| Prep Time | 10 minutes |
| Cook Time | 2 hours |
| Yield | 6 cups |
A common way to lighten the burden of cooking Thanksgiving dinner is to prepare several things in advance — pie crust, cranberry sauce, and turkey stock, for example. Though my mom used to make gravy from the broth of turkey parts she simmered while the big bird was cooking, I get a jump start on the cooking by buying turkey necks and chicken wings (read: cheap) several days before Thanksgiving and making the stock ahead of time. I use this stock to both moisten the stuffing and make the gravy; double the recipe if you want enough stock for soup.
| ~ | Olive oil | |
| 1 | yellow onion or 2 to 3 leeks, roughly chopped | |
| 2 | celery stalks, roughly chopped | |
| 2 | carrots, roughly chopped | |
| 3 | fat garlic cloves | |
| 2 | lb. turkey necks | |
| 1 | lb. chicken wings | |
| 10 | cups water | |
| 5 | stalks Italian parsley | |
| 3 | stems fresh thyme | |
| ~ | Leek greens (optional) | |
| ~ | Salt |
Read more about Thanksgiving menu planning in “Classic Thanksgiving.”
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1. by redweather on Dec 1, 2009 at 9:28 AM PST
ok, help! i made this stock the other night, with 2 turkey carcasses, and when i got it out of the fridge last night to use it for soup, it had gelled in the pot! it was very gelationous all the way through! did i do something wrong? is it salvageable?
2. by anonymous on Nov 21, 2011 at 10:30 AM PST
I think you did everything right. I look for extra turkey wings and thighs to add gelatine to the stock and even use chicken wings if I needed to assure that the stock or broth will gel. The gel melts at a very low temperture and easily becomes liquid to use amy way you like.
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