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How to Make Bone Broth (Recipe, with Instant Pot Option)

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Bone Broth Recipe with Tutorial
Wellness Mama » Blog » Recipes » Beef Recipes » How to Make Bone Broth (Recipe, with Instant Pot Option)

If you aren’t already making bone broth regularly, I’d encourage you to start today! It is an incredibly healthy and very inexpensive addition to any diet, and the homemade versions beat store-bought broth in both taste and nutrition (although there is some amazing homemade organic broth you can buy pre-made now).

This is the one nutrient rich food that anyone can afford to add!

What is Broth?

Broth (or technically, stock) is a mineral-rich infusion made by boiling bones of healthy animals with vegetables, herbs. and spices. You’ll find a large stock pot of broth/stock simmering in the kitchen of almost every 5-star restaurant. It is used for its great culinary uses and unparalleled flavor, but it is also a powerful health tonic that you can easily add to your family’s diet.

Broth is a traditional food that your grandmother likely made often (and if not, your great-grandmother definitely did). Many societies around the world still consume broth regularly as it is a cheap and highly nutrient dense food.

Besides it’s amazing taste and culinary uses, broth is an excellent source of minerals and is known to boost the immune system (chicken soup when you are sick anyone?) and improve digestion. Its high calcium, magnesium, and phosphorus content make it great for bone and tooth health. Bone broth also supports joints, hair, skin, and nails due to its high collagen content. In fact, some even suggest that it helps eliminate cellulite as it supports smooth connective tissue.

It can be made from the bones of beef, bison, lamb, poultry, or fish. Vegetables and spices are often added both for flavor and added nutrients.
Delicious Homemade Bone Broth Tutorial- How to make perfect bone broth

Why Drink Bone Broth?

Anyone who has read Gut and Psychology Syndrome knows the many benefits of bone broth and how it can improve digestion, allergies, immune health, brain health, and much more.

What isn’t as well known is that broth can help reduce cellulite by improving connective tissue, increase hair growth/strength, improve digestive issues, and remineralize teeth.

Broth is also helpful to have on hand when anyone in the family gets sick as it can be a soothing and immune boosting drink during illness, even if the person doesn’t feel like eating.

Broth is very high in the amino acids proline and glycine which are vital for healthy connective tissue (ligaments, joints, around organs, etc). The Paleo Mom has a great explanation of the importance of these two amino acids:

In addition, glycine is required for synthesis of DNA, RNA and many proteins in the body. As such, it plays extensive roles in digestive health, proper functioning of the nervous system and in wound healing. Glycine aids digestion by helping to regulate the synthesis and of bile salts and secretion of gastric acid. It is involved in detoxification and is required for production of glutathione, an important antioxidant. Glycine helps regulate blood sugar levels by controlling gluconeogenesis (the manufacture of glucose from proteins in the liver). Glycine also enhances muscle repair/growth by increasing levels of creatine and regulating Human Growth Hormone secretion from the pituitary gland. This wonderful amino acid is also critical for healthy functioning of the central nervous system. In the brain, it inhibits excitatory neurotransmitters, thus producing a calming effect. Glycine is also converted into the neurotransmitter serine, which promotes mental alertness, improves memory, boosts mood, and reduces stress.

Proline has an additional role in reversing atherosclerotic deposits. It enables the blood vessel walls to release cholesterol buildups into your blood stream, decreasing the size of potential blockages in your heart and the surrounding blood vessels. Proline also helps your body break down proteins for use in creating new, healthy muscle cells.

What Kind of Broth?

Homemade, nutrient-dense bone broth is incredibly easy and inexpensive to make. There is no comparison to the store-bought versions which often contain MSG or other chemicals and which lack gelatin and some of the other health-boosting properties of homemade broth. However, if you’re short on time, I recommend Kettle & Fire’s grass-fed bone broth because it’s pretty gelatinous and made with organic ingredients.

In selecting the bones for broth, look for high quality bones from grass fed cattle or bison, pastured poultry, or wild caught fish. Since you’ll be extracting the minerals and drinking them in concentrated form, you want to make sure that the animal was as healthy as possible.

