Homemade Vegetable Stock in Pressure Cooker Recipe | ChefDeHome.com (2024)

Vegan, GF, Low-Sodium Vegetable Broth, packed with nutrients, and ready in just 20 minutes!

Posted On: Nov, 29 |Author: Savita

DIY Healthy Soups

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Homemade Vegetable Stock in Pressure Cooker Recipe | ChefDeHome.com (1)

Diet Info: DF GF F LF Na LS VG V Fa

Vegan, GF, low-sodium, and surprisingly healthy.. this Vegetable Stock just needs 20 minutes of cooking and has ton of flavor to make all of your winter soups and stews even more delicious!

The best part of making vegetable stock at home? You can really use any veggies/flavors of your choice and can still keep it low-fat and low-sodium. Bonus?! Without any preservatives and needs just 20 minutes start to finish! How good does that sound?

In my kitchen, every soup starts with a batch of vegetable stock (if I don't have some frozen already). To save time, I often make stock in pressure cooker. Pressure cooker not only saves time but also preserves the nutrients very efficiently. So today I thought to share my favorite stock recipe with you all! Plus, I'm also sharing some homemade secrets which make homemade vegetable broth much more than just soup-flavor-enhancer.

Homemade Vegetable Stock in Pressure Cooker Recipe | ChefDeHome.com (2)

Honestly, in my home, homemade vegetable stock (or broth) is much more than just a flavor-enhancer for soups and stews. I'm fan of making a big pot of pressure cooker stock every weekend during winters. A part of which certainly goes in flavoring soups and a part I freeze to use during the weekdays... plus a part we sip when just fresh out of the pressure cooker. No kidding! Fresh made vegetable stock is potent source of veggie nutrients and is popular remedy for common cold weather symptoms.

I fortify my homemade vegetable stock with fresh ginger, turmeric, and some herbs. These warm spices make veg stock a "winter health tonic". Sip a 1/2 cup of this soup and say good bye to all common winter weather symptoms!

Homemade Vegetable Stock in Pressure Cooker Recipe | ChefDeHome.com (3)

Let me quickly sum-up the benefits of this Homemade Veg Broth:

1. Use it to flavor soups, stews, and even to cook flavorful pot of rice.
2. It is vegan, gluten free, low in fat (just a tsp oil) and has low sodium per serving.
3. Ginger, thyme, citrus (lime-Vitamin-C), and turmeric give this vegetable stock "winter health tonic" qualities. Sip a hot cup, just like tea to combat cold.
4. In hurry, heat a few cups of stock, add a tablespoon low-sodium miso paste, buckwheat noodles, some tofu, and chopped tomatoes to serve healthy and comforting Ginger-Miso Noodle Soup for dinner.
5. Freeze the extra stock to use for weekday dinner.

Homemade Vegetable Stock in Pressure Cooker Recipe | ChefDeHome.com (4)

Variations:
Vegetable stock is very forgiving by nature. You can really use any vegetables of your choice. Like I love replace:
1) Spinach with a bunch of fresh Kale Leaves.
2) Add a small stalk of lemon-grass instead of lime juice for lemony aroma without lemon taste.
3) Replace onion with sweet leeks for a sweeter tasting veggie stock.
4) Add some garlic and black pepper for a sharp peppery vegetable stock.

Homemade Vegetable Stock in Pressure Cooker Recipe | ChefDeHome.com (5)

I hope this veg stock recipe will help you make lots of homemade healthier soups this winter.

Wish you a happy and healthy week ahead. -Savita

Now you have the stock! Let's make soups!! :)

Roasted Butternut Squash Soup with Goat Cheese Slow Cooker Turnip, Kale and Lentil Soup Thai Curry Carrot Soup

Homemade Vegetable Stock in Pressure Cooker

Homemade Vegetable Stock in Pressure Cooker Recipe | ChefDeHome.com (6)

Total Time: Prep Time: Cook Time: Cuisine: American () Difficulty: Easy

Yields: 5 Cups - Serves: 5

(No. of servings depends on serving size.)

Ingredients

Vegetable Stock

Winter Vegetable Broth

Smart Swap: For a variation, you can also replace onion with sweet leeks.

Directions

  • 1. In pressure cooker pot, heat 1 teaspoon olive oil. (You can also use canola or just a spray or two of oil). Add onion, carrots, chopped tomatoes, and celery. Saute until onions and tomatoes are soft. (3-4 minutes). Now, add thyme, ginger, lime juice, cilantro, spinach, salt, and water then combine well.
  • 2.Place the lid of cooker and cook on high heat until pressure builds (if your cooker has pressure indicator then until first whistle). Now, lower the heat to medium-high and cook for 8 minutes.
  • Homemade Vegetable Stock in Pressure Cooker Recipe | ChefDeHome.com (7) 3. After 8 minutes, (6-7 whistles), switch-off the heat. Leave the cooker aside for 10 minutes until pressure is fully realized. Once pressure realized, open lid, and pass the contents of pot through a fine-mesh or food mill. Discard the solids.
  • Homemade Vegetable Stock in Pressure Cooker Recipe | ChefDeHome.com (8) 4. Store stock/broth in air-tight container in refrigerator for up-to one week. Or let it cool completely and the freeze in small portions for up-to 6 months.
  • Homemade Vegetable Stock in Pressure Cooker Recipe | ChefDeHome.com (9) 5.For Medicinal Broth, Add some lime juice, crushed mint leaves in fresh made hot stock. Taste and adjust salt if needed. Drink 1/2 cup at time to help with cold or to simply warm-up in cold weather.

