13-4 lbchickenskin removed and set aside to make schmaltz
1/2yellow onion
1largecarrotcut into 4 or 5 pieces
6-8peppercorns
the homemade chicken stock
more water to make sure the chicken is fully submerged
2tsp kosher salt
Matzo balls
3largeeggsbeaten
1/4cupschmaltzyou may need to top up your schmaltz with a bit of vegetable oil
3/4cupmatzo meal
3tbspsoda water(carbonated water/club soda)
1 1/4tspkosher salt
pinchcayenne pepper(optional)
Matzo ball soup
3-4carrotscut into pieces on the bias
the matzo balls
the chicken
the matzo ball soup broth
Instructions
Make the homemade stock
Put the chicken bones in a large pot and cover with water. This should be somewhere around 12 cups or so.
Cut the onion in half. Leave the skin on. Add it to the pot.
Bring to a bare simmer and cover. Watch your heat after you cover it. It will start to simmer harder. Adjust your heat so you see small bubbles and the surface of the stock moves gently. You don't want this to come to a roiling boil.
Wait. Let it simmer. Takes time. Like 6-8 hours. You are done when the bits of chicken taste like nothing.
Cool slightly and pass through a colander to catch the bones. Let the stock cool. Congratulations. This is better than anything you can buy.
Poach the chicken
Pick a pot big enough to hold the chicken. Skin the chicken. Place the chicken, half an onion and the pieces of carrot into a pot. I use a 5 litre dutch oven.
Pour the homemade chicken stock overtop. Add water if needed to fully cover the bird. Add 2 tsp kosher salt.
Bring to a simmer. Cover and poach the chicken. This will take around 30-40 minutes. Do not rely on time though. You need an instant read thermometer. The chicken is done when the thigh is 175F.
When the chicken is cooked remove it from the pot. Careful. It's sitting in hot liquid. It's full of hot liquid. This is a trip to the hospital waiting to happen. Use tongs. Make sure you have a good grip. Let the stock drain from the cavity.
Let the chicken cool until you can handle it. Remove the meat from the chicken. Set aside to cool. When it's cool shred it into fairly big pieces.
Return the carcass to the pot. Simmer, covered, for another couple hours.
Let cool slightly and strain through a colander. Eat the onion. It's tasty stuff. Strain a second time through a fine strainer lined with cheesecloth or paper towel. Congratulations. This is really better than anything you can buy.
Taste your soup. It will not be salty enough. This soup takes a lot of salt. Make sure the broth is hot. You want your salt balance to be right for hot soup. Cool soup always needs more salt.
Add a tsp of kosher salt and stir. Taste. It may need more salt. Add a half tsp of salt this time. Taste again. Keep going until it tastes right. It always amazes me how much salt this soup needs.
Make the matzo balls
Add the eggs to a bowl large enough to hold all the ingredients. Beat them to combine the whites and yolks. Add the matzo meal, carbonated water and salt.
If you don't have quite a quarter cup of schmaltz top it up with a bit of vegetable oil. Add the schmaltz to the bowl. Stir to combine. Cover loosely with cling wrap. Refrigerate for at least two hours. It will set up when it chills.
Bring a large pot of water to a lively simmer. Not a roiling boil though. Matzo balls can self-destruct if you boil them too hard.
Set a piece of wax or parchment paper on the counter. To make the balls wet your hands. Grab a golf ball worth of the chilled mixture. Form a ball. Keep your hands wet. Repeat until you've used up all the matzo ball mixture. You should get 8-10 balls.
Gently lower the matzo balls into the simmering water. Cook 25-30 minutes. They should get about a little less than double in size and start to sink. That's when they are done. Pull them out gently and set aside.
Assemble the soup
Cook the carrots in salted water. You could toss them in the soup to cook instead. I don't like that extra carrot flavour in the broth. Up to you. Just make sure the carrots are soft.
Bring the matzo ball soup broth to a simmer. Drop the matzo balls into the soup gently to warm through.
Put a matzo ball or two in a bowl. Add a good handful of chicken and a few carrot pieces.
Ladle steaming hot broth overtop and serve. Some people like flat Italian parsley in the soup. If you do add a bit to garnish.
Notes
Except for the cayenne the matzo ball recipe is from Bon Appetit. It's a good recipe. It works well. The carbonated water makes for nice light matzo balls.