There are several places to find good bones for stock:

  • Save leftovers from when you roast a chicken, duck, turkey, or goose (pastured)
  • From a local butcher, especially one who butchers the whole animal
  • From local farmers who raise grass fed animals (ask around at your local farmers market)
  • Online from companies like US Wellness Meats (also where I get grass fed tallow in bulk- they sell pre-made high quality broth), Butcher Box, or Healthy Traditions (I order high quality beef, bison, lamb, and chicken bones from them at good prices)

This recipe for broth is my favorite and is an adaption of the recipe in Nourishing Traditions.

 

Delicious Homemade Bone Broth Tutorial- How to make perfect bone broth

Bone Broth Recipe (Stove Top or Instant Pot)

Make nourishing bone broth at home simmered on the stove top or in the Instant Pot in a fraction of the time.
Prep Time 10 minutes
Cook Time 8 hours
Total Time 8 hours 10 minutes
Calories 16kcal
Author Katie Wells

Servings

16 cups

Ingredients

  • 2 lbs bones from a healthy source
  • 2 chicken feet (optional)
  • 1 gal water
  • 2 TBSP apple cider vinegar
  • 1 onion
  • 2 carrots
  • 2 stalks of celery
  • 1 TBSP salt (optional)
  • 1 tsp peppercorns (optional)
  • herbs and spices (to taste, optional)
  • 2 cloves garlic (optional)
  • 1 bunch parsley (optional)

Instructions

  • If you are using raw bones, especially beef bones, it improves flavor to roast them in the oven first. I place them in a roasting pan and roast for 30 minutes at 350°F.
  • Place the bones in a large stock pot or the Instant Pot.
  • Pour cool filtered water and the vinegar over the bones. Let sit for 20-30 minutes in the cool water. The acid helps make the nutrients in the bones more available.
  • Rough chop and add the onion, carrots, and celery to the pot.
  • Add any salt, pepper, spices, or herbs, if using.

Stove Top

  • Bring the broth to a boil. Once it has reached a vigorous boil, reduce to a simmer and simmer until done.
  • During the first few hours of simmering, you’ll need to remove the impurities that float to the surface. A frothy/foamy layer will form and it can be easily scooped off with a big spoon. Throw this part away. I typically check it every 20 minutes for the first 2 hours to remove this. Grass-fed and healthy animals will produce much less of this than conventional animals.
  • Simmer for 8 hours for fish broth, 24 hours for chicken, or 48 hours for beef.
  • During the last 30 minutes, add the garlic and parsley, if using.
  • Remove from heat and let cool slightly. Strain using a fine metal strainer to remove all the bits of bone and vegetable. When cool enough, store in a gallon size glass jar in the fridge for up to 5 days, or freeze for later use.

Instant Pot

  • Add the garlic and parsley to the pot if using, place the lid on the pot, and set valve to seal.
  • Cook at high pressure for 2 hours, followed by either a quick release or natural pressure release. Either is fine.
  • Let cool slightly, strain, and store in a gallon size glass jar in the fridge for up to 5 days, or freeze for later use.

Nutrition

Nutrition Facts
Bone Broth Recipe (Stove Top or Instant Pot)
Amount Per Serving (1 cup)
Calories 16
% Daily Value*
Cholesterol 2mg1%
Sodium 458mg20%
Potassium 57mg2%
Carbohydrates 1g0%
Vitamin A 1575IU32%
Vitamin C 5.8mg7%
Calcium 21mg2%
Iron 0.3mg2%
* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2000 calorie diet.

Notes

Detailed stove-top timing instructions below.

Like this recipe? Check out my new cookbook, or get all my recipes (over 500!) in a personalized weekly meal planner here!

Bone Broth Instructions

The first step in preparing to make broth is to gather high quality bones. As I said, you can find them from sources listed above or save them when you cook. Since we roast chicken at least once a week, I save the carcass for making broth/stock.

Chicken for Bone Broth

I usually aim for 2 pounds of bones per gallon of water I’m using to make broth. This usually works out to 2-3 full chicken carcasses. If possible I’ll also add 2 chicken feet per gallon of water (completely optional!).

You’ll also need some organic vegetables for flavor. These are actually optional but add extra flavor and nutrition. Typically, I add (per gallon of water and 2 pounds of bones):

  • 1 onion
  • 2 large carrots (if from an organic source, you can rough chop and don’t need to peel)
  • 2 celery stalks, rough chopped
  • 1 bunch of parsley

bone broth vegetables

Since I make in bulk, I usually use about 4 times the amount of each of these. You can make in any amount, just multiply or divide the recipe up or down.

