Instant Pot Bone Broth (Beef and/or Chicken) (2024)

This Post May Contain Affiliate Links. Please Read OurDisclosure Policy.

Instant Pot bone broth is as easy to make as it is on your wallet. Rich in delicious nutrients, proteins, and collagen, homemade pressure cooker bone broth also gives your recipes an extra level of flavor – or you can sip a mug of warm bone broth just like it’s coffee or tea. Once you know how to make your own bone broth at home, you’ll want to make it (and use it) all the time!

Instant Pot Bone Broth (Beef and/or Chicken) (1)

🍖 What Makes This Recipe So Good

  • Ever found yourself wondering what to do with the carcass of the turkey you grilled for Thanksgiving, or the whole chicken you cooked in the air fryer last week, or those marrow bones you’ve been eying at the store? Instant Pot bone broth solves all those problems. It’s an easy, delicious way to use every part of the protein you buy, which is great for your wallet and better for the planet. You literally can’t lose here.
  • Warm, soothing, gelatinous bone broth is basically self-care in a mug. I’ve completely replaced after-dinner drinks with a warm cup of broth, which relaxes me before bed and makes me feel amazing in the morning.
  • Even if it did nothing for my spirit, I’d absolutely keep drinking it for the physical benefits. Drinking straight bone broth helps heal your gut and funnels more nutrients into your body, which is especially ideal if you’re on any sort of diet or just struggling to eat enough nutritious foods through the day.
  • You don’t HAVE to drink bone broth straight out of a mug. No, no. You can use it in any recipe where you’d ordinarily use chicken broth, beef broth, or vegetable broth, and in a lot of recipes where you’d just use water. Boiling pasta or chicken, cooking rice or quinoa, making homemade soup, making gravy… it’s SO versatile!
  • It’s a great make-ahead recipe that’s perfect for meal prep and freezer meals! I like to seal a week’s worth in a large jar to keep in the refrigerator, then freeze the rest in sealed plastic bags, laying flat on the bottom shelf of the freezer. Instant Pot bone broth can be frozen up to one year, so it’s great to have on hand for whenever you might need it.

🦴 Key Ingredients

Bones – You can play around with the type of bones you use for your bone broth, but I highly recommend using marrow bones and gelatinous bones (like feet!), so you get plenty of gelatin and collagen. I prefer these over regular chicken bones, actually.

Sea Salt – Himalayan pink salt or Celtic sea salt work wonderfully in this recipe because they contain the trace minerals your body needs, and they’re reflective of the minerals in our bodies. Legit healthy food!

You Gellin’?

In addition to vitamins, nutrients, and proteins, Instant Pot bone broth produces something truly magical – GELATIN.

Gelatin helps improve overall gut health and digestion, helps you feel full longer, and it helps protect your joints and reduce joint pain. It helps improve sleep quality, can give your mood a little boost (naturally!), can improve cognitive abilities and skin health and heart health and bone strength.

Uhhhhhh, well IN THAT CASE!

👩🏼‍🍳 Chef’s Tips

  • So, just a heads up. It’s absolutely possible to overcook Instant Pot bone broth. I don’t say that to panic you – just to make you aware! Keep an eye on your cook time and especially your depressurizing time. Overcooked bone broth will taste bitter and I can’t imagine it’d be very enjoyable.
  • You’ll want to boil the chicken feet for 5 minutes or so before using them in the Instant Pot. Boiling them just helps remove any impurities from the skin. 5 minutes is long enough to do the trick without cooking the feet or extracting too many nutrients from them before you start your broth.
  • Technically, yes, you can reuse the bones for multiple batches of bone broth. The amount and strength of the nutrients in each batch will diminish each time you reuse the bones, though. If you’re able, it’s really best to use fresh bones every time you make bone broth, to ensure you’re getting the most benefits you can. That’s another reason I like to make up a really large batch and freeze as much as possible for later! If prices go up dramatically, I’ve got enough to get by for a bit.
  • You’ll notice a thick layer of healthy fat resting on top of the bone broth after it cools. That layer is totally safe to consume, but you’re welcome to scoop it off and discard it if you want. Just use a fork or spoon to scoop off only that thick layer, leaving the brown-ish gelled Instant Pot bone broth below.
Instant Pot Bone Broth (Beef and/or Chicken) (2)

🥘 More Better-For-You Recipes You’ll Love

Instant Pot Bone Broth (Beef and/or Chicken) (3)

Recipe By: Cheryl Malik

5 from 49 votes

Instant Pot Bone Broth (Beef and/or Chicken)


Prep 15 minutes minutes

Cook 3 hours hours 20 minutes minutes

Total 3 hours hours 35 minutes minutes

These step-by-step instructions give you perfect homemade bone broth right in your Instant Pot. Enjoy a mug of warm broth on a chilly day, or use it in your favorite soups, to cook pasta or rice, or to add a little flavor to boiled chicken breasts.

