Learn how to make the best bone broth in the instant pot with this simple tutorial. Bone broth is nourishing, gut healing and the perfect liquid, in which to simmer away vegetables and meat into a delicious homemade soup

two jars of homemade bone broth in mason jars on a white quartz countertop with a gray dutch oven in the background

It is known to be an effective immune booster, which is the reason mom reached for the chicken noodle soup when you were sick as a kid.

Homemade bone broth is not liquid when made properly.

Unfortunately, the liquid chicken broth you find in boxes on grocery store shelves, doesn’t have the same healing properties as bone broth.

When bones are simmered for long periods of time, gelatin is pulled from them, causing the jello like consistency.

The stuff you find in the grocery store simply isn’t made with the health benefits in mind.

Bone broth has a special place in the meal rotation here at the farmhouse. I love the simplicity of a homemade soup.

From cheeseburger soup, to pumpkinroasted red pepper and tomato soup and more. It is a staple, no matter the season.

Packing so many vegetables an broth into a cozy, nourishing one-pot meal is a no-brainer for me. Less dishes. More nutrition. I’m all there.

Plus, I love being able to use every part of the chicken. I pay good money for organic, pasture raised chickens.

The last thing I want to do is throw away the leftovers bits of meat and bones, when they are still packed with nutrition.

swing top jar of homemade bone broth on a white kitchen countertop with an antique stove in the background

Instant Pot Chicken Bone Broth

I have been making chicken broth on the stovetop for years now. The process is simple. Simmer bones in water for at least 24 hours.

The problem is I always need all my stovetop space.

As a family of 8, it isn’t practical to have one large stock pot and burner constantly occupied with simmering broth.

Also, I didn’t really like leaving the burner on at all times. It was on while we left the house and overnight. It felt like the fire hazard.

Recently, I started making my go-to recipe in the Instant Pot, and I don’t think I will be going back to my old way. It gets it done in way less time and I get my burner back.

This post contains affiliate links, which means I make a small commission at no extra cost to you. See my full disclosureย here.

overhead photo of chicken bones, lettuce, celery and carrots in a dutch oven on the stove

Health Benefits Of Bone Broth

  • Reduce joint pain and inflammation.
  • Help skin elasticity.
  • May help support the immune system.
  • Help gut health including leaky gut by tightening the junctions
  • It is very nutritious and full of vitamins, minerals, and amino acids. Each batch will vary on how much nutrients are in it.

Source

Want to save this recipe?
Just enter your email and get it sent to your inbox! Plus you’ll get new recipes from us every week!
Please enable JavaScript in your browser to complete this form.

FAQ:

jar with swing top lid filled with chicken broth on a white countertop with onions and garlic surrounding the jar

Can you leave bone broth in Instant Pot overnight?

Yes. After it has cooked, set it on warm for 10 hours.

I will frequently let it go during the day, and then when it’s done cooking set it to warm for 10 hours when I don’t want to deal with it at the moment.

Is it better to slow cook or pressure cook bone broth?

The most important aspect is that you can get the broth to gel. So whether you use the slow cooker or pressure cooker to make your broth, you want it to gel for the most health benefits.

The slow cooker can accommodate more bones, but it loses more liquid in the cooking process, and can contain toxic substances like lead (this is more likely in older models).

Is a pressure cooker good for bone broth?

Yes. I love using the pressure cooker because you set it and forget it, plus its made from non-toxic stainless steal, plus it gives you amazing broth.

Should I skim fat off bone broth?

No. This is delicious and healthy fat. While some people recommend it for flavor purposes, I like to leave mine to add extra nutrients. You could also skim it off to use the fat for cooking.

Can I use the fat from bone broth?

Yes. Use it for pan frying, sautรฉing, or just leave it in when making soups.

Is drinking bone broth everyday good for you?

Bone broth is full of vitamins, minerals, and amino acids. It is also has many health benefits making it a delicious choice, good for everyday.

Can you freeze broth?

Yes. After it has been cooked and cooled you can freeze it. I will usually freeze it in a quart size mason jar leaving a few inches of headroom to allow for expansion (a ziplock freezer bag will also work. If you don’t leave any space at the top, your mason jar will likely break.

You can also freeze it in table spoon portions in a silicon mold. That way if you only need a little bit to flavor a dish you have already portioned out cubes.

overhead photo of bone broth in a swing top jar. The jar is surrounded by carrots, celery, and onions.

Ingredients:

Chicken or Beef Bones: I prefer chicken. They are easier to come by since I’m constantly making whole chicken for dinner and tend to be cheaper. You can even use chicken feet, see that post here.

