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12-21-2019 02:11 PM
can anyone recommend a bone broth that does not have an enormous amount of sodium?
Or, just share what bone broth you use with the lowest amount of sodium you've found?
thanks,
12-21-2019 02:16 PM
Make your own then you will know what is in it.
12-21-2019 02:21 PM
Hello! I decided to start making my own after paying $4 a quart and the sodium content was off the chart. I went to YouTube and starting watching videos & it's very easy to make your own...believe it or not. I found a video from Goshen Farm and Gardens (YouTube) that you just use a slow cooker or crock pot with chicken drumsticks. I only have $4 in a gallon now and it's all natural, not to mention, I just add a pinch of salt. Trust me, it's really easy.
12-21-2019 02:27 PM
It is easy to make. At a cooking school we were taught in a soup class. The chef told us that due to the electrolytes in the broth the sodium content can be high. Read the label for ADDED salt.
I know the one I buy has no added salt but I do not know the salt content. I do know it is about $7.00 a jar.
12-21-2019 03:16 PM
Costco sells a bone broth that is low in sodium
by Pacific Foods...90 mg of sodium per cup.
it is what I buy
12-21-2019 03:27 PM
@SeaMaiden wrote:
Costco sells a bone broth that is low in sodium
by Pacific Foods...90 mg of sodium per cup.
it is what I buy
I tried this brand, it is more of a rich stock than a bone broth. It certainly does not have the collagen content of homemade or other high-quality brands.
If you need bone broth for health purposes this is not the one, but if using only for taste it is nice.
12-21-2019 04:00 PM - edited 12-21-2019 04:22 PM
@Abrowneyegirl wrote:
@SeaMaiden wrote:
Costco sells a bone broth that is low in sodium
by Pacific Foods...90 mg of sodium per cup.
it is what I buy
I tried this brand, it is more of a rich stock than a bone broth. It certainly does not have the collagen content of homemade or other high-quality brands.
If you need bone broth for health purposes this is not the one, but if using only for taste it is nice.
How do you know this? I have some of this and see no collagen content listed.
I prefer the homemade broth sold at my food co-op, made at a local farm, but I don't know what the collagen content of that one is either. I just know that it's very good and costs twice as much.
Just curious.
12-21-2019 10:46 PM
12-22-2019 12:44 AM
What's the difference between bone broth and regular broth,which I make when I make chicken soup?
12-22-2019 01:10 AM
@evelyner wrote:What's the difference between bone broth and regular broth,which I make when I make chicken soup?
with true bone broth, you roast the bones (or chicken feet) first and then cook/simmer for many hours to get the collagen to release. When purchasing commercially made, make sure the packaging specifically states that it's made from slow roasted bones or it's not real bone broth, as opposed to throwing some chicken, celery, carrots, and onions in a pot and cooking it until the chicken is done.
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