LifestyleHow to rescue your chicken broth: One simple ingredient

How to rescue your chicken broth: One simple ingredient

Did you add too much salt while making chicken broth? You can save it. Just add one thing to the pot, and the broth will be less salty.

How to save oversalted broth?
How to save oversalted broth?
Images source: © Adobe Stock | abrada

5:29 PM EDT, July 18, 2024

Chicken broth is among the most popular soups, often gracing our tables. Preparing it is simple. Just take a pot and throw in vegetables, chicken, and a few spices. Finally, pour in water and place it on the stove.

After an hour, you can enjoy delicious and nutritious broth, a base for many other soups. Unfortunately, chicken broth doesn't always turn out as we would like. Sometimes it is too salty. Is such a soup only good for pouring out? It turns out that it can be saved.

How to make a good chicken broth?

Chicken broth is among the most popular and oldest soups. The first mentions of it date back to the 17th century. The base of the old-fashioned broth was meat. At the time, hunted birds were used. Dill, parsley, rosemary, and onion were also added to the soup.

Modern chicken broth is prepared somewhat differently. Usually, chicken meat ends up in the soup, although some people enrich it with duck or beef. This gives the broth an intense flavor. An inseparable element of chicken broth is vegetables, such as carrots, celery, leek, and parsley.

One cannot forget about aromatic spices in the form of allspice, bay leaf, or lovage. The whole thing is covered with cold water and cooked for 1.5 - 2 hours on low heat. In the meantime, scum should be removed to keep the broth clear.

How to save overly salty chicken broth?

This prepared chicken broth is highly delicate yet aromatic. While cooking, you need to add salt, but sometimes, we pour in way too much.

Can you save overly salty chicken broth? It turns out you can. You only need one thing—a raw potato. Wash and pierce it in several places, throw it into the boiling broth, and leave it there for 10 minutes. The potato will "absorb" the excess salt without depriving the soup of its taste.

Don't have a potato at home? No problem. Add a large piece of peeled apple, preferably sour. The apple, just like the potato, will neutralize the salty taste. If you leave it in the soup, it will give it an extraordinary, deep aroma.

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