Filtered Water – I use my Berkey Water Filter

Apple cider vinegar: Optional. This adds flavor and can help draw out the minerals in the bones.

Vegetable scraps: Like celery leaves and carrot peels: Optional. It adds flavor, color, and nutrients to the stock. When you are chopping veggies for other meals you can place the bottoms of tops of the veggies (that would normally be tossed in the trash anyhow) into a zip-lock bag and place in the freezer. When you go to make broth you have free veggies to use.

Tools You May Need:

Instant Pot

Half gallon jars for storage

two jars of homemade chicken bone broth on a white countertop with a white stove with a dutch oven in the background

How To Make The Best Instant Pot Bone Broth

Add Veggies, Bones, And Water

  1. Fill the Instant Pot with your bones of choice. I fill the stainless steel pot about 3/4 of the way up with bones. A good example of bones used in this scenario is approximately two chicken carcasses.
    • You can also use bones from legs only, thighs only, etc. If you made barbecue chicken legs, when you are done eating, throw the bones in a ziplock bag and into the freezer. Any bones you can add to the pot will work great.
    • It is also ok to mix bones from different animals in the same pot. No harm, no foul.
  2. Cover the bones with water. Make sure the water isn’t too high above the bones. For the broth to gel, it is important to have a water to bone ratio that isn’t too high.
    • Watch the video to see how many bones and water I add for bone broth that effectively gels.
  3. Add a few tablespoons of apple cider vinegar. The acidic vinegar pulls nutrients from the bones into the broth water.

Set The Instant Pot

  1. Press the soup button on the Instant Pot. Set it to low pressure and the maximum cooking time of 120 minutes. Repeat three times.
    • The first time I made bone broth in the Instant Pot it didn’t gel. I was disappointed. Turns out it just needs more time. Repeat the low pressure soup button two more times. Run it through the cycle a total of three times.
    • If a cycle happens to finish while you are sleeping or out and about, no worries. It will just go to warm. Sometimes I get through the whole process in six hours.
    • Sometimes I let it sit on warm between cycles and the process is stretched out for 24 hours.
straining bone broth into mason jars with a white funnel and fine mesh strainer on a white countertop

Straining it off

  1. Take the lid off the Instant Pot and press the cancel button to turn it off. Allow it to cool slightly before straining it off. Just be sure to put it in a place on your counter where you won’t forget about it. Not that I’ve done that….twice.
  2. Once the broth is cool enough to work with, place a stainless steel strainer over a large bowl. Strain off the bones.
    • If you have chickens, they love to eat whats left. Little cannibals.
  3. Pour the broth into half gallon jars. I find a funnel is helpful for this.
  4. Store them in the refrigerator for up to one week.
  5. I usually make one gallon at a time.
overhead photo of a chicken broth in a swing top jar with celery, garlic, carrots and a wooden spoon surrounding the jar

Which bones are best for homemade bone broth?

I like the taste of chicken broth best. Any bones will work.

Beef soup bones usually have more fat. There will be a thick layer of tallow at the top of the jar, after it is refrigerated.

homemade bone broth in a swing top lid on a white countertop surrounded by veggies

How To Get Bones For Bone Broth

  • Always eat meat with bones. Don’t buy boneless skinless chicken breasts. They are all white meat and pretty flavorless. Plus, they won’t give you any bones for broth. I make a whole chicken a couple times a week. That provides most the bones I need.
  • Find a local farmer who you can purchase meat from. My sister and I usually split a whole cow a couple times per year. The meat processor charges a very small amount to throw in the bones.
  • Ask local farmers what they do with the extra bones that people don’t want.
  • I hear Whole Foods sells bones in the freezer section. I’d be willing to bet they will cost you an arm and a leg.

How To Use Bone Broth

Adding broth to dishes helps boost flavor and nutritional value. Some of my favorite ways to use it in cooking include:

  • Soup
  • Stews
  • Cook rice, couscous, risotto, quinoa, etc. in broth for added flavor.
  • Baste a chicken or turkey in it.
  • Use it in place of water in savory Instant Pot or Crock-Pot dishes.
  • Make our families’ favorite Sourdough Stuffing or Chicken Pot Pie.

Find Delicious Recipes With Broth:

If you try this recipe and love it, I would love if you gave it 5 stars! Thank you! Tag me on Instagram @farmhouseonboone.

