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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.

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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 six, 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

1,511 responses to “How to Make Bone Broth (Recipe, with Instant Pot Option)”

  1. Sherina Avatar

    Hi! I tried to leave a post under the Bone Broth recipe but for some reason its not letting me leave it.

    I am making it for the 2nd time and I mixed chicken and beef bones along with all the other goodies and on the 2nd night of cooking, I forgot to refill the water b/c I noticed it kept evaporating and I woke up this morning and all the water was gone and the bones were a bit burnt! EEK! What do I do? Please tell me I didn’t ruin this whole batch!

    HELP!

  2. Nirit Avatar

    Small tip – I put up the stock in the morning;when i get home from work, the chicken bones are soft enough to cut with kitchen shears; I carefully cut them right in the pot. It seems to help the process of extracting the gelatin.

  3. sonja Avatar

    is there anything nutritious left in the vegetables after 24 -48 hours? if there is I wouldn’t want to throw them away… any suggestions?

  4. SophieE_sophie Avatar
    SophieE_sophie

    When I make bulk stock I reduce it to a thick syrup, let that set in the fridge then cut it up into stock “cubes,” which I freeze on a plate then throw in a ziplock bag. Voila! homemade stock cubes- less time spent melting and less freezer space used up.

  5. Anna Avatar

    What about the reports of lead in bone broth? I was just reading some different blogs online that were saying lead is concentrated in bones. How do you know for sure that bone broth is completely safe? I am trying to recover from my own gut issues and start a family as well. Want to keep lead and other contaminate exposure as low as possible.

  6. Jasmine Avatar

    I was unable to find strictly bones last minute tonight, so I just bought the legs and cut off the meat. In the simmer, does it have to only be bones and veggies or can I add the bits of meat that I cut off earlier? Some recipes say the meat will be tasteless or lose nutrition, others say to add the meat at the end of the simmer, & some say to throw it all in at once. Not really sure what is best..?

    1. Jenny Avatar

      Depends on what you want to do with the meat. If you’re cooking the meat for a meal, it will become more tasteless the longer it cooks (because all the flavor is being imparted into the broth). So for a meal, you’d do better to cook it separately or cook it for a limited time with the broth.

  7. Krista Overly Avatar
    Krista Overly

    You can, and should, leave the skin on your onion…it has lots of nutrients and, with a yellow onion, gives your broth a nice golden color! 🙂

  8. pduffy4 Avatar

    I don’t fancy the cost of leaving on my cooker for 48 hours!!!! Would be very expensive in the UK (Scotland)

    Can an effective stock be made in 2 hours using pork ribs?

    1. Kandy Avatar

      It was mentioned cooking 12 hours would be sufficient if you did not want to cook on your stove overnight.

  9. Kathy Avatar

    If you were to put salt in about how much would you include? I tried making beef broth and it seemed so oily and tasteless even with all the normal veggies that had been cooked in it! (Could’ve been my newly pregnant taste buds though 😉 ) I’d really like to try again but may have to go with chicken broth this time.

  10. christine Avatar

    Hi, the fluid doesn’t last during 24 hours of simmering! It evaporates. What am I doing wrong?

    1. Deb Avatar

      Hi Christine, I have been making bone broth for 5 years. Your simmer rate should be very slow. Here’s an analogy: put your fingers under a faucet of running water, and then hold your hand over a bowl of water – the drips will be slow. Also, it helps to have a lid with a hole in it. Keep the lid on while simmering, you will have very little evaporation. If you don’t have a lid with a hold in it, then angle the lid so that there is a bare amount of steam escaping.

  11. Jona Ohm Avatar

    The simmering times are very long. Do you need to add water as it evaporates? Do you do this for days at a time, or how do you achieve the hours of simmering?

