Everything You Need to Know
About Gut Healing Bone Broth

Dear Friends,

I almost always have a batch of bone broth simmering in my kitchen. This healing broth is more to me than soup. It’s a wonderful elixir that helps heal my gut and guards me against getting sick.

If you have an autoimmune disorder (like I do), making bone broth a part of your regular daily life helps tremendously with energy levels and digestion, too.

And by the way, I do not mean the cartons of broth you buy at the grocery store. In order to have a good healing bone broth, you need to make your own.

But I understand that’s easier said than done, so I’m here to take you through the entire process from start to finish.

First of all, let me remind you why you should be making bone broth a part of your day.

Nutritional Benefits of Bone Broth

Your bowl of bone broth contains a healing helping of glucosamine and chondroitin sulfate, which work together to reduce inflammation, joint pain, and other symptoms of arthritis.

Bone broth is excellent for digestion (it will do wonders for your gut), but it’ll also aid your nervous and immune systems and help your muscles grow and repair.

That same broth will also give you a huge boost of minerals, including calcium, phosphorus, potassium and magnesium. It’s also rich in proline, glycine, and amino acids.

And did I neglect to mention that bone broth helps to prevent bone loss while building healthy hair, nails, and skin?

Now that you know why it’s so good for you, let’s get into the nitty-gritty.

Start With Good Bones!

Find yourself a very good butcher. You can use bones from any animal as long as it was a good, healthy one. I prefer locally sourced bones, organically grown if possible. At the very least, grass-fed. Do not use factory-farmed animals—they aren’t going to result in a nutritious broth. (Hint: If you can’t source good bones locally, buy bones online from US Wellness Meats).

Keep in mind that the flavor will change based on the kind of animal you use, but it’s okay to mix your bones. And the absolute best bones are marrow bones. You want big bones like knuckles, which contain cartilage. That means more collagen, which means a healthier broth.

How To Make Bone Broth

For best flavor, start by roasting your bones. To do this, place the bones in a pan in a 350-degree oven and roast for one hour. Then move them to your slow cooker with some salt, pepper, onion, celery, carrots, herbs and a few cloves of garlic. Add a couple of tablespoons of apple cider vinegar so that the minerals and nutrients can be leeched from the bones. Cook on low for at least 8 hours for poultry, 12 for beef. I tend to go much longer, up to 72 hours. You’ll need to replace the water from time to time, so the crock cooker is filled almost to the top.

When the broth has cooked as long as you need it to, strain the broth and let it sit in the fridge until the fat hardens on the surface. Spoon off the fat and in the morning, if you’ve done it just right, the broth should be good and gelatinized.

No Jiggle?

If your broth doesn’t gel, you might have added too much water, or perhaps you didn’t cook your broth long enough or too vigorously. Remember, the larger the bones, the longer they will need to cook! Also, they need connective tissue—that’s where the gelatin is so bones with joints are helpful. That’s why I LOVE chicken feet! (yeah, I know…gross, but magnificent, delicious gelled bone broth!)

Jiggle Achieved…Now What?

What do you do with that healing elixir?

Drink it from a mug like you would a cup of coffee. This is a great way to start the day! I also make soup from my broth, and I use it in recipes calling for stock. I aim to consume about 8 ounces of bone broth per day (more during flu season because of the immune boost it gives me), which really isn’t that difficult.

Storing Bone Broth

You should use up your broth within 3 or 4 days. If you need longer than that, move it to the freezer. It will keep there for up to a year.

Store some of your bone broth in an ice cube tray so you always have some on hand when your recipe calls for a little bit of stock! (2 cubes for recipes calling for 1/4 cup, 4 cubes to the 1/2 cup).

Want delicious recipes to use that yummy bone broth you’ve made? Click here.

8 Responses

  1. Hi there! I’m still experimenting, trying to get my broth to gel. But even the batches that don’t gel are still nutritious, right?

    1. Yes, bone broth is still nutritious even if it doesn’t gel. However, gelling is a sign that there’s even more of at least one important nutrient, and it gives the broth an irresistibly smooth texture that enhances everything you cook with it.

    2. Yes, nutritious but will not heal the leaky gut and does not provide the collagen to help line the joints and also support the skin so it doesn’t wrinkle. Loss of Collagen is dreadful in older years, so take care of your collagen and elastin while you still have it! The collagen also helps the lower part of the digestive system as it slithers through. So good!

  2. I read an article that said leaving the fat layer intact until ready to use actually provides a “seal” which preserves the broth much longer.

    1. I have found this to be true. Sometimes after preparing a roast chicken, then roasting the bones and simmering with veggies for days, I simply cannot go further with the whole chicken soup thing. So I put the crockpot back in the fridge and the fat gets hard and puts the whole thing on hold. When I am ready to make the chicken soup or whatever else I want to make, I just skim the fat off and take the skin and meat off the bones ~ which now crumble into bone meal because they’ve cooked so long in the crock pot with the apple cider vinegar etc. If using beef marrow bones, obviously, they don’t crumble after being cooked for days. But they still give us incredible amounts of minerals, so long as we’re getting clean bones from organic grass-fed animals. Always be sure to refrigerate properly so your soup doesn’t go sour!

  3. Is there a trick to getting the ice cubes out of the tray? I have the cheap plastic trays, and the last batch of broth that I tried freezing is permanently stuck to the tray (ok, it’s stuck until I thaw the tray out).

    1. You can place your ice tray in some hot water until your tray easily “twists” and the cubes are ready to pop out.