Beef and Chicken Stocks

diadeb

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Hi Everyone, does anyone know which is the lowest carb beef and chicken stocks. I sometimes have authentic stock in the freezer ready for use but not always and was interested to know which ones people buy and use, thanks, Deb
 

hanadr

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i would imagine that neither stock has enough carb to cause a problem. If you make it yourself, you know what went in to it. If you bought it, there should be a list of ingredients.
My stock recipes don't have any carbs, other than what cooks out of carrots and onions, which must be near zero.
Hana
 

diadeb

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Thanks for the reply hanadr, I was thinking of stock for making gravy i.e. if you were braising some braising steak, when done how would you make the gravy to go with it. I would use Xanthum powder to thicken but would you use anything else eg oxo cubes etc to make it brown and tastier, thanks, Deb
 

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diadeb said:
Hi Everyone, does anyone know which is the lowest carb beef and chicken stocks. I sometimes have authentic stock in the freezer ready for use but not always and was interested to know which ones people buy and use, thanks, Deb

Hi Deb .

I use the Kallo range of chicken,veg, stock cubes .
They are lactose/gluten free ...
I find they help with my intollerances to wheat/gluten/lactose .

Hope this can help .

Anna .
 

diadeb

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Many thanks Anna, I have just been on Tesco's website and they sell them so I shall get some, I have never heard of them before.
So do you just mix with natural juices and gum?
 
A

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diadeb said:
Many thanks Anna, I have just been on Tesco's website and they sell them so I shall get some, I have never heard of them before.
So do you just mix with natural juices and gum?


I'm not a gravy lover but my other half is. I tend to 'cheat' by making a water-based roux (suppose I could use gluten-free) and adding soy sauce. This give the gravy a taste, colour and saltiness. It's a pity about the salt, as we never have salt on anything, including spuds, rice and pasta and it 'hides' the flavour of fresh veg. but you may like to compare soy sauce with the stock cubes/liquids.
 

Yorksman

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If you want to make a beef stock to then make a gravy, you could just render some shin beef down in a slow cooker. The cooective tissue and gristle on shin beef breaks down if slowly cooked for a few hours and makes a wonderfully tasty gelatinous gravy. It's normally sold in big chunks but if you cut them up smaller and slow cook it for about 7 or 8 hours, all the meat will disappear into the liquid. Depending on the quality of the shin beef, it may even set into a sort of jelly when cool. You won't need to thicken it with anything.
 
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gezzathorpe said:
diadeb said:
Many thanks Anna, I have just been on Tesco's website and they sell them so I shall get some, I have never heard of them before.
So do you just mix with natural juices and gum?


I'm not a gravy lover but my other half is. I tend to 'cheat' by making a water-based roux (suppose I could use gluten-free) and adding soy sauce. This give the gravy a taste, colour and saltiness. It's a pity about the salt, as we never have salt on anything, including spuds, rice and pasta and it 'hides' the flavour of fresh veg. but you may like to compare soy sauce with the stock cubes/liquids.

PS if you like the idea of making gravy the traditional way, and you are pushed for time, a pressure cooker will do the job in about 20 minutes or so. Makes even 'cheap' meat edible. :roll:
 

anna29

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gezzathorpe said:
diadeb said:
Many thanks Anna, I have just been on Tesco's website and they sell them so I shall get some, I have never heard of them before.
So do you just mix with natural juices and gum?


I'm not a gravy lover but my other half is. I tend to 'cheat' by making a water-based roux (suppose I could use gluten-free) and adding soy sauce. This give the gravy a taste, colour and saltiness. It's a pity about the salt, as we never have salt on anything, including spuds, rice and pasta and it 'hides' the flavour of fresh veg. but you may like to compare soy sauce with the stock cubes/liquids.
Gezzathorpe - the Kallo cubes are the lowest in salt contents .
You can try cutting 'out' the soy sauce and just use the kallo cube .
It will still be very tasty 'without' any saltiness :thumbup:

Anna .
 

anna29

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diadeb said:
Many thanks Anna, I have just been on Tesco's website and they sell them so I shall get some, I have never heard of them before.
So do you just mix with natural juices and gum?

Deb - I just use them with a little veg water or tomato puree .
Or just chuck in a few chopped tomatoes or chopped fresh veg .
Natural juices is ideal too - I find this is tasty enough for myself :thumbup:

Anna .
 
A

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anna29 said:
gezzathorpe said:
diadeb said:
Many thanks Anna, I have just been on Tesco's website and they sell them so I shall get some, I have never heard of them before.
So do you just mix with natural juices and gum?


I'm not a gravy lover but my other half is. I tend to 'cheat' by making a water-based roux (suppose I could use gluten-free) and adding soy sauce. This give the gravy a taste, colour and saltiness. It's a pity about the salt, as we never have salt on anything, including spuds, rice and pasta and it 'hides' the flavour of fresh veg. but you may like to compare soy sauce with the stock cubes/liquids.
Gezzathorpe - the Kallo cubes are the lowest in salt contents .
You can try cutting 'out' the soy sauce and just use the kallo cube .
It will still be very tasty 'without' any saltiness :thumbup:

Anna .

Thanks, will give them a try.
 

diadeb

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Thanks to everyone for the replies, I shall be trying the Kallo cubes after shopping, Deb x