24 8-ounce servings

Equipment

  • large sheet pan

  • Tongs

  • Instant Pot

  • water enough to deglaze sheet pan

  • whisk or spatula, to scrape up browned bits

  • Mesh strainer

  • Large bowl

  • large airtight, freezer-safe glass jars or large food-safe, sealable freezer bags

  • funnel optional, to help fill jars

Ingredients

  • 2 ½ pounds beef marrow bones usually "beef bones" at the store
  • 2 ½ pounds beef feet and/or beef necks and/or use chicken feet and/or chicken necks
  • 1-2 tablespoons apple cider vinegar optional, see Notes
  • 1 large carrot roughly sliced
  • 1 stalk celery roughly sliced
  • 2-4 cloves garlic smashed
  • 5-10 whole black peppercorns to taste
  • 1 tablespoon Himalayan pink sea salt recommended but any sea salt is fine; use more to taste
  • 4-5 sprigs fresh rosemary and/or fresh thyme
  • filtered water enough to almost fill Instant Pot

Instructions

To Prepare the Marrow Bones

  • Preheat oven to 350° Fahrenheit. Spread marrow bones out across sheet pan in one even layer, making sure bones don't touch or overlap.

  • When oven is preheated, place sheet pan in oven and roast marrow bones 20 minutes. After 20 minutes, carefully remove sheet pan from oven. Use tongs to flip marrow bones over.

  • Return sheet pan to oven. Bake 15 minutes more, then remove sheet pan and set aside. Let marrow bones cool slightly.

    Instant Pot Bone Broth (Beef and/or Chicken) (4)

For the Instant Pot Bone Broth

  • Once marrow bones have cooled slightly, carefully transfer bones from sheet pan to Instant Pot insert.

  • Pour water on sheet pan, just enough to cover bottom of pan. Using whisk or spatula, carefully scrape up any browned bits stuck to sheet pan. Transfer contents of sheet pan (water, fat, and browned bits) to Instant Pot insert with marrow bones.

  • Place necks and feet in Instant Pot.

If Using Apple Cider Vinegar

  • Pour apple cider vinegar over all bones, then let bones sit in vinegar 30 minutes. After 30 minutes, proceed with all steps below.

If Not Using Apple Cider Vinegar (or After 30 Minutes)

  • Add carrot slices, celery slices, smashed garlic cloves, peppercorns, sprigs of rosemary and/or thyme, and plenty of sea salt to Instant Pot.

  • Pour in enough filtered water to fill pot ⅔ of the way. Secure lid on Instant Pot with valve in sealing position.

    Instant Pot Bone Broth (Beef and/or Chicken) (5)

  • Set Instant Pot to cook on Manual Low Pressure for 180 minutes (see Notes below). Instant Pot will pressurize, then cook time will begin.

  • Once cook time is up, use Natural Release to let pressure out of Instant Pot. Process will take approximately 20 to 30 minutes. Once Instant Pot is cool enough to touch, remove lid and set aside.

  • Place a mesh strainer over a large bowl and gently pour broth over strainer. Discard bones and veggies. Pour broth into glass jars with tight fitting lids, or into plastic freezer bags.

  • Fit mesh strainer in large bowl. Carefully pour contents of Instant Pot insert into strainer. Once Instant Pot has been emptied, discard bones, vegetables, and herbs. If needed, strain broth again to remove any remaining debris or aromatics. If broth is still warm, place bowl in refrigerator until broth has cooled.

    Instant Pot Bone Broth (Beef and/or Chicken) (6)

  • Fit glass jar with funnel if desired, or open freezer bag. Slowly pour strained broth into jar or freezer bag. Repeat with additional jars or bags as needed until all bone broth has been transferred to storage containers.

  • Secure lids on jars, or remove air from freezer bags and seal bags completely shut. Place broth in fridge or freezer as needed (see Notes below) or serve immediately.

Video

  • Instant Pot: I tested and perfected this recipe using a 6-quart Instant Pot. For smaller pressure cookers, make two batches, or cut the recipe in half.
  • Chicken Feet: Boil the chicken feet at least 5 minutes before using them, to remove any surface impurities.
  • Apple Cider Vinegar: Soaking the bones in apple cider vinegar helps extract all the nutrients from the bones and helps the broth gel, but you might prefer the flavor of the broth without the ACV. I do! If that’s the case, you can skip this step.
  • Instant Pot Settings: If you prefer to cook your broth on Manual High Pressure, set your timer for 120 minutes instead of 180 minutes.
  • Refrigerate: Store in airtight containers or sealed plastic bags for up to one week.
  • Freeze: Store in airtight containers or sealed plastic bags (placed flat in freezer) up to one year.
  • Reheating: To reheat refrigerated bone broth, scoop out a cup of the gelatin and warm it on the stove.

