How To make Beef Stock Master Chefs
2 tb Oil, vegetable
6 lb Bones, beef, meaty
2 md Onions, trimmed, quartered
don't peel 2 lg Carrots, peeled, trimmed
:
coarsely chopped 2 Celery, stalks, trimmed,
coarsely chopped 1 Leek, trimmed, halved
:
lengthwise, coarsely chopped, (white and :
green parts) 4 Garlic, cloves, unpeeled
1 bn Parsley, stems
2 c Water, plus more as needed
2 md Tomatoes, fresh or canned,
-- cored, coarsely chopped 1/2 ts Thyme, dried, or
3 Thyme, sprigs
2 Bay leaf
2 Cloves
3/4 ts Salt, coarse
8 Peppercorns
Preheat oven to 450 F. Put the oil in a roasting pan and heat briefly in the oven. Add the bones to the oil in the pan, toss to coat and roast for 35 minutes.
Add the onions, carrots, celery, leek, garlic and parsley, tossing them all to coat with fat. Roast 30 minutes longer. Remove the pan from the oven and transfer the bones and vegetables to a clean stockpot. Drain off as much of the fat as possible. Place the roasting pan over medium-high heat (use 2 burners if necessary), and add 2 cups of cold water and boil briefly. Scrape up all of the browned bits into the water. Transfer the liquid to the stock pot and add enough cold water to cover. Bring slowly to a boil, skimming off all of the froth that forms. Lower the heat and add tomatoes, thyme, bay leaves, cloves and salt. Simmer uncovered for 6 to 8 hours adding water as necessary just to cover the ingredients. Skim whenever necessary. Add peppercorns for the last 15 minutes of the simmering. Strain the "soup" into a large bowl through a colander lined with a double layer of dampened cheesecloth. Gently press the solids to extract all of the liquid, and discard the solids. Pour the stock into containers for storage and label and date them. The stock will "keep" for up to 3 days in a refrigerator, and up to 6 months in a freezer. Source: New York's Master Chefs, Bon Appetit Magazine : Written by Richard Sax, Photographs by Nancy McFarland : The Knapp Press, Los Angeles, 1985
How To make Beef Stock Master Chefs's Videos
From Boxed to Delicious Beef Stock | Chef Jean-Pierre
Hello There Friends, what an episode I have for you today! I am going to transform a Boxed Beef Stock into a Homemade Delicious Beef Stock without the hours of cooking. It is truly something that you have to do if you don't want to spend the hours of roasting bones and cooking down a stock. Let me know down in the comments how you did and how amazing this is! Thank you for the continuous support we love you guys.
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Original Beef Stock:
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Spiced Short Rib of Beef Masterclass | MasterChef New Zealand | MasterChef World
Chef Josh Emett presents a masterclass in how to cook a spiced short rib of beef!
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How One of the Country’s Best Chefs Runs Two-Michelin-Starred Ever in Chicago – Mise En Place
At Chicago’s Michelin-starred Ever, chef Curtis Duffy delivers creative twists on traditional dishes like corn balls dipped in white chocolate, rabbit with capers and cardamom, black truffle risotto with maitake and Parmesan, and more.
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Producer: Daniel Geneen
Directors: Daniel Geneen, Murilo Ferreira
Camera: Carla Francescutti, Murilo Ferreira
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Classic French Best Quality Brown Beef Stock (professional advanced restaurant recipe)
Be sure to have the ANNOTATIONS turned on in your YouTube preferences located at the bottom of the video frame. Only then will you be able to see the list of ingredients and other important text presented throughout the video.
Although the title of this video states restaurant recipe, only the finest Michelin star restaurants today would actually make stock in this manner.
Brad Makes a Master Stock | It's Alive | Bon Appétit
Bon Appétit’s Brad Leone is back for episode 65 of It’s Alive, and this time he’s making his “master stock.” The perfect base for your broths, sauces, or just to drink as a hearty morning elixir. Join Brad as we learn about ham hocks, misophonia, and the correct way to spell Scorsese, which is Scorsese, and not how it was hastily spelled in the video. Sorry, Marty. It’s what it is. This stock is so good we had to let the people know about it ASAP. The good news is there’s actually a recipe for this episode! Follow along at home:
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Join Bon Appétit test kitchen guy, Brad Leone, on a wild, roundabout and marginally scientific adventure exploring fermented foods and more. From cultured butter and kombucha, to kimchi and miso, to beer and tepache, learn how to make fermented and live foods yourself.
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Brad Makes a Master Stock | It's Alive | Bon Appétit
Stock Secrets Chefs Won’t Tell You
Stock Secrets Chefs Won’t Tell You
Brown Chicken Stock in the Instant Pot:
Brown Chicken Stock on the Stove:
00:00 Intro
01:13 I don’t want to waste the chicken meat on stock. Can I use a carcass leftover from roasted chicken to make stock?
04:25 Can I make stock out of raw chicken? Why do you need to roast it?
05:09 Can I remove the skin from the chicken before making stock? Isn’t it all fat and we remove the fat in the end, so why add it in the first place?
06:13 Your stock calls for salt free rotisserie chickens. If I can’t find salf-free ones, can I use salted ones?
07:43 Instead of buying rotisserie chickens, can I roast my own chicken to make stock?
08:24 How much water should I use per pound of chicken?
09:44 Can I add powdered gelatin to store bought (or wimpy homemade) stock to make a pan sauce or a braise?
11:06 Why should I strain out the solids before reducing the stock?
12:00 I have a recipe that calls for 4 cups of chicken stock -- how much of your chicken stock is that?
14:02 A better way to think about stock
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