The leek and mushroom part is to use scraps in the freezer. It wasn't my intent when I put them in there, but while I was poking through the bones every week for a good deal, it started to sound very good. I'm not keeping the solids, just the essence in the broth. For how rarely I use beef broth, this flavor profile sounded like a great idea to make a quick soup by adding some cooked barley and maybe some carrots. Actually, I fished out and saved the turnip and carrots from the veggie stock I made the same day, so maybe they could go in it.
Unlike with the chicken broth, I decided to add salt to this batch. Not a lot, since I'll salt it in the final use, but more than zero. Maybe it's because of the fat content, but I find beef broth needs the help. I added 1/4 tsp to each pint, half of the recommended amount.
You do not have to pressure can this recipe to preserve it. You can freeze it. Or, just make one quarter of what I did and make just enough for a single batch of soup. I was making this to get things out of the freezer.
I bought a jiggler, which is a weighted pressure regulator so you don't have to calibrate the gauge. I'm pretty good at using the right amount of heat to maintain a steady pressure, but the jiggler lets me do it by listening to the rocking motion. If it jiggles too fast, you turn down the heat; too slow, turn it up. It will always prevent over-pressurization. This was my first canning session with it, and it does help. It also proved that my gauge is off by almost two pounds and I've been canning at a higher pressure than necessary. I hope this will improve my seal rate.As usual, I'm using the NCHFP website's current guidelines for canning the beef broth, except I'm roasting the bones first for a deeper flavor, which does not affect processing time. I also canned some vegetable broth at the same time, which isn't listed on their site. In the older Ball book, the time for veggie broth is 30 minutes for pints, so that's what everything ran for. You always go for the longest time of any ingredient, recipe, or size jar. Processing for a longer time never affects safety, and with broth it doesn't affect quality.
4 lbs raw beef marrow bones, meat on ok
1 gal water
2 Tb apple cider vinegar
*green tops from one bunch of leeks
*stems and pieces from 1 lb of mushroom caps
1 tsp peppercorns
salt to taste
Makes about one gallon
Difficulty rating :)
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