I trust only me to carve the turkey—that’s because it gives me alone time with the carcass. I covet the bits of salty, golden-brown turkey meat close to the bones once the big hunks of meat are carved away. By the time I make it to the holiday table, I’m quite full and deliriously content.

Roasted Turkey Bones Make the Best Stock

But that’s only half the story! The rest? The bones! Turkey stock made with the leftover carcass is full of personality. It’s the key to future meals like soup, risotto, or any time you want a flavorful upgrade from boxed chicken stock. Turkey stock is the best stock to make if you’ve never cooked homemade stock. That’s because you probably already have all the ingredients on hand since you just had a big turkey dinner. All you need is water, the roasted turkey bones, and a large pot. Vegetables and aromatics are useful, but optional.

Turkey Stock, Step-by-Step

Making turkey stock is hands-off babysitting of a pot that’s happily simmering away. Plus, that incredible scent of roast turkey will fill your house (again). To make turkey stock:

Tips for the Best Turkey Stock

When preparing the roast turkey, save the turkey neck and wing tips. They add a lot of flavor to your stock, especially if you can roast them in the pan with the turkey before adding it to the stock.Giblets for the win! The heart and the gizzard from the giblet bag usually found in the turkey can be added to the stock for extra depth. Don’t add the liver, though (the one that’s squishy and slimy). It will make the stock bitter.Out of veg? Traditionally, onions, carrots, and celery are added to make the stock. If you have them, great. If you don’t, go ahead without them. It’ll still be worth it.Herbs: Parsley and thyme with their stems are great additions. Go light on rosemary and sage, if using, since they can overpower the stock. A bay leaf or three is great, too.Chill first, then skim: The fat is easiest to remove from the stock once everything is chilled because it solidifies. You can just scrape it off and pitch it.

Signs of Glorious Turkey Stock

When your stock sets up like loose gelatin once it’s been chilled, that’s a sign of excellent stock-making. The jelly-like body is from the collagen in the bone’s connective tissue dissolving. It adds a silky richness to the stock. Turkey wings have lots of collagen that contribute good body, so be sure to add them if you saved them.

Make Stock in a Pressure Cooker or Slow Cooker

Most of us don’t have a pressure cooker or a slow cooker big enough to hold a turkey carcass,  but if you do, you can easily adapt our chicken stock recipes for the pressure cooker and slow cooker to make turkey stock. Just follow the recipe as written but use the turkey bones instead of chicken.

Can’t Make Stock Now? Freeze the Carcass!

Have I driven home from my in-laws’ with their gift of frozen turkey carcass in tow? Yes, I have. You can pop that carcass in the freezer and deal with it in a few weeks if there’s too much action happening post-holiday for you to handle.

Storing Turkey Stock

Before you refrigerate the strained turkey stock, you need to let it cool. You’ll have a lot of stock. If it goes into a fridge still hot, it will warm the inside of the fridge, creating ideal conditions for a bacteria farm. Small batches of warm food are often okay to refrigerate, but with this, you gotta fully cool it. To quickly cool the stock, make an ice bath. But not all of us have a ton of ice. Another way? If there’s snow outside, set it in the snow and give it a good stir every 10 minutes or so. And remember, the shallower the container, the faster the stock will chill. Pour the stock into airtight containers (I like to use lidded glass quart jars) and refrigerate for up to seven days. You can freeze the stock in freezer-safe bags or containers for up to one year. READ MORE: How to Freeze Soup, Beans, and Broth

Use Turkey Stock to Make These Recipes

Turkey Mushroom Risotto Chipotle Turkey Pozole White Turkey Chili Stracciatella alla Romana Creamy Tortellini Soup with Sausage and Spinach

Adding the turkey skin translates to tons of flavor. Skim the fat off the finished stock once it cools Omitting the skin will yield a stock with a thin, flat flavor. If you happen to have turkey bones that aren’t roasted, you can still follow this recipe. Your resulting stock will have a more neutral flavor and subtle color. Add the onions, celery, carrots, bay leaves, parsley, and thyme. Add enough cold water to cover the bones by an inch. If there’s scum at the top as it simmers, don’t stir it in. Use a skimmer or a slotted spoon to scoop it out and discard it. These are the impurities in the bones coming up. Alternatively, you can fish out the bones and vegetables with tongs or a slotted spoon. Sometimes you only have one stockpot—the one you’re cooking the stock in—which gives you limited options for receptacles for straining the stock. Get creative if you must. Toss out the cooked vegetables and bones. You can pick off any bits of meat, but they will be stringy and flavorless, so I skip it. If not, let the stock cool to room temperature. There are ways to speed this up: pour it into smaller pots, set the pot in an ice bath, or pour it into shallow pans. But don’t place a giant stockpot of hot stock straight in the fridge because it can spoil. Chill it overnight and then scrape off the fat that solidifies on top. Pour the stock into airtight containers. Refrigerate it up to 7 days or freeze it for up to 1 year.