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Simple Turkey Stock: A Lesson from Mrs. Patmore’s Kitchen

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Make the Most of Your Christmas Bird with This Easy, Waste-Not Approach to Homemade Turkey Stock

In the great kitchens of Downton Abbey, nothing went to waste. Mrs. Patmore would have been appalled at the thought of discarding a perfectly good turkey carcass after Christmas dinner. Making stock from the bones wasn’t just thrifty—it was expected. And the resulting liquid gold would become the foundation of Boxing Day soups, rich gravies, and hearty stews to sustain the household through the cold winter months.

The good news? You don’t need a kitchen brigade or hours of labor to capture that same old-fashioned goodness. This simple approach to turkey stock strips away unnecessary fuss and delivers pure, concentrated turkey flavor with minimal effort.

Why Simplicity Wins

Modern recipes often complicate stock-making with extensive vegetable additions, lengthy roasting of bones, and complicated techniques. But there’s wisdom in the Edwardian approach of letting the main ingredient speak for itself.

By using just your leftover roasted turkey carcass and water—no carrots, celery, or onions—you create a stock with clean, unadulterated poultry flavor. This versatile base can then be seasoned and adapted for any dish, rather than being locked into one flavour profile.

The roasting of your turkey during its time in the oven has already developed beautiful depth and colour in the bones. There’s no need for additional browning—you’ve already done the work.

Signs of Success

A well-made turkey stock will have a rich golden colour and, once chilled, should set into a soft, jiggly gel. This gelatin is the mark of a stock with true body—it will give your soups and sauces a silky, restaurant-quality texture that water or commercial broth simply cannot match.

Putting Your Stock to Work

In the Downton era, this stock would have been put to immediate use. Consider these traditional applications:

A Note on Waste Not, Want Not

The Edwardian kitchen operated on principles of economy that we would do well to remember. A single Christmas turkey, treated with respect, could provide the main course for Christmas dinner, cold cuts for Boxing Day, stock for soups, and rendered fat for cooking—feeding a household for nearly a week.

Making stock is perhaps the simplest way to honour this tradition. It requires little active effort, transforms something destined for the rubbish bin into something valuable, and connects us to generations of cooks who understood that good food comes not from extravagance, but from care.

If you like a more robust version, here is my Hung Over Turkey Stock recipe.


What to Make with Your Stock

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Easy Turkey Stock

This is a simple approach to stock making that delivers pure turkey flavour with very little effort. Using the roasted carcass as-is, without further browning the bones in the oven, saves time and allows the turkey flavour to shine.
Course Soup
Cuisine English
Keyword turkey
Prep Time 10 minutes
Cook Time 2 hours
Refrigeration 6 hours
Servings 10 cups

Equipment

Ingredients

  • 1 12-14 lb Turkey carcass
  • 10 cups water
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Instructions

  • Using chef’s knife remove wings from carcass and separate each wing at joints into 3 pieces.
    Cut through ribs to separate breastbone from backbone, then cut backbone into 3 to 4 pieces.
    Using kitchen shears or heavy knife, remove ribs from both sides of breastbone. (You should have roughly 4 pounds of bones broken into 10 to 12 pieces.)
  • Arrange bones in stockpot or large Dutch oven in compact layer. Add water and bring to boil over medium-high heat.
    Reduce heat to low, cover, and cook for 2 hours, using shallow spoon to skim foam and impurities from surface as needed.
  • Strain stock through fine-mesh strainer into large container; discard solids. Let stock cool slightly, about 20 minutes.
    Skim any fat from surface (reserve fat for making soup). Let stock cool for 1 1/2 hours before refrigerating. (Stock can be refrigerated for up to 2 days or frozen for up to 4 months.)
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