If you are using raw bones, especially beef bones, it improves flavor to roast them in the oven first. I place them in a roasting pan and roast for 30 minutes at 350°F.

Then, place the bones in a large stock pot (I use a 5 gallon pot). Pour cool filtered water over the bones and add the vinegar. Let sit for 20-30 minutes in the cool water. The acid helps make the nutrients in the bones more available.

Rough chop and add the vegetables (except the parsley and garlic, if using) to the pot. Add any salt, pepper, spices, or herbs, if using.

Making Homemade Bone Broth

Now, bring the broth to a boil. Once it has reached a vigorous boil, reduce to a simmer and simmer until done. These are the times I simmer for:

  • Beef broth/stock: 48 hours
  • Chicken or poultry broth/stock: 24 hours
  • Fish broth: 8 hours

During the first few hours of simmering, you’ll need to remove the impurities that float to the surface. A frothy/foamy layer will form and it can be easily scooped off with a big spoon. Throw this part away. I typically check it every 20 minutes for the first 2 hours to remove this. Grass-fed and healthy animals will produce much less of this than conventional animals.

During the last 30 minutes, add the garlic and parsley, if using.

Remove from heat and let cool slightly. Strain using a fine metal strainer to remove all the bits of bone and vegetable. When cool enough, store in a gallon size glass jar in the fridge for up to 5 days, or freeze for later use.

How to Use Bone Broth

Homemade Broth/Stock can be used as the liquid in making soups, stews, gravies, sauces, and reductions. It can also be used to saute or roast vegetables.

We try to drink at least 1 cup per person per day as a health boost, especially in the winter. My favorite way is to heat 8-16 ounces with a little salt and sometimes whisk in an egg until cooked (makes a soup like egg drop soup).

In times of illness (which doesn’t happen often) we will usually just drink bone broth until we start feeling better as it supports the body but is very easy to digest so the body’s energy can go to healing. In cases of stomach bugs or vomiting, bone broth often calms the stomach very quickly and helps shorten the duration of the illness.

If you don’t want to DIY, this is a great pre-made bone broth option shipped straight to your door!

If you aren’t already, make bone broth a regular part of your kitchen routine. It’s health boosting, inexpensive, and easy… you can’t afford not to!

This article was medically reviewed by Dr. Lauren Jefferis, board certified in Internal Medicine and Pediatrics. As always, this is not personal medical advice and we recommend that you talk with your doctor or work with a doctor at SteadyMD.

Do you already make bone broth? Will you try it now? Share your tips or questions below!

Bone broth is an incredibly nutritious and health-boosting food that is very easy to make. This step by step tutorial shows you how.

Sources

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Katie Wells Avatar

About Katie Wells

Katie Wells, CTNC, MCHC, Founder of Wellness Mama and Co-founder of Wellnesse, has a background in research, journalism, and nutrition. As a mom of seven, she turned to research and took health into her own hands to find answers to her health problems. WellnessMama.com is the culmination of her thousands of hours of research and all posts are medically reviewed and verified by the Wellness Mama research team. Katie is also the author of the bestselling books The Wellness Mama Cookbook and The Wellness Mama 5-Step Lifestyle Detox.

Comments

1,512 responses to “How to Make Bone Broth (Recipe, with Instant Pot Option)”

  1. Angela Avatar

    Hi! Thanks for this post! I’ve never made meat broth before. What type of meat do I buy at the store? I haven’t eaten meat in 12 years and I’m excited to try this recipe out!

  2. Maggy Avatar

    I like your topic and I am interested to work on it… but you didnt mentioned how to cook it in a slow cooker.
    have you ever tried to cook it on slow cooker? can you explain.

    Thank you…

  3. Laura Avatar

    There’s a company that my health coach came across that makes some really incredible tasting bone broth and they ship it frozen to you. It’s called Au bon broth. The premium one is addictingly delicious. It gels up really nice too! Good ingredients

  4. jeanne Avatar

    Just a wondering that I can’t seem to find an answer to…..I reuse the water I used to cook..is that correct?..I cook my lamb shanks and chicken legs. I take the meat off the bones and I feed my family. I immediately put the bones into the pot where I cooked the lamb shanks and do not empty the water that was used to cook the lamb shanks. I top it up with some more water. Am I supposed to use new water entirely?