  12. Michelle Zalenski Avatar
    Michelle Zalenski

    Hi Katie…thanks for the post. I have a couple of questions and sorry if they are repeats but my kids are still young and I have limited time to read all the posts…LOL! I make chicken soup a lot by using filter water, organic carrots, onion, garlic, celery, rosemary, thyme, salt, pepper, paprika, cumin and chicken pieces. I bring the water and veggies up to a boil then add chicken and cook at boil until chicken is done. I remove the chicken pieces and turn down soup to simmer. Once the chicken pieces have cooled, I pull off the meat and add back into soup. From there I usually throw away the bones!!! So from here I’m wanting to know if I can make a bone broth from those same bones? If it’s good to go, does it matter if it’s not a whole chicken carcass or not? Most times I just use leg, wing pieces for soup but sometimes I do roast a whole chicken. Also, you mentioned that you skim the top to remove the impurities…..when I’m making soup..I also remove fat, skimming the top..is this also impurities when making the soup or is it just when your using bare bones?? If when making soup, it is impurities….how many times of skimming is sufficient?? Ok…thank you so much for your response 🙂 I look forward to making this bone broth 🙂

  13. Liz Avatar

    Hello! Just have a couple of questions that I need some help with. When I make my broth I usually strain it then put it in the fridge until the fat hardens ontop and then scoop it off and throw it away. Should I leave the fat in it?? My broth doesn’t gell up, I use a good amount of bones and cook for 48+ hours (beef bones) but it’s always a liquid when it’s in the fridge. Is that bad? Should I add some gelatin to my broth?

    Thanks so much Katie I love your blog 🙂

  14. Emily Avatar

    I feed it to my little ones by boiling organic brown rice noodles and veggies in the broth, and waiting for the noodles to puff up real big.

  15. Summer Haffner Avatar
    Summer Haffner

    Wait, why do you want gel? When I think of broth, it’s something you can pour and drink. Is it just that it’s thicker when it’s chilled?

  16. Summer Haffner Avatar
    Summer Haffner

    Dear Wellness Mama, maybe someone already asked this, but I am wondering about the safety of using the stove while we sleep. Am I missing anything?

  17. Nicole Kleinsinger Larson Avatar
    Nicole Kleinsinger Larson

    I am just getting started with bone broth for my 6 month old and so far he LOVES it (his older sister wants it now too)! But I am not sure what to do about how much water evaporates. The first time I made the beef bones, it cooked and cooked and I ended up with less than 2 quarts and it wasn’t even that concentrated (I used about 3 lbs of bones for that)…I am doing my first chicken today and in around 8 hrs it has reduced so much I am concerned about letting it cook for the whole 24 hours.

    Q: How do you add water without losing flavor and watering it down too much?

    Also, I am trying to get over my squeamishness about chicken feet, (not there yet) so today I used a whole raw 3 lb chicken and made regular chicken soup and after 5 hrs removed the meat (made it into tacos for dinner) and kept the rest cooking,

    Q: do you think this is as nutritious or should I only be saving my roast chicken bones or putting on my big girl panties and doing chicken feet (Which are still $5/lb from the meat guy at my farmers market so not even that cheap)? Thanks for your guidance, I want to start doing this all the time and appreciate your advice!

    1. Katie - Wellness Mama Avatar

      You can definitely cook with the meat on at first too. Are you covering while cooking? You can add more water as it cooks if needed but it will lose some as it cooks too…

  18. Ariel Avatar

    Hi Katie! Thank you for the post. I’m making my first batch of chicken bone broth. I added additional pepper to the pot just before it boiled. I checked on it after 20 minutes and stirred in the foam with the pepper on top, expecting the foam would return…it’s been 2 hours and it hasn’t yet. Do you have any suggestions?
    Thank you so much.

  19. Tami Figueroa Avatar
    Tami Figueroa

    I made my first batch yesterday on an electric stove for 24 hours. I kept it on the lowest setting and it still boiled and I had to add a lot of water. It is dark brown and smells kind of burnt. Is there a tip for this or does it just work better on a gas stove?

  20. Laura Avatar

    I made bone broth this week for the first time using your recipe. After cooling and storing in the fridge in a glass container, I found that the entire broth is gelatinous, rather than liquid. Is this normal?
    Also, I started with a gallon of water, but it cooked down to about half of that volume in ~ 5 hours, at which point I stopped simmering. Is there a benefit to simmering for 24 hours? I guess it extracts more nutrients? Do you lose a lot of volume when you prepare bone broth? Do you add additional liquid at any point during the process?
    Thanks so much!

    1. Laura Avatar

      I spent some time reading through previous posts last night and found all the answers to my questions, so please disregard – I know you’re busy! Thank you for the great recipe!

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