curry sauce, it’s very delicious.
That touched me. It was a quick reminder of gratitude for the greatest generation fading in the rearview mirror.
That generation was 90-100 yrs old in 2000, genius. They’ve been gone for over 20 years. So close!
Thank you for sharing, our forefathers were very resilient. ❤🙏
I can attest to getting beef bone cut offs for free. Went to a local butcher in the next town over and asked him if he had any cutoffs/bones he was going to toss. I explained I was going to try to make home made beef stock. He literally gave me almost 30 lbs for free, excellent cuts full of marrow. I offered him money, but all he wanted was some of my homemade stock in return. I happily gave him a bunch after.
Nice!
Wow, I have to pay a smaller fortune for bones at my local supermarket.
@@Greblav If you have any local farms near you, I'd suggest you approach and just ask the farmer. They may know someone that butchers and be able to help you out. Or ask around at a local farmers market, someone is bound to know someone. Heck, even ask your co workers. Thats how I found the gentleman that hooked me up.
Around here that tray of bones is like $50. If they don't sell for stock, they'll get twice as much $ once they are smoked for dogs.
I learned how to do this almost 40 years ago, and i make my BeefStock about a week after Thanksgiving......to be ready for Christmas Prime Rib.
I make my own Chicken Stock all through the year......but Beef Scraps and Bones have come increasingly harder for me to find.....i have a special bin in my deep freeze......when i come across them , Im ON IT!.....i gotta say SONNY.....you totally nailed this .
When I learned this i was early 20's, and did MASS Quantities of Prime Rib Bones in Huge Hotel Roasting Pans that could hold 3 Boneoff Prime Ribs.....then make the stock in a 20 Gallon Tip Kettle. I got so good, suddenly it was my job.......never caught on the old timers didnt want to do the heavy lifting, or babysitting the Ovens or Kettle.......so yeah, Sonny, I DO KNOW!
Top tip, do your remouillage in a pressure cooker. It will extract all the last of the gelatin from the bones to make that second stock almost as unctuous as the first one.
pressure cookers are SICK. Bones after it just goes to paste )
Best stock i've ever ate was always from pressure cooker. It takes all flawors from meat, bones and veggies into the stock.
I argue with myself whether to use my pressure cooker (holds less, but more concentrated flavor) or the big old roasting pan. When I use the pressure cooker, I only cook for an hour-and-a-half. For this 8-hour cook, should I bump the time up by a lot?
Edit: you know the pressure cooker has done its best, because if you taste the meat, there's pretty much zero flavor left in it.
@@jvallas I usually go for between 2 and three hours, three if I'm not pushed for time.
That extra time is just for getting more gelatin out of the bones but I think after that you are getting rapidly diminishing returns.
@@jvallas look, I use a pressure cooker to extract all the flavors from vegetable trimmings, meat trimmings, leftover bones and cartilage. The pressure cooker forces the food to release all its vitamins, aromatic oils and nutrients into the broth without loss. I use this broth to make soups and sauces without wasting good ingredients on sauces. I cook good ingredients (tenderloins, steaks, filets, main parts of vegetables) in a cast iron skillet. And already into it I add the result of the pressure cooker to improve the taste.
oh, i think i got misunderstanding. im using
Afghan Pressure Cooker "kazan". it has a lot higher pressure and after it bones simply crumble into dust if you squeeze them, since all the useful substances under pressure went into the broth.
I just got the call to do a trial shift in a kitchen this week and potentially leaving a job I've been at for over a decade to finally follow my passion. Sonny's channel was a huge inspiration for me to really start trying to master the craft of cooking and I'll forever be grateful for that.
And a chef is born!
Now let’s go!
All my best wishes for you and your new career! :)
Your next step will be to call Gordon Ramsey. Or not.
You have more balls than I do, I’d love to do something like that. Risk equals reward, I hope you’re rewarded!
Here’s a tip: After you make your stock and freeze it in deli containers , run the container until a bit of hot water until the stock loosens, pop it into a vacuum sealer bag and seal the bag. Your stock will last many more months in the freezer because air can’t get to it.