  5. Galina Avatar

    Dear WellnessMama,

    After finishing simmering the 2lbs of bones with a gallon of water, as you suggest per the recipe, how much broth should you have made? i.e. 1/4-1/2 gallon of broth?

  6. Jasmin Avatar

    Hi everyone,

    I’m looking at buying and electric stove-top slow cooker, and was wondering whether anyone on here had used one successfully? If so, which model is it?

    I understand it’s really easy to over-cook bone broth, and the gentle simmer is the key to success!

    From what I can see online, they can get quite expensive, so thought I had better check with people in the know!! Any guidance/advice you can give on this would be really appreciated I so don’t want to make a poor investment! :s

    Thank you in advance,
    Jasmin

    x

  7. Michelle Avatar
    Michelle

    Thank you so much for this post, Wellness Mama.

    I just have one quick query – I understood you could only cook meat once plus one reheat, to avoid food poisoning.

    Does roasting the bones, then soaking them in cold water before cooking/making the actual broth, then freezing the broth and reheating it for consumption (if I’ve understood the process correctly) not cause a problem?

    Look forward to hearing from you, and thank you for your time.

  8. Philippa Avatar
    Philippa

    Need to buy a bigger slow cooker as I only have a gas hob. Do you happen to know whether a ceramic slow cooker is okay? Can’t seem to find any stainless versions in NZ.

    1. olga Avatar

      I just bought this 18 qt ( I thought 22 qt would be too big) Rival roaster at Amazon for 39 dollars. I tried to make broth with whole chicken and my 7 qt crock pot was too small. I read a lot of Amazon reviews on roasters of people who use them like slow cookers for large batches of soups, chilis, etc that just will not fit in the largest of crock pots. I haven’t tried it yet.

  9. Kerri Avatar

    Thanks for the great info. I made bone broth this morning and realized too late that you said to add the garlic at the end. Will the broth still work out with garlic brewing all day long?

  10. aneta Avatar

    Im using frozen chicken bones, when would I add the apple cider? to the frozen bones in cold water or after they have been boiled. Thank you!

  11. Kristina Keller Avatar
    Kristina Keller

    Aside from purchasing bone-in meats, which im not at all used to doing. In that case im wondering what beef cuts that aren’t extremely expensive you can find bone in. Almost all the conventional grocery stores where I live; Northwestern MN, seem to have gone almost exclusively boneless in most meats. Now onto finding bones; I was extremely shocked to find that not only are broth bones more expensive than meats when on sale but almost twice as expensive! my income consists of social security and child support at this point. Im post bariatric surgery; in which neither the doctors or dentists will concur that there is poorer oral health associated with the reconstruction of your insides. I am 35 and am in no hurry for a full set of dentures which I have heard of happening. I started oil pulling about a month out of surgery as well as ditched the fluorinated toothpaste for Earthpaste. I have noted several benefits thus far however with an increased cost. I have a molar I am fighting to remineralize and repair but most of all keep. If anything I will have extracted although they (the dentist) would prefer to root canal. I am most defiantly not going this route.
    Back to the original topic at hand. I am not finding these bones as cheaply as they are referred to. We don’t have many specified butchers around but I would suspect since their meat is more expensive their bones are liable to be as well. no idea where else I could obtain these as I don’t know any farmers that butcher themselves anymore due to the FDA regulations. Any help or advice would be extremely appreciated. Thank you

    1. Wellness Mama Avatar

      I am not sure about where you live, but near my, whole chickens, even organic ones, are very inexpensive pound for pound. We frequently buy frozen chickens when they are on sale and cook them once a week. The meat makes a couple of meals and then we make broth with the carcass. It’s definitely easier than buying bones specifically for making broth. Every once in a while we have found a butcher that wanted to get rid of their bones for cheap, but chickens are often the less expensive route.

  12. Nanaki Kaur Avatar
    Nanaki Kaur

    Hi Katie!

