Beef Bone Broth, easy style - Revived Kitchen (2024)

19 Shares

I’m posting this recipe for my mother because she called me this week asking about making bone broth. You can imagine my excitement!

She had called me to tell me that her copy of “From Scratch” (my favorite cookbook ever) had just arrived in the mail, and it talked about bone broth, and she wanted to make some! She said, “Can you tell some of your farmer friends that I’d like some bones?” Little did she know that when we moved to California—leaving her with our deep freezer and everything in it—I had left her a knuckle bone and chicken feet, as well! (And a kidney, which I’m still not sure if she’ll eat. Haha.)

“Mom!” I said, “There’s actually a knuckle bone in your freezer!” :D

So exciting!

So here is the recipe for bone broth: for my mother, and anyone else who wants to learn to make broth. :)

How to Make Beef Bone Broth

Step 1:

Get a grass fed bone. Or about 5 lbs. of bones, which looks about like this. Isn’t this cool?! (Buy grassfed meat products here.)

You can get bones from a local butcher, and they’ll even cut them into pieces for you. Or you can call a local grass fed beef farmer and request bones from them at really great prices. Bones will cost anywhere between $0-$3/lb. In my experience, even $3/lb. is really cheap for making broth, if you consider the cost of store-bought broth. Store-bought broth doesn’t even come close to homemade, since is more closely resembles water with added flavoring than actual broth, and it has a LOT less nutrients!

Here’s the math:

5 lbs. of bones at $3/lb. costs $15.

$15 for bones + the cost of veggies… let’s say $5 more….is $20

For $20, you can make AT LEAST 3 gallons of broth, if not more, which comes to $1.67 a quart.

If a homemade quart costs AT MOST $1.67, and a quart of broth from the store costs $4, THAT’S A SAVINGS OF $28 for three gallons of broth!!!

AND that’s calculated at the HIGHEST cost I’ve ever paid for bones with the LOWEST amount of liquid return on broth. If you get the bones cheaper AND make more broth, you’re saving OVER $30 by making your broth at home!!

AND it’s nutrient-dense, AND you can’t beat the taste of homemade broth. You just can’t. Don’t even try.

Anyway.

Step 2:

If you have any meaty bones, roast them in the oven until they turn brown. Otherwise, place the bones in a large pot of filtered water), along with 2-3 TBSP of apple cider vinegar. I use about 1.5 gallons or until the water covers the bones, leaving at least 2 inches of margin from the top of the pot. Let the bones sit for an hour.

Step 3:

After an hour, bring the water to a rolling boil. As the water boils, a foamy scum will begin to float on the top of the water. Skim this off with a spoon.

Step 4:

Add a large WHOLE organic onion WITH THE SKIN. Make sure it’s organic!! This is super important since we are leaving the skin on. Break 3 large carrots in half and plop ’em in the pot. Do the same with 3 stalks of celery. If you have any other vegetable scraps you wish to add, you can add those, too. Adding parsley is also good.

Step 5:

Reduce heat and cover. You want to keep your pot on LOW or the lowest setting possible where it is still bubbling a little bit, but not boiling. A slow simmer.

Step 6:

Walk away for anywhere between 24-72 hours. (I’m serious, Mom! It’s okay! I literally just leave it on the stove for 3-5 days. Don’t worry about it!)

Step 7:

Every day (for 3-5 days), I remove between 2-4 quarts of broth. I use a ladle, a canning funnel, and cloth to filter the broth into half gallon mason jars. For every quart I remove, I add back another quart of filtered water, and then I let that go for another 24 hours (at least). It’s not an exact science. I don’t use a timer.

Step 8:

Refrigerate the broth or let set out on the counter until it cools. Now, you have a few options!

#1 – You can keep the broth in your fridge for a week and use it in soups and stews and things.

#2 – You can downpour the broth into freezer bags, label them with the date and contents, and throw them in your freezer for later use. I like using plastic freezer bags because I can cut the bag off from around the frozen hunk of broth and just throw it into a pot.

#3 – You can use a pressure canner to store the broth for later.

#4 – You can pour the broth back into a stock pot and boil it until it reduces in volume. This creates a broth concentrate, which takes less space to store. Just remember to add water back to your broth when you use it in recipes.

#5 – You can reduce it even further, until it becomes VERY dark and syrupy. Pour this syrup onto dehydrating sheets, and dehydrate until it becomes hard like resin. Grind the resin in a food processor, and voila! You have instant broth for breakfast on the go!

19 Shares

Beef Bone Broth, easy style - Revived Kitchen (2024)
Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Duane Harber

Last Updated:

Views: 6707

Rating: 4 / 5 (51 voted)

Reviews: 82% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Duane Harber

Birthday: 1999-10-17

Address: Apt. 404 9899 Magnolia Roads, Port Royceville, ID 78186

Phone: +186911129794335

Job: Human Hospitality Planner

Hobby: Listening to music, Orienteering, Knapping, Dance, Mountain biking, Fishing, Pottery

Introduction: My name is Duane Harber, I am a modern, clever, handsome, fair, agreeable, inexpensive, beautiful person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.