Chicken Bone broth in jar on a napkin.
Chicken Broth

I’m going to let you in on a little secret: I haven’t bought chicken broth in years. I used to think making chicken broth was this big, long, complicated process, and that kept me from making my own forever, but then I discovered the really easy trick to super easy chicken broth, and I haven’t looked back. Homemade chicken broth is tastier, healthier (you can control the sodium levels), and, the main reason I make it, it’s so much cheaper! Especially with this method. It’s practically free!

The key? Scrap bags.

Chicken Broth Scrap Bags

I keep two gallon-sized freezer zip-top bags in my freezer at all times. In one bag goes chicken scrapsโ€”leftover bones and skin from chicken breasts, trimmed fat scraps, carcasses leftover from whole roasted chicken. I ram it all in there and freeze it.

In the second bag goes all my veggie scrapsโ€”onion skins, carrot peels, celery leaves. I just fill it up as I’m cooking throughout the week. I don’t worry about ratios (too much onion or too little celery), I just fill it up with whatever I have leftover.

Then, once both bags are completely full, it’s time to make some chicken stock.

Chicken Broth

I dump both bags into a giant stock pot (I tend to use my 21 quart canning pot), throw in a couple of bay leaves and a few shakes of poultry seasoning, and then fill up the pot with water. I honestly don’t measure at all. See? Lazy. I also don’t salt my brothโ€”I save that step for when I’m actually cooking with the broth down the road.

Chicken Broth

And then I pop it on the stove on high.

Chicken Broth

I bring it to a boil, reduce the heat, and simmer for a few hours, or until the broth looks like, well, how broth should look! It should look rich, dark, and super delicious.

Chicken Broth

I know some folks strain off the fat, but I like to keep it in my broth (fat=flavor!), so my next step is to let the broth cool slightly, and then strain it. I usually strain it twice, once through a fine mesh sieve, and then again through my Greek yogurt strainer.

Chicken Broth

Then, I let it cool completely, and freeze it in four-cup servings in quart zip-top bags. I’ve also frozen them in quart canning jarsโ€”freezing in jars works beautifully, just as long as you keep enough headspace. In fact, I’d prefer to freeze them jars, but I just don’t have enough freezer space (mama needs a new freezer!).

Chicken Broth

After boiling down, I usually get between 12-15 quarts of broth from each batch (one chicken scrap bag and one veggie scrap bag). And that’s almost always enough to last me until my scrap bags fill back up again. It’s a wonderful system!

Protip: What about the alcohol?

Donโ€™t worry about getting buzzed off this stew. It simmers for two hours, enough time to burn off almost all the alcohol. That being said, it definitely still has the flavor and scent of wine (and trust me, your whole house will smell wine-tastic). So keep that in mind!

And, considering I’m going to have those chicken and veggie scraps anyway, making this broth is totally free. Twelve quarts of good, organic broth runs about $45โ€”that’s a nice savings!

Chicken Broth

I know a lot of folks say healthy eating is expensive, and I definitely agree it can be, but I think with little tricks like this, and a little bit of time, you can make up for a lot of that extra expense.

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29 Comments

  1. I have always wanted to make homemade chicken broth but thought it would be too difficult or time-consuming. Thanks your post, I will be making my own this year!

  2. THIS is such an awesome idea! I have been trying to think of ways to not waste the carrot peels!

    Do you save the “paper” from the outside of the onion too?

    Thank you for this, I love it!

  3. I just made vegetable broth in my slow cooker this weekend using this method! As you noted, it’s awesome because I’m using materials I would’ve thrown away otherwise. I totally hear you on needing a new freezer though; I feel like my lack of a chest freezer is seriously cutting down on my cooking possibilities (including making more broth!)

  4. I used to hide my scrap bags of chicken so no one would think I was that poor. Then I decided to add veggie scraps to the freezer and make chicken veggie stock. Now my rich friends think I am “so clever” instead of poor and I have the best base in town. You can also trim chuck roast, steak or fancy cuts ans make a great beef stock with leftover onion scraps or whatever you enjoy. Don’t make as much or keep as long but it helps out a lot with a large pot of homemade beef noodles. Thrifty is great !

      1. Hi, Karen! The veggie scraps come from veggies that have been washed, so there’s no need to wash anything again before it gets stashed in the freezer or heads into the stock pot!

  5. I make chicken stock in the crockpot all the time, but I never thought of using a scrap bag to put everything in it. What a great idea. I will definitely be saving all those bits and pieces now!

    Homemade broth is so much flavorful than the box stuff. I also don’t salt until I actually cook it. A friend in culinary school told me that once.

  6. My boyfriend and I keep a veggies scrap bag in the freezer, but I didn’t even think about keeping a chicken one as well. Homemade stock is the best.

  7. i love this tip!! How many times have I thrown all of that away and then bought chicken stock the next week. Thank you!

  8. Now you need a pressure canner. ๐Ÿ™‚ I bought one primarily because I was sick of forgetting to defrost my chicken stock until the last minute! I can mine now and it’s so easy. Definitely consider the investment if you haven’t already!

    1. I am still one of those people afraid of canning and pressure cooking! As a kid, canning week was my least favorite! Tell me they have worked out all those problems so no more exploding jars or catapulting lids! I also remember lots of jars of carrots and green beans I was dreading eating all winter.
      I love the idea of the scrap bag. I already save my chicken scraps so how easy will it be to add another bag to the freezer for carrot tops, onion peels and celery ends! Great efficiency!

  9. I made stock in the crockpot overnight and always feel like I am wasting all those carrots, etc. when I strain it. Using a scrap bag is such a good alternative idea. Thanks!

  10. I love your scrap bag method! That is fabulous. I usually make my broth in the crockpot overnight (even though I hate waking up to the smell) because I don’t always have a few solid hours at home to knock it out. I also choose to skim my fat because chicken fat is high in PUFAโ€™s (polyunsaturated fatty acids) โ€“ which are very fragile and oxidize easily.

    I’m going to give your scrap bag method a go! Thanks again for the tip!