Brown Beef Stock ( Fond Brun )

This is where things get deeper.
Brown beef stock is all about intensity, depth, and layered flavor. It takes more time, more attention—but the result is on another level.
No shortcuts here. This is real cooking.
Essentials
- Time: 6-8 hours
- Difficulty: Basic technique
- Yield: ± 2–3 liters
Ingredients
- Veal & beef bones
- Chicken carcasses
- Carrot, onion, celery
- Bouquet garni
- Cold water
- Tomato paste
Good to know
- Freezes well
- Use within 3 days
- Base for sauces and stews
Step 1 – Build the base
What you see: raw beef and veal bones, vegetables, tomato paste

Start with veal and beef bones, combined with onions, carrots, and celery. Add tomato paste.
👉 This is where color and depth begin.
Step 2 – Roast
What you do: roast bones and vegetables

Place everything in the oven (200°C) and roast until lightly browned.
You’re not burning—you’re building flavor.
Step 3 – Develop color (tomato paste)
What you see: deep browning and caramelization

Mix the tomato paste through and return to the oven.
👉 Let it cook. This is where the magic happens.
Step 4 – Deglaze
What you do: loosen the roasting tray

Add liquid to the tray and scrape up all the browned bits.
👉 That’s pure flavor—don’t lose it.
Step 5 – Transfer to pot
What you do: move everything into a pot

Transfer bones, vegetables, and all juices into a large pot.
Nothing gets left behind.
Step 6 – Add water and bouquet garni
What you do: build the stock

Add water, bouquet garni, and pepper. No salt !
Bring it slowly to temperature.
Step 7 – Gentle simmer
What you see: slow, controlled cooking

Bring to a simmer, not a boil, and skim as needed.Turn heat to low and simmer for 6-8 hours. If water gets too low, add more to the pot. Turn off the heat and let the stock come to room temperature.
👉Time does the work here.
Step 8 – Strain
What you do: pass through a sieve

Strain the broth, discard the solids and put the stock in the refrigerator until the fat solidifies and rises to the top. Skim and discard the fat.
Let gravity do the work—don’t force it.
Step 9 – Final result
What you have: deep, rich brown stock

The color should be dark and glossy. The flavor deep and structured.
This is the base for serious sauces and several stews.
Closing
Master this, and you’re not just cooking… you’re building depth.