Approximate Information for One Serving

Serving Size: 8ouncesCalories: 171calProtein: 10gFat: 14gSaturated Fat: 2gCholesterol: 40mgSodium: 326mgPotassium: 31mgTotal Carbs: 1gFiber: 0.1gSugar: 0.2gNet Carbs: 1gVitamin A: 577IUVitamin C: 0.3mgCalcium: 44mgIron: 1mg

Nutrition Disclaimers
Number of total servings shown is approximate. Actual number of servings will depend on your preferred portion sizes.
Nutritional values shown are general guidelines and reflect information for 1 serving using the ingredients listed, not including any optional ingredients. Actual macros may vary slightly depending on specific brands and types of ingredients used.
To determine the weight of one serving, prepare the recipe as instructed. Weigh the finished recipe, then divide the weight of the finished recipe (not including the weight of the container the food is in) by the desired number of servings. Result will be the weight of one serving.

Did You Make This Recipe?

Tag @40aprons on Instagram and be sure to leave a review on the blog post!

Instant Pot Bone Broth (Beef and/or Chicken) (7)

Cheryl Malik

In addition to being a certified health coach, certified yoga instructor, and mom of 3, Cheryl is also the recipe developer, editor-in-chief, food photographer, and passionate foodie behind 40 Aprons. Having spent the last 10+ years as a food blogger, she's become known for her flavorful recipes, detailed instructions, gorgeous photography, and down-to-earth approach to food and cooking in general.

Never Miss A Meal!

New Recipes Straight To Your Inbox

A curated selection of our most recent recipes, delivered straight to your inbox once a week.

Leave A Review

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

  1. Me, again! I don’t understand how you soak the bones in apple cider vinegar when the recipe only calls for 1-2 Tablespoons and yet it says to pour over the bones? Could you please clarify this? I watched the video and it didn’t include that step in it. Thank you!

    Reply

    1. Hey, Tracy! So, you’re not exactly soaking the bones in the apple cider vinegar. Just pouring a little ACV over the bones and then letting them absorb it for 30 minutes. After 30 minutes, you’ll add the aromatics and then the filtered water.

      I hope that helps! Don’t hesitate to ask any other questions you may have!

      Reply

      1. You gave the best answer. Thank youInstant Pot Bone Broth (Beef and/or Chicken) (8)

        Reply

  2. I am currently getting ready to make this bone beef broth. My marrow bones are frozen. Do I need to unthaw them before roasting them in the oven?

    Reply

    1. Hi Tracy! We haven’t tried this with frozen bones, so we can’t say how it would turn out. We’d recommend defrosting them first to be safe. If you do try it with frozen bones, let us know how it goes! 😊

      Reply

  3. Absolutely loved this recipe. I couldn’t find chicken feet so used pigs feet and it turned out fabulous and totally gelled. I did boil the pigs feet for 10 minutes to make sure they were “clean”. Thank you for this recipe!Instant Pot Bone Broth (Beef and/or Chicken) (9)

    Reply

    1. Thank you, Terry! And thank you for letting us know you had success using pigs’ feet!

      Reply

    1. You can heat it along with the broth!

      Reply

  4. Great tip!Instant Pot Bone Broth (Beef and/or Chicken) (10)

    Reply

  5. awesome broth soothingInstant Pot Bone Broth (Beef and/or Chicken) (11)

    Reply

    1. Thanks for the review, Kin! So happy you enjoyed the bone broth!

      Reply

Where To Next?

One-Pan Holiday Meal

Caramelized Onion Chicken Thighs (Paleo)

Chicken Roulade with Goat Cheese, Spinach, and Prosciutto

All About Hygge

Big Mac Salad

Instant Pot Bone Broth (Beef and/or Chicken) (17)

Meet Cheryl

Passionate foodie, certified health coach, serial entrepreneur, and mom of 3.

I've been developing and sharing delicious, approachable recipes on 40 Aprons for more than a decade. My goal is simple: take the chore out of mealtime by creating recipes that anyone can cook and that never skimp on flavor.

Meet my Team

Seasonal Favorites

Strawberry Goat Cheese Salad with Balsamic Vinaigrette

Paleo Lemon Bars

Fried Pickle Dip

Nicoise Salad

Instant Pot Chicken Tacos

Trending Now

Chicken Fajita Casserole

Cucumber Jalapeño Margarita

Creamy Jalapeño Popper Dip (Low Carb, Keto)

BBQ Chicken Salad

Instant Pot Bone Broth (Beef and/or Chicken) (2024)

FAQs

Should bone broth be chicken or beef? ›

“While beef bone broth and chicken bone broth are healthful, beef bone broth has more collagen per serving. It is also better for gut health, for immunity, for sleep, and for mood. And it's better for skin and nails,” Schiff says.

