The Year of the Chicken Bone
Or: How Liz Turns Her Deep Freeze Into a Poultry Archive
Not the ice maker.
I mean, dig in.
We’re talking labeled bags. Stacked bags. Strategic freezer Tetris.
It is a bone vault.
“Stock season is coming.”
Why We Save the Scraps (Yes, All of Them)
It comes from what you were about to throw away.
- Chicken carcasses (rotisserie chickens, roasted chickens, wings, thighs… all welcome)
- Onion ends and peels
- Carrot tops and peels
- Celery leaves and ends
- Garlic skins and cloves
- Herb stems (parsley, thyme, rosemary)
- The occasional sad leek top that deserved better
- Freeze everything
- Repeat until Steve questions his life choices.
The Great Stock Day Reckoning
Strain, Store, Brag Quietly
- Strain out the solids. Once through a wide-mesh strainer, then again through a fine-mesh strainer. Cheesecloth is optional if you’re feeling particularly accomplished that day.
- Taste it. This is non-negotiable. We always add a little chicken bouillon at the end to bring out that extra chickeny flavor (a real word now).
- Let the stock cool
- Skim the fat if you want (or don’t—this is a no-judgment kitchen)
- Store in jars, freezer containers, or silicone molds for easy portions. Do not fill them to the top. Stock expands when frozen.
You now own liquid gold.
- Soups
- Risotto
- Gravy
- Braising
- Or sipping straight from a mug like a Victorian orphan with excellent skin
The Moral of the Story
Then it feels smart.
Then it feels elite.
Label it. Commit to the chaos.
And remember:
“This is what sustainability looks like.”