Another tip, make very gelatious stock and put it into Tupperware.
Once cool, tip it onto a chopping board, chop into cubes. Put on a plate and freeze separately. Then you can put them in a food bag and take them out one frozen stock cube at a time.
@@tomallcock3185 great tip but you can easily use cheap ice cube trays! Thanks for sharing, and, remember to label the bag with the date that you have prepared the beef cubes. Even the best prepared beef stock will degrade after 6 months, turning bitter tasting. Happy cooking!
@@michaelsalmon6436 that's another good tip. This is what the internet is best at.
Souper Cubes makes a tray specifically for freezing stocks and broths
And that is a great idea, however, I will add, reduce your stock by half. Then freeze it. If you need two cups of stock, use one cup of reduced stock and add one cup of water.
Pro Tip: If you need a fair amount of tomato paste, use a small can. Tubes are for those moments where you only need a Tbsp or two
Second tip: if you have a lot of exposed marrow bones, you can leech out the blood (hume) in cold water first. This helps get rid of the gross top foam / cloudy stock
Definitely this. Its worth the extra step, although marrow bones are becoming more popular so I don't always get a lot from the butcher, it just depands on when I ask really.
In cooking school we rubbed our mirepoix with the tomato paste and baked it in the oven as well as the bones, we didn't put any paste on the bones we did blacken the onyo too.. great techniques bro you're making me want to make some up now
I made stock based upon your first stock video, stayed up until 5am keeping my eye on it, my wife thought I was insane, but loves the channel too...Best cooking channel out there.
I'm bald
Jesus loves you and may God bless you
first
Eh, a man doesn't need hair if he can cook like you do. Lol
And yes, Jesus loves you anyway. 😊
Hi Bald, im Dad.
Bless you. It was a great run. RIP dudecancook former beautiful hairline.
Been cooking a long time so thought to add something here. I make my own Vietnamese beef pho broth Hanoi style so spent a year researching how its done. I even spent 3 months in SEA wandering around learning how they make their broths. The one thing i found that makes a broth richer with out compromising the flavor profile of the beef is to use a pound of chicken feet for every gallon of stock that you intend to finish with. They are extremely high in collagen which adds that desired richness. They are also inexpensive at ~$2.50/lb at most Asian groceries.
I make batches of two gallons each overnight adding the aromatics for the last hour of the low simmer, then freeze it in 1/2 gallon volumes using zip-locks. I have pho bo broth when i need it.
I love seeing the number of comments about how YOU, Mr. Dude, were so fundamental in teaching people to cook! I have to add my own. I make your BBQ sauce and Rosemary salt, and experiment with both, all the time. I have friends and co-workers who are constantly asking, "when's the next time you're going to make this?" It feels amazing. Huge thank you to you, and the team!
Suggestion. When placing your fantastic liquid into a container, turn it upside down when placing it into the fridge. The next day you just need to pour out your stock as all the fat is on the bottom.
So simple but genius
Your cooking lessons are so great! My family often eats in silence because of the concepts and best cooking practices you share with us. I apply your tips to everything I cook. Love how you reinforce your tips in each video!
I just started watching like 2 videos before you considered leaving the tube... so glad you stuck it out. Your content is even better now! Thanks!
Thank you so much for your pearls. It means a lot to me. And I recognize the things you teach are absolutely priceless.
Best cooking channel on YT by a mile!
by a country mile
I just made stock last week. Cant wait to see everything I could have changed!
Not gonna lie after I started watching your videos a couple of months ago it has made me more passionate about cooking and I thank you for it king 🤴
You are my inspiration to start cooking. Thank you so much.
Thank you for this. This is extremely useful and well explained.
This was super interesting. I started making my own chicken and beef stocks about a year ago. I make them in a 20qt pot (and sometimes also have an additional 12 qt Dutch oven going). The big different here for me is that I often throw a ton of veggies in just for the nutrients. I’ve got two little kids and sneaking micronutrients in anywhere I can is always a bonus. I ALSO tend to try to use the really gelatinous stuff for everything - soups included. Reason being that I love the mouthfeel AND love knowing everyone is getting all of that extra protein in the form of collagen. Perhaps it’s unnecessary, or maybe. Just a matter of preference.
