Skip to main content

Super-Concentrated Cantonese Chicken Stock

Ingredients

1 pound chicken breasts
1 pound chicken wings
4 cups cold water
2 slices of unpeeled fresh ginger (1/4 inch thick each)
1 stalk scallion, cut into 1-inch pieces
2 teaspoons Chinese cooking wine or sherry

For added body:

1 (1/4-ounce) packet unflavored gelatin
1/4 cup cold water

Preparation

  1. Step 1

    Rinse chicken under cold running water. Place chicken in a large pot, add water, and if the chicken is still exposed add more water to barely cover the chicken. DON’T use hot water to speed up the boiling process. Hot water straight from the tap leaves a distinctly artificial, technically “yucky,” and cloudy flavor.

    Step 2

    Add ginger, scallions, and rice wine. Bring to a boil over high heat, occasionally skimming off the gunky foam that rises to the top so you can rid your stock and the world of the impurities that will taint you and your stock.

    Step 3

    Cover (with a tiny crack) and reduce heat. Simmer for 2 hours. Remove from heat and strain finished stock through a chinois, or fine mesh strainer, into a large enough container or bowl.

    Step 4

    If the stock doesn’t have enough body to your liking, in a separate bowl mix unflavored gelatin with cold water, then mix with chicken stock.

    Step 5

    Do not season! To make sweet and deep savory love to your mouth, hold off on seasoning the stock until the time is right. It is best left for whatever wonderful recipe you’re cooking. Each dish is seasoned with different savory elements in the place of salt, but you can get creative for your own recipes as long as you think of whatever you season it with as being a “salty” element (fancy mix-and-matching with something like kelp [aka kombu] or similar).

    Step 6

    If storing for later, cool off stock uncovered until it is lukewarm or close to room temperature before storing in a refrigerator or freezer. If you’re trying to be smart and think the fridge will cool off the stock for you, you’re wrong and it may ruin other ingredients in your fridge because it will heat your fridge up instead and the stock will go bad because it wasn’t cooled off properly.

Image may contain: Advertisement, Poster, Flyer, Paper, Brochure, Human, and Person
From Adventures in Starry Kitchen: 88 Asian-Inspired Recipes from America's Most Famous Underground Restaurant © 2017 by Nguyen Tran. Reprinted by permission of Harper One, an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers. Buy the full book from HarperCollins or from Amazon.
Read More
Leftover rotisserie chicken finds new purpose in this endlessly comforting dish.
From author Sonoko Sakai, this Japanese omelet is distinguished by its fluffy layers, with a touch of sweetness from maple syrup.
Developed in the 1980s by a chef in Hong Kong, this sauce is all about umami.
This gingery stir-fry comes together in under 30 minutes.
“Soft and pillowy, custardy and light—they were unlike any other scrambled eggs I had experienced before.”
The salty, sweet, sour, spicy flavors of classic kung pao are easy to create at home. Let this recipe show you how.
A satisfying weeknight dinner from Tiffy Chen. Serve with rice or noodles.
Chewy noodles, tinned fish, and hardy greens in an umami broth.