I haven't made rabbit stock yet - but I do make chicken, turkey and beef stock. I am always using leaner organic meat so I never skim the fat - since it provides more taste if done properly, just MHO. Generally when I make chicken stock, the bones are coming from a bird that is cooked on a rotisserie with no added fats, I have no idea if that makes a difference. Since domestic rabbit is leaner than even organic chicken, I don't anticipate any fat or greasiness. My concern, not having processed any rabbits yet, is that it seems like there's not much to their bones! But then, hopefully we will be processing 16+ buns each time, so I'm guessing that I can get some good stock from that many sets of bones!
There are different methods - I've made stock with nothing but the bones, fat and skin and I've made it with added veggies of all sorts (check herbs with a quick google though, there are a couple that turn bitter when slow cooked). I always use some OACV, which helps to pull the good stuff out of the bones. I learned by accident a couple years ago that the longer you simmer your stock, the richer the flavor. I had a huge turkey carcass and only a 12 qt pot, so had to separate the carcass in two piles and process in two batches. The first batch I believe I simmered for 8-9 hours - the soup made with that stock was absolutely amazing. For just being a turkey soup, everyone who tasted it said it was the best soup of their life. By the time I processed the second batch of stock I was so sick of turkey smell (this was a Thanksgiving bird that we were eating for three days, then the stock/soup making began lol) that I only simmered it for four hours. It was good stock/soup, and if I hadn't made the other batch first I would have thought it was wonderful.
Anyway, so I always simmer my stock on low, about 3 on my electric burner (no crock pot for me, it's just not the same) with added OACV and random veggies (or not) for a minimum of 8 hours. I have the veggies in the whole time, then they go in the trash or compost. There's no nutrition left in those veggies anymore, so they are just empty veggie shells. I generally don't add herbs to stock, as they are best (IMHO) added to individual recipes. I have been known to simmer stock on Low overnight, then turn it back up to "3" in the morning for those times that I don't get my stock going until 8 pm - just did that last week. I get an amazing gel from my stock, to where sometimes the soup when cold can almost look like there's no liquid, then when you heat it the liquid shows up - had me pretty nervous the first time that happened!
Stock/broth trivia you don't really need to know, or may already - stock comes from simmering bones in water, broth comes from simmering meat.
Sorry, way more than you wanted to know - I just started the process for what will be 24 quarts of beef stock, so stock is on my brain. Major batch cooking AGAIN this weekend!! <br /><br /> __________ Fri May 09, 2014 11:28 pm __________ <br /><br />
HoppyMeal":2lirz54y said:
After I cook down my left over bones and remove the bones I add celery, onion and I also add chicken bouillon cubes.
Just curious, why do you add bouillon cubes? Is it because the rabbit bones don't make a rich enough stock? Say it isn't so...