Definitely gonna try some of the other tricks though…and this fuels my desire for a vacuum sealer
This is the best beef stock video I have ever seen and I have learned a lot from it. Thank you! Can you please provide a link to the vacuum seal machine you use? Thank you.
I have never commented on anything on the internet. I love watching cooking videos. This was one of the very best cooking videos I have ever seen. The extra steps and storage options included! Great visuals and concise presentation without sacrificing anything. I will follow this recipe to the word. I can’t wait to try.
Thanks. I actually learn something today. Didn't know I can make another stoke.
I really found this video helpful! I always make chicken stock and freeze in vacuum bags. With various sizes! But I also like containers too since they are reusable. My friend was telling she hates celery in stocks never occurred to me to use leeks instead, let alone blacken the onions first! I've never made beef stock though! I think I'll ask my butcher for any beef bones next Wednesday. I was going to attempt this in my instant pot until you said LOW & SLOW. Either way works for me - I'll try your method first. Thank you!
I don't know what it is that sets you apart and elevates you above any other chef/cooking TH-cam channel I have ever watched, but your channel is amazing and you're inspiring. Love it!
Thanx Sonny...I fill regular sized ice cube trays with demi and vacuum seal 1 or 2 cubes together..Man, .you've certainly enriched my life with this stock/demi recipe alone...and in concert with your stroganoff recipe Wow!...I'm 65...been amateur cookin my whole life...thank you much dude...even my asian oyster sauce strongly benefits from using the stock ...its not only the base flavor but the mouthfeel....the collagen of course lends so much to that....both the stock and demi are such a luxury ingredients..
I did this without the tomato paste using more onions…I had some walla walla sweet onions I had to use up so I blacked some just roasted some… came out truly awesome thx so much for the tips you give us on the channel!!!
I followed your beef stock recipe a few days ago, refrigerated it overnight, saved the fat and portioned it for the freezer. The stock is amazing. I did an audible on the Remouillage by adding 4 beef ribs I couldn't fit into the stockpot. The Remouillage also came out amazing and surprisingly was nearly as gelatinous as the stock. I will definitely be doing both the stock and Remouillage from now on. In fact, I'm using the Remouillage for tomorrow night's dinner: Mushroom Bourguignon. Thanks again for this awesome technique.
One of my favorite uses of my chamber sealer is to make flat panels (4 cups each) of stock for the freezer.
Big thumbs up for this video!!!
I love making stock, and you give several tricks that I'm going to use from now on! Blackening the onions and leek, I'm gonna try that.
I'm accustomed to tomato paste out of a can but a tube looks way more practical here.
I was always looking for more foamy stuff to take out so there were some stocks where I didn't even skim anything, that's clear now (no pun intended)
The remouillage; I was cooking my bones for 12 hours before throwing in the veggies for another 4. This is a bit more work but having two different stocks instead of one(with the flavor in between those two) is probably worth it.
My tip for everyone is the herb Marjoran. It's delicious. floral, and it goes very well with almost all spices, like thyme and rosemary. I discovered it a few years back and I can't for the life of me understand why I never see anyone using or even mentioning it. When I put it in my beefstock I got so many compliments and questions about that one specific flavor which nobody could identify.
Love the passion, wish I had time for this labor of love. Make me appreciate my mom's cooking growing up. She did not skip steps. ❤
Dude, your vids are awesome and from a teaching perspective it is one of your best. I make your stuff all the time but i don't have a fridge to kick! Good job man! Good job.
This is one of the most comprehensive videos on making great stock! You should do one on chicken and others as a series!
Thanks brother. Love your channel. Just bought a large stock pot. Looking forward to trying this method.
I made some just like you did. I used chef Jean-Pierre’s recipe. I recently added a quarter quart to some braised beef short ribs and it took the resulting sauce to an entirely different level.
