Skip to main content

Instant Pot Vegetable Stock

5.0

(1)

This image may contain Food Dish Meal Bowl Stew Soup Bowl and Soup
Photo by Chelsie Craig, Food Styling by Kate Buckens

Browning the onions and using mushrooms gives this stock a deep golden brown color and plenty of structure and savory flavors. If you plan to use the stock in a dish where it will cook down dramatically (such as a braise, risotto, or pan sauce), omit the salt.

Recipe information

  • Yield

    Makes about 2½ quarts

Ingredients

1 Tbsp. vegetable oil
2 medium onions, unpeeled, halved
2 celery stalks, halved crosswise
2 large carrots (6–8 oz. each), scrubbed, halved crosswise
8 oz. white button or crimini mushrooms, torn in half if large
1 head of garlic, halved crosswise
Handful of parsley
2 bay leaves
1 tsp. whole black peppercorns
2 tsp. kosher salt (optional)

Special Equipment

An Instant Pot or other pressure cooker

Preparation

  1. Step 1

    Heat oil in Instant Pot on Sauté setting (if using a manual pressure cooker, heat over medium-high). Add onions, cut sides down, and cook, undisturbed, until golden brown, about 3 minutes. Add celery, carrots, mushrooms, and garlic and toss to combine and coat with oil. Reduce heat to medium and cook with lid askew, stirring occasionally, until onions and mushrooms start to release some liquid and vegetables are browned in spots, 5–6 minutes. Stir in parsley, bay leaves, and peppercorns, then pour in 3 quarts water.

    Step 2

    Lock lid and cook stock on high pressure 40 minutes, then release pressure manually.

    Step 3

    Strain stock through a fine-mesh sieve into a large bowl; discard solids. Add salt (if using), stirring to dissolve. Let cool.

    Step 4

    Do Ahead: Stock can be made 4 days ahead. Cover and chill, or freeze up to 6 months.

    Photo by Chelsie Craig, Food Styling by Kate Buckens
Read More
Giving mushrooms the au poivre treatment transforms the humble shrooms into a showstopping main fit for the fanciest of bistros.
Scallion-infused oil, or pa gireum in Korean, is a fragrant way to upgrade a pot of rice.
This velvety white wine sauce imparts tangy, rich flavor to everything it touches.
Braising canned chickpeas in chicken stock and olive oil makes them unbelievably tender and buttery. This is worth the effort of peeling 40 cloves of garlic.
This assertive dressing is the perfect complement to tender, delicate steamed vegetables.
Tons of caramelized onions, so much gooey cheese, and very few dirty dishes.
A flavorful one-pan meal featuring baked pierogies, roasted beets, and a poppy seed dressing. Frozen pierogies and pre-cooked beets make this extra easy.
A plant-based spin on chorizo to put toward tacos, quesadillas, and more.