How to Build a Deeply Flavored Stock from Scratch
By Sophie Laurent | 2026-02-20
In classical French cooking, there is a saying: tell me your stock and I will tell you your cooking. A restaurant can be evaluated simply by tasting its bouillon. Stock is the invisible backbone of every great dish, and yet most home cooks either skip it entirely or use a cube. The difference in the final dish is enormous.
The process of making a great stock is less about recipes and more about understanding principles. For a rich, amber chicken or beef stock, the first principle is colour. Roast your bones in a 200C oven until they are deep golden brown before they go anywhere near a pot of water. This Maillard reaction on the surface of the bones creates hundreds of flavour compounds that will infuse your stock. The second principle is temperature. Stock should never boil -- it should only ever simmer, with just the occasional lazy bubble breaking the surface. A rolling boil will emulsify the fat and make your stock cloudy and greasy.
The third principle is patience. A chicken stock needs at least 3 hours. A veal stock needs 8. You cannot rush collagen extraction. The fourth principle is restraint: no salt. Stock is a base ingredient; salt later when you are making the final dish. Follow these four principles and you will produce a stock worth the effort -- the kind that gels solid in the refrigerator, filled with body and complexity. Zesty Flowers members have access to our complete stock masterclass covering chicken, beef, fish, and vegetable bases.
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