Definitely make this!
I follow your method, except I do add the celery and garlic. But when I make stock, I use around 20-25lbs of beef bones and cook it outdoors in a large tamale pot on my turkey fryer burner. Another secret I use is about 5lbs of chicken feet for extra gelatin.
When it’s finished, I pressure can in quarts and pints. That way it’s shelf stable and ready without thawing.
Last batch was just over 4 gallons. I am set for the next year.
I save all my onion skins and vegetable scraps in a freezer bag. Also save all bones from our dinners. When I have enough to make broth, I add all to a huge water canning pot and add some fresh or dried herbs from my garden. Add a couple tablespoons of apple cider vinegar and water to fill the pot. I proceed to simmer this for 48 hours or more, adding water to keep the level up. I then get my jars and lids and pressure canner, and can according to directions, hot pack. Label jars and store in proper rotation. I haven't used a lot of beef bones so I'm very excited to see if I have a local butcher. Thanks for sharing your talents. ❤
Your vids have stepped my cooking game up like 20 notches. Thank you so much! Keep killing it!
Love it!! If you kept reducing would it eventually be a Demi-glacé?
That’s what he was showing when he reduced some at the end, which Marcus licked off the plate, and which only made a blue icecube worth of Demi glacé. Normally you would reduce quite a bit more to make it worthwhile.
Sonny, that looks amazing! Kudos to Marcus for his efforts and contributions to these videos! 🙂😋😎❤
Amazing and simple. I'm trying this stock this weekend. Probably gonna be my new beef stock from now on.
Nice job, I love stock videos. Have you tried instant pot tonkatsu broth? it cuts the time down to like 4 hrs and it's just as good.
I have bought 2 kinds of deli containers from Amazon in the past. I need more, and I'm hoping these are the ones I preferred. I can't tell from looking at the picture, but one kind are a type of hard but very clear plastic - could break if you really tried (least fave, not flexible the way the others are). 2nd kind is very flexible and just slightly opaque. I think that's what these are. If so, they're great.
i've used tomato paste for stock, but had always caramelized it in a pan, but smearing it ON the meat for that browning is brilliant
Is the good burn on the onion and leeks replacing the bitterness of the celery?
Just wanted to drop a line and say I love your channel. You seem like such a regular, approachable dude, so it's refreshing to see genuine people on YT versus all of the made-up personalities and characters. Haven't tried this method for beef stock, but I did do your 24 brisket and it was the best piece of meat I've ever cooked! That technique was incredible, although my energy bill hates you for it! I know I should be asking this in the brisket video, but is there any shortcut or cheat to cutting down the oven cook-time by using a sous vide, which is more energy efficient?
I wish i had yours kitchen products.
Thank you for Sharing
Bro, this is an amazing lesson! You are a WONDERFUL chef, THANK YOU so much for this cooking lesson! I AM going to do this, God willing! ~
I was told that salt prevents the bones from breaking down as well and adding to the stock, and to use a couple glugs of vinegar for the opposite effect....or wine.
Could you add some beef fat scraps, when making the remouillage, to slow down the evaporation?
One of the best video on stock. Thank you
Would love see you do the same thing for chicken stock. Great stuff.
Great video. I freeze my stock in the deli the containers then pop out the frozen stock and vacuum seal them . The stock last month’s longer that way.
Great information!!!! Thanks!!!
I am making this right now and our house has smelled crazy good all day with the scent of this amazing stock. Thank you for the amazing tutorial Sonny!
Nice axe. Great recipe. Thanx for sharing.
Thoughts on stretching stock out with vinegar (for bone broths) and refined coconut oil (to boost saturated fats)?
i used a crock pot, 18 hours. ridiculously delicious.. someone send this hero a roll of paper towels! thank you Chef! 🙏🏼👨🍳❤️
I've never heard of a Remouillage but honestly it makes so much sense. Definitely going to try it out 👍
What about blanching your bones before cooking them to remove some of the impurities?
you can do that if you want a really really clean stock, might be a bit overkill for most people but they do that in high end restaurants
If you're making something like Phở or a consommé this works nicely. Mind you, I roast bones for Phở too, and if you keep the stock at a bare simmer and skim it every so often, the clarity ends up wonderful anyway
Making my own stocks for a few years now, and guys, it really changes everything when you have good stock right at hand in the kitchen.