    I recently decided to try drinking bone broth after reading a blog about how someone was able to cure her lifelong adult acne by drinking it. I have had acne as well for around 6 years- since I was 13 years old. I’m actually vegetarian but I am desperate to clear my skin, so decided to give this a go. Since I am doing it now, I would like to make sure that I’m making the broth correctly in order to maximize the potential benefits and would really appreciate your advice!

    Here are the steps that I followed yesterday. I used 6-7 chicken necks for my broth.

    Let necks sit in the juice of 1 lemon,3-4 tbsp of apple cider vinegar, and water for around 20-30 min
    Bring water to a boil, and let it simmer for around 3 1/2 hours, covered.

    I wanted to cook it for the recommended 8-24 hours, but the butcher that I got the bones said that the chicken necks are delicate and therefore he recommended cooking it for less time. When I turned the heat off, the amount of water had gone down dramatically and the necks still looked pretty solid. I let the broth cool down on the counter and then popped it in the fridge.

    My concerns are as follows.

    1. Did I cook the broth long enough to maximize benefits?
    2. When I drank the broth, it had a very vinegary taste- which makes sense because I added a decent amount of vinegar, and a great deal of the water evaporated during cooking. Could drinking too much vinegar be harmful?
    3. I ended up with around 3 coffee mugfuls of broth. Should I have added more water in between cooking to make up for what was lost through evaporation?

    Please let me know 🙂

  13. Annie Avatar

    Ditto – mine never gel up and there is never “scum” to be skimmed off, with known “unclean” meats, as well as clean, organic grass-fed meats What am I missing, besides chicken feet? What is the benefit of the “gel”, and therefore, what might I be missing without it? Thanks!

    1. Amanda Carmen Avatar
      Amanda Carmen

      I have been making bone broth for probably 14 years, and mine always gels up. How long are you cooking/simmering your broth for? If you do not simmer it for long enough then not enough of the collagen breaks down to cause it to “gel.” Do you always simmer for 24 hours (for chicken broth)? If not, then I would say this is the reason. Also, I always add in apple cider vinegar, as this helps the process as well, from what I understand.

      1. Annie Avatar

        Thanks, Amanda!
        Beef bones – 48 hours and chicken bones 24 hours in crock pot
        Yes, I use ACV for 1/2 hour before cooking, and pretty much keep to WM’s recipe.

      2. Sarah Avatar

        I have been struggling with mine not gelling. I do cook for 24 hours AND do the apple cider vinegar 🙁 Not sure what I am doing wrong…Maybe adding too much water? How much do you add during cooking? I replace what evaporates. Also..When is does Gel… what does it taste like when you heat it up? Does it heat to look like normal broth? Thank you!

  14. Melanie Avatar

    Hi Katie, I’ve made 2 attempts at the bone broth, both with a mix of beef and lamb bones (joint, marrow, etc.) from my local grocery, lots of veg and some spices. I’ve enjoyed both batches but neither of them gel’ed and neither of them created the residue you say needs to be skimmed off the top at the beginning. What could be wrong? If I’m obviously missing the gelatin, does my broth have any nutritional value?

  15. Lynn Avatar

    Can I make bone broth in a crock pot and what would be a good size for making a good amount.

  16. Niki Avatar

    I am beginning an organic diet after visiting an acupuncturist. I want to begin making bone broth. I am now going to save my chicken carcass.

    My question is how do you store your bone broth. Does it keep in a pantry, refrigerator, or in a freezer?

    Thank you,
    Niki

  17. Cindi Avatar

    Hi! I’m new to bone broth and have some in the making right now. I’m using grass fed beef marrow bones from Whole Foods. I roasted them as per your recipe and a lot of fat was rendered from the bones in the pan. I put the bones in the water with the vinegar to “soak”. Here’s my question….Do i add the rendered fat from the pan to the cooking/simmering water and cook it along with the broth? Or what else would I do with it? I was under the impression that grass-fed beef contains a lot of omega-3’s and I sure would hate to lose a bunch of nutritive value by discarding it.

  18. James Gordon Avatar
    James Gordon

    It all depends on what the chickens eat. I drive by true “Free-Range” turkeys every day in Weston, MA. However I would not eat one if you paid me. Their diet consists of very well manicured grass and bugs treated with every insecticide and fertilizer available, not so organic. Check around a little, they are probably better than any commercially available chicken in the states, Lord knows what they are fed.

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