What is the best meat for bone broth? ›

Beef bone broth: Use grass-fed beef bones. The best ones to use for beef broth are meaty bones and bones that have a lot of tissue and cartilage or marrow like oxtail, shanks, and knuckles. Pork bone broth: For pork broth, ribs and the neck bones work well, as well as cartilage-rich pig's feet.

Which tastes better chicken or beef bone broth? ›

Beef broth has a stronger, bolder taste. Chicken bone broth is often lighter and a more relatable taste. After all, most of us ate chicken soup growing up. As a result, upon first taste, you may prefer chicken bone broth over beef.

Can you overcook bone broth in an Instant Pot? ›

It's absolutely possible to overcook Instant Pot bone broth.

Can I mix chicken and beef bones for bone broth? ›

Bones for bone broth: You can use any mix of beef, pork, or chicken bones for making bone broth. Adding some meaty bones, like short ribs or ham bones, will make a richer-tasting broth; you can also use the meat from the bones in other dishes. Filtered water: We used filtered water for more neutral testing.

Which bone broth has the most collagen? ›

Beef bones are more dense than chicken bones, which yields a higher concentration of minerals and collagen compared to chicken.

Which bone broth is healthiest? ›

What kind of bone broth is healthy to drink? Non-gmo beef or chicken bone broth is the healthiest option to drink. Beef and chicken are both great options because they are high in protein, collagen, gelatin and amino acids for gut health and skin hydration.

Which animal bone is best for bone broth? ›

The best bones for broth are full of connective tissue like joints or knuckle bones for beef and feet for chicken. Think about getting the big joints responsible for moving animals around. These are feet, hips and knees.

What parts of the chicken are best for bone broth? ›

You'll need about 3 pounds of chicken bones. Make sure at least half of that is collagen-rich, like chicken backs or wings.

What does drinking bone broth do to your body? ›

The high water content in bone broth helps you stay hydrated. Water makes up 70% of the body and impacts virtually every bodily function. Bone broth contains small amounts of the amino acid glycine, which may promote relaxation and deeper, more restorative sleep. Collagen is the most abundant protein in your body.

Why is chicken broth better than beef broth? ›

In conclusion, both beef and chicken broth offer unique health benefits and can be a valuable addition to your diet. While beef broth is higher in protein and collagen, chicken broth is lower in calories and fat. Ultimately, the choice between the two depends on personal preference and dietary requirements.

Is store-bought bone broth as healthy as homemade? ›

We've covered just 3 here, but all 19 amino acids found in bone broth have their own unique health benefits to offer. While store-bought bone broth also contains some level of these nutrients, they're much more abundant in homemade versions.

Is it better to make bone broth in a slow cooker or Instant Pot? ›

In conclusion, we enjoyed the flavor and the yield of the slow cooker the best! But, the Instant Pot version was the all-around best for time, taste, and yield. And stove top is a classic method which get's the best of both flavor and time.

Can you leave bone broth in Instant Pot overnight? ›

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.

Does pressure cooking bone broth destroy nutrients? ›

Is it better to slow cook or pressure cook bone broth? It is better to choose a technique that suits your life and goals. A pressure cooker will save you batch time and get you 75% of the nutrition benefits of bone broth.

What type of bone broth is healthiest? ›

What kind of bone broth is healthy to drink? Non-gmo beef or chicken bone broth is the healthiest option to drink. Beef and chicken are both great options because they are high in protein, collagen, gelatin and amino acids for gut health and skin hydration.

Is chicken or beef bone broth better for a leaky gut? ›

Beef bone broth is a little better known for its gut-healing benefits, while chicken is recommended for electrolytes and skin health. Many opt to mix the two together to soak up optimal nutrition benefits. If that's not an option, we recommend switching it up every few weeks.

Does chicken bone broth taste better? ›

There are two key differences between how soup broth and bone broth taste: Soup stock is often very flavorful and in many cases, salty. Bone broth is often more bland and does not taste salty. Soup stock is a thin liquid; bone broth has an oily texture and feels thicker in the mouth.

Is beef bone broth or chicken bone broth better for dogs? ›

Beef and poultry bone broth are best for dogs because they are lower in many allergens. Be sure to check with your veterinarian if you are unsure. And also note your dogs history. If they are sensitive to poultry products then opt for beef.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Aron Pacocha

Last Updated:

Views: 6365

Rating: 4.8 / 5 (48 voted)

Reviews: 87% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Aron Pacocha

Birthday: 1999-08-12

Address: 3808 Moen Corner, Gorczanyport, FL 67364-2074

Phone: +393457723392

Job: Retail Consultant

Hobby: Jewelry making, Cooking, Gaming, Reading, Juggling, Cabaret, Origami

Introduction: My name is Aron Pacocha, I am a happy, tasty, innocent, proud, talented, courageous, magnificent person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.