That's some sexy slowmo scrapping the good bits in the half sheet tray!
Well done!
particularly Fond of that shot
Btw, LOVE your videos. When will you be coming out with a hard copy cookbook? Yes, I'm old school. Plus, I collect cookbooks!
Thanks man. Your videos help.
I'm really impressed with this video. I've been studying Ramins, Pho's ,Wor Wontons, Consumes, etc.. online, and this video really good. 😊
Been watching your vids alot lately. Do you recommend any good stick blenders for home use. With whisk attachment is fine.
Mainly for making sauces and milkshakes. Hummus. Things like that
I have the same apron! Love it. Question? Do you can any of the yummy things you make?
Great video. Thank you. Chicken stock would be great to 🙏🏼
@thatdudecancook, A question for you. I put bones, trimmed fat, other ingredients into a pressure cooker after roasting and I think it gets more flavor out of everything than boiling, but I never tried simmering this way. I also reduce it down to next to nothing before freezing so I basically have bullion. I often try to do it fast with higher heat just to get it done. Low heat seems like it would produce better flavor, so I'll try your method. Would you say that pressure cooking to make stock is inherently bad? Have you ever tried it? I notice after pressure cooking chicken bones for a long time you can crush them with your fingers. then I have cooked more to get the marrow extracted, but I never tested to see if it tasted good. just presumed it did and added it to the original batch of stock.
Thanks dude. Greatly appreciated.
How long does that butane tank last in your portable stove. I am thinking of buying one?
This changed a ton for me, thank you Sonny
Thank you!❤❤❤
I put my demiglace in icecube trays. I love my chamber vac for things with fluidity.
Wonder if you can use the fat from the first one to cover the second one to reduce evaporation?
I always use the brush trick so as not to lose an atom of flavour. Great video❤
Great recipe! About the fat: use it as a substitute for butter on your next slice of bread. I've made a similar broth, using deer bones. They came as 3€ per 1kg.
Yaya. Thanks s lot Dude! Seriously.. Thank You.
One thing I learned a long time ago was when you first add the liquid is to add a tiny amount (1 teaspoon per 5 litres) of apple cider vinegar to help extract the extra collagen and minerals from the bones. Especially when doing chicken foot/neck.
For skimming the scum, may I suggest a fine mesh spider? Gets all the scum and leaves behind all the stock.
Just want to say, I'm loving this new style of humour you and marcus are doing.
Great Content, thank you!
Whats the benefit of roasting the tomato paste on the beef versus cooking it out on the bottom of the pot?
Informative and fun!
Excellent..TY!!
This is one of your top 10 videos !!!
*TheDudeCanCook* Bravo well done, thank-you sir for taking the time to bring us along. GOD Bless. (( New Sub ))
lol I also can't resist pulling one of those beef plate ribs out when it's ready; a little salt and a brush of my fav bbq sauce -- chef's treat!
Sonny you never disappoint. Love your content and you are such an amazing teacher. Great video.
I'm making this right now and my kitchen smells ridiculously good! I have made beef stock before, but I don't think I put enough bones/meat, and I haven't tried using roasted tomato paste so I'm curious how that's going to turn out.
braise shin low and slow for 6-8 hours, awesome stew. You can clarify with egg whites too on your stock.
You got any of those quart container solutions for people trying to avoid plastic?
was it covered for 4 hours or open? i didnt catch that after i went back, im assuming no lid?
Could you use the bbq for the bones? Or would that ruin the flavor?
I definitely have to try this.
I make my own stocks but I was missing the tomato paste element and charring the vegetables. Quick question for chicken stock...same process? Charring and tomato paste?
I tend to use tomato paste only for beef bone, especially if reducing for a Demi glacé. If making a brown chicken stock you could add a smidgen, but not too much.