11 Ways to Fancy Up a Box of Store-Bought Broth (2024)

Meghan Splawn

Meghan Splawn

Meghan was the Food Editor for Kitchn's Skills content. She's a master of everyday baking, family cooking, and harnessing good light. Meghan approaches food with an eye towards budgeting — both time and money — and having fun. Meghan has a baking and pastry degree, and spent the first 10 years of her career as part of Alton Brown's culinary team. She co-hosts a weekly podcast about food and family called Didn't I Just Feed You.

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updated Nov 19, 2019

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11 Ways to Fancy Up a Box of Store-Bought Broth (1)

Soup season is here, and while I’m sure we’d all love to be that home cook who always has homemade broth stocked in the freezer, the reality is sometimes you’ve got to make really good store-bought broth into really great homemade soup. So first find a brand of broth you love, and then enhance it with one (or more) of these kitchen staples.

1. Add spices.

Whole spices are a fast and easy way to doctor up homemade broth. Lightly crushed peppercorns can enhance chicken broth destined for chicken and dumplings, or you can add cinnamon sticks, star anise, cloves, and coriander to beef broth for a quick interpretation of pho.

Try it: How To Make Quick Vietnamese Beef Noodle Pho

2. Add aromatics.

Celery, carrots, and onions are standard soup starters, but you can also add fragrant ginger and garlic to a simmering pot of store-bought broth. When deciding whether to add the aromatics in whole parts or finely chopped, keep the final flavors and texture in mind. Lightly crushed garlic cloves lend a delicate flavor, while minced cloves will be quite strong.

3. Simmer with fresh herbs.

Bay leaves, thyme, rosemary, sage, lemongrass, and lime leaves are simple upgrades to store-bought stock. Also consider saving herb stems for quickly simmering in soup broth instead of using whole herbs.

4. Throw in a cheese rind.

Save your Parmesan rinds for soup fodder. These leftovers make for an incredibly savory broth. My favorite place to use them? In the broth for a hearty minestrone soup.

Try it: Easy Green Minestrone

5. Simmer with fruit peels.

This suggestion might raise an eyebrow or two, but citrus peel is not an uncommon addition to soups. Thai coconut soup can be made with lime peel in place of its infamous lime leaves. I even know a chef who is fond of whole apples in his pho broth, so a few apple peels in a chicken broth destined for cheese soup sounds ideal.

Try it: How To Make Tom Kha Gai: The Best Method for Most Home Cooks

6. Add a sprinkle of smoked salt.

Pho relies on charred aromatics for its smoky background flavor, and while you can absolutely replicate this step and add those aromatics to store-bought beef broth, smoked salt is a fast and easy way to add smoky flavor to broth. Be cautious of the store-bought broth’s sodium content before trying the enhancement.

7. Add a sauce.

Soy sauce, fish sauce, hot sauce, or chili paste can quickly and efficiently flavor store-bought broth — a little bit goes along way with these ingredients. We often add a few drops of fish sauce to chicken broth before making wonton soup.

Try it: Won Ton Soup

8. Stir in miso paste.

Many of us know and love miso from miso soup, but its addition to broth isn’t limited to miso soup. For the best results, add this thick flavorful paste at the end of cooking when the soup will no longer come to a boil.

9. Add a splash of white wine.

Depending on the wine, a splash of wine can either enhance store-brought broth with a subtle sweetness or a nice acidity. This is another addition that is best made at the end of cooking.

10. Add a little vinegar.

My favorite chile recipe calls for a splash of apple cider vinegar (it supposedly aids digestion), and many French onion soup recipes call for a thimbleful of sherry vinegar for serving. This is another one to add just before eating.

Try it: How To Make French Onion Soup in the Slow Cooker

11. Concentrate it.

This is one of my favorite tricks that I learned from mastering tom kha gai. Bringing store-bought broth to a boil and reducing it by half vastly improves its texture and body. If you’re looking for a really flavorful base for chicken noodle soup, this will do the trick. Use a wide, shallow pan for this step to cut the time in half.

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