Bone Broth

4.53 from 21 votes
Bone broth is a delicious, nourishing, gut healing and the perfect liquid, in which to simmer away vegetables and meat into a delicious homemade soup.ย 
Prep: 10 minutes
Cook: 6 hours
Total: 6 hours 10 minutes
Servings: 8
two jars of homemade bone broth in mason jars on a white quartz countertop with a gray dutch oven in the background
Save this recipe!
Just enter your email and get it sent to your inbox! Plus you’ll get new recipes from us every week!
Please enable JavaScript in your browser to complete this form.

Ingredients 

  • 1/2 gallon water
  • 2 lbs chicken bones
  • Veggie scraps, onions, celery, carrots, etc.
  • Herbs, parsley, thyme, basil, etc.
  • Peppercorns
  • 1-2 tablespoons apple cider vinegar

Instructions 

  • Place the chicken bones into the Instant Pot and pour over water with veggie scraps and apple cider vinegar.
  • Add lid and set to seal.
  • Set to low pressure for 240 minutes.
  • Once the time is up, set it again for 240 minutes.
  • When it is done cooking, you can either allow it to naturally release or flip the valve to venting.
  • Strain off the broth using a fine mesh strainer and store broth in the fridge.

Notes

  • This will store for up to a week in the refrigerator. Or you can freeze for up to 6 months.

Nutrition

Calories: 15kcal | Carbohydrates: 1g | Protein: 2g | Fat: 0.5g | Saturated Fat: 0.03g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 0.02g | Monounsaturated Fat: 0.04g | Cholesterol: 5mg | Sodium: 878mg | Potassium: 44mg | Sugar: 1g | Vitamin A: 5IU | Calcium: 10mg | Iron: 0.2mg

Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.

Like this? Leave a comment below!

Sharing is caring!

4.53 from 21 votes (18 ratings without comment)

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recipe Rating




84 Comments

  1. Melodie says:

    Just make this yesterday, it is a wonderful and simple recipe! Thank you! Definitely will be making again!

  2. Roxanne Heusdens says:

    Do you also ask the butcher for the bones from your half cow? Your videos have just shown you using chicken.

  3. Jocelyn says:

    Hello! Thanks so much for posting this. If I have some chicken giblets, do you recommend adding them to the pot as well? If not, is there some other easy and nutritious use for them? Thanks!

  4. Christine M Tufo says:

    when you let it sit over night in the fridge and it thickens do you use all of it in your soup or do you throw out the top fat part?

  5. Emily says:

    So excited to finally try this yesterday! When should the broth congeal? After being in the fridge over night mine is still liquid. I did a total of six hours in the instant pot.

    Thank you!!

  6. Heather says:

    Can you make bone broth with deer bones?

  7. Philippa says:

    Hi
    I really enjoyed reading this but I’m a bit confused. I’ve read 3 or 4 articles on bone broth but none have cleared it up for me. I just don’t understand the difference between bone and chicken broth. You seem to use it interchangeably in this post. If you have to much chicken left on your bones does that make it chicken broth? Does chicken broth have less nutritional value? Or maybe they can be used interchangeably and it really doesn’t matter.
    Last question why do you cook it on low pressure? Wouldn’t it be faster to just cook it on high pressure?
    Thanks –Philippa

    1. Cathy Hansen says:

      From what I understand, stock is the tasty water after you have simmered meat and/or bones for a short time (the taste is milder and the liquid is clearer). I will often thinly slice off the breast meat and then simmer a whole chicken for a couple hours.

      Bone broth is highly nutritious because it is simmered for such a long time (usually 24-36 hours on the stove and often darker in color) that it pulls the vitamins and minerals out of the bones! Hope that helps!

  8. Lauren says:

    Hi. Question about the process. Can I ask why you use the soup button at low pressure for 120 minutes, 3times. Why not just use low pressure for 6 hours? Thanks. โ€”Lauren

    1. Laura says:

      I am wondering the same thing. I have 2 batches to do, so I guess I’ll do one the 3 x soup cycle way and then the next batch I’ll do low pressure for 6 hours and see how they compare. Will report back, if interested.

      1. Sarah says:

        Iโ€™m interested in if the results differed!!

  9. Beverly says:

    We made bone broth before with a big stock pot and it was really good but so time consuming and hands on that we just haven’t had the time to make it as much as we would have liked. I found your website through a tidbits blog post. I am so blessed to have read that post! This is by far the best way to make bone broth!!! Thank you so much!

  10. Sadie says:

    What size instant pot are you using?

    1. Lisa says:

      I use the 6 quart.