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2Responses

  1. Eric

    Wow, what a fast way of making stock. I usually do it on the stove and it take a fair bit of time to prep it for my meal I'm going to cook with it. Super fast and still tastes good. Thanks for all the time you just gave back to me.

    Homemade Vegetable Stock in Pressure Cooker Recipe | ChefDeHome.com (13)

    Savita

    thanks, Eric for your wonderful feedback. I've been making stock in pressure cooker from quiet sometime now and it sure is great time saver! I'm really glad you like the recipe and it will help you save time too. Time is money! :) Have a wonderful day! and Happy Cooking!

Homemade Vegetable Stock in Pressure Cooker Recipe | ChefDeHome.com (14)

Hi, I’m Savita!
Blogger behind Chef De Home. (...about me)

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Homemade Vegetable Stock in Pressure Cooker Recipe | ChefDeHome.com (2024)

FAQs

What not to put in homemade vegetable stock? ›

Cruciferous veggies: Brussels sprouts, broccoli, cauliflower, cabbage, or kale – these can make your broth become bitter. Green bell peppers (and possibly other colors of peppers, as well): these can make your broth become bitter. Especially avoid using the inside white pith of the pepper.

What is the difference between vegetable broth and vegetable stock? ›

Vegetable stock likely comes unseasoned, while broth usually contains salt and other seasonings. Vegetable stock is made with untrimmed, sometimes whole vegetables, while broth is made from trimmed, roughly chopped vegetables.

What is the advantage of making stock in a pressure cooker? ›

Not only does it cut down significantly on your total cooking time, yielding stock in less than an hour, but the resulting stock tends to be even better than a classically long-simmered one, with deeper flavor and an impressive extraction of gelatin.

How do you make vegetable stock taste better? ›

Roasting onion, carrots, celery, tomatoes, and garlic until nicely brown intensifies the broth's flavor and adds color. The roasted vegetables add a rich, satisfying quality to the broth. Second, add tomatoes. Tomatoes add sweetness, color, and umami.

What two types of vegetables should be avoided in stocks? ›

While you can use a lot of vegetables in stock, you can't use all of them, because some vegetables—particularly cruciferous ones like broccoli and cauliflower—will make your stock bitter or otherwise unpalatable (read: farty).

What veggies are not good for stock? ›

7 Vegetables to Avoid Adding to Vegetable Stock

1. Leafy green parts of carrots and celery. 2. Brassicas, including cabbage, Brussels sprouts, broccoli, cauliflower, turnips, rutabagas, collard greens, kohlrabi, and kale.

What are the disadvantages of cooking in a pressure cooker? ›

However, starchy foods may form acrylamide, a harmful chemical, when pressure cooked. Consumption of this chemical on a regular basis may lead to health issues like cancer, infertility, and neurological disorders.

Can you make stock in a pressure cooker? ›

To make regular stock, cook on high pressure for 1 hour if using all chicken or poultry bones, or 2 hours for beef or pork bones or a combination of poultry and meat. For bone broth, cook on high pressure for 3 hours for poultry bones, and 4½ hours for beef, pork, or mixed bones.

How long to pressure can stock? ›

Center hot lid on jar. Apply band and adjust until fit is fingertip tight. Process filled jars in a pressure canner at 10 pounds pressure 20 minutes for pints and 25 minutes for quarts, adjusting for altitude, according to your pressure canners directions.

What vegetables are good for a vegetable stock? ›

Good stock really is key. I prefer whole vegetables for my stock, rather than scraps. I use: onions, carrots, celery, leeks, garlic, thyme, parsley, bay leaves, and black peppercorns.

What brings out the full flavor of the stock? ›

Woody herbs like rosemary, thyme, oregano, sage, tarragon, and marjoram release tons of flavor as they slowly simmer in stock. Give them a rinse and toss in a big handful of sprigs per quart of store-bought stock.

Why is my homemade vegetable stock bitter? ›

A number of ingredients may make vegetable broth taste bitter. Therefore, it's best to avoid these ingredients – or use them in moderation. Bitter greens, such as dandelion greens or mustard greens. Tough or woody herb stems, such as rosemary stems, thyme stems, oregano stems, or even hard basil stems.

What should you avoid when making stocks? ›

Avoid bitter greens and members of the brassica family (kale, cabbage, Bok Choy). Other greens can be used in small quantities. Good in small quantities (no more than 1/5 of the stock ingredients). Foods in the Brassica family, such as kohlrabi, are too strong for stock/broth and can impart a bitter taste.

What ingredient items should never be used in stock preparation? ›

Dark greens (spinach, kale, etc) can make a stock bitter and of course greenish in color. Cabbage also can impart a overwhelming bitterness. Potatoes can cloud a stock from their starchiness, so they are not good when you want clear stock for something like a soup or consomme.

Which of the following vegetables are best to be avoided when making stock? ›

Steer clear of any member of the brassica family; broccoli, cauliflower, kale and cabbage among others. These will ruin your stock with a sulphurous and bitter flavour. Softer vegetables such as potatoes or pumpkin are no good as they break down too easily, creating a cloudy stock.

Should I put potato peels in my vegetable stock? ›

Save those vegetables that may have lost their crunchy appeal for a flavorful veggie stock. Even if stored properly, celery and carrots may become floppy after some time, but don't let them go to the compost. Throw in your onion skins, potato peels, and other veggie scraps from cooking to add more flavor to the mix!

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