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Healthy Home Economist / Archives / Recipes / Stock, Broth & Soups / Stock & Broth Recipes / Healthy and Easy Bouillon Cubes Recipe

Healthy and Easy Bouillon Cubes Recipe

by Sarah Pope / Affiliate Links ✔

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Simple herbal recipe for homemade bouillon cubes that will keep you from using commercial brands from the store, even organic, that contain high amounts of synthetic MSG.lovage leaves and healthy homemade bouillon cubes on a cutting board

People new to traditional cooking and making homemade broth are frequently surprised to learn that bouillon cubes from the store are heavily processed food. Without exception, they contain large amounts of processed glutamate or MSG. Even organic brands should be avoided! If you wish to use them, it is best to make homemade bouillon cubes instead.

Take a look at the ingredients of this popular brand of organic chicken bouillon cubes from the health food store that falsely proclaims “No MSG Added” on the label:

Organic Chicken Bouillon Cube Ingredients:
yeast extract, corn starch*, non hydrogenated palm oil*, mineral salt, natural chicken and rosemary flavouring, chicken fat*, lovage*, turmeric*, parsley*, chicken meat powder*. *organic

What’s the very first ingredient?

Yeast extract which is an alias for glutamate. Note that there are dozens of aliases used in food labeling that while misleading, is completely legal. It is essentially a cat and mouse game food manufacturers play with consumers. As soon as consumers wise up to one name, they change to another then another. (1)

Note that the avoidance of MSG and glutamate in processed foods is important. It frequently helps resolve issues with headaches. It also simplifies maintaining a healthy weight. MSG damages and kills neurons in the hypothalamus in the brain stem. This can contribute to obesity over time by damaging metabolism. Neurosurgeon Dr. Russell Blaylock describes the dangers of this food additive in his book The Taste That Kills.

How companies get away with these labeling shenanigans is shocking. As a consumer, you really need to be on your toes to keep from falling for these processed food scams.

The good news is that it is simple to make your own healthy bouillon cubes to liven up the flavor of bone broth or to add to filtered water along with some veggies, legumes, or meat to make a super-fast soup in a pinch.

Healthy Stock Cubes

The easy and delicious recipe for homemade stock cubes below uses the strong and flavorful herb lovage. It’s been traditionally used for centuries to boost the taste of soups and season broth from Europe to southwestern regions in Asia.

This recipe was sent to me from Joan O., a reader in Ireland. She very graciously said I could publish for all to enjoy.

Sarah, please feel free to use my recipe. One of my daughters has eczema and I knew that MSG exacerbated it, but I had thought that we were an MSG free house until I read your website and found out that yeast extract is [glutamate] MSG.

My family and I were consuming MSG unknown to ourselves in the form of organic bouillon & stock cubes. When we gave them up it was difficult to compensate for the taste but the following Lovage cubes recipe does a really good job, better than just adding fresh lovage as the flavour is much stronger.

A nutritionist has been working with my daughter for the last few months and she is now on a diet to build up her gut as we suspect that she has leaky gut (in spite of being breast fed for 3 and a half years) she is already much much better. Sometimes I use the lovage cubes with homemade stock but really they are pretty strong and can be used instead of stock cubes. I also make chicken and lamb stock and find the slow cooker very useful for this, when I’ve made stock I usually reduce and reduce it and then pour it into ice cube trays to make stock cubes.

Keep up the good work Sarah.

homemade bouillon cubes
5 from 4 votes
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Homemade Bouillon Cubes Recipe

Recipe for homemade bouillon cubes that may be used with homemade stock to improve the flavor or on their own in a pinch as a base for soups.

Course Soup
Keyword easy
Author Sarah Pope

Ingredients

  • 3 bunches fresh lovage 21 ounces (200 grams)
  • 1 onion preferably organic
  • filtered water
  • 1-2 tsp grassfed butter

Instructions

  1. Sweat the onion on low heat using healthy cooking oil of choice for several minutes to draw the moisture out, taking care that little to no browning of the onion occurs.

  2. Add the lovage a few handfuls at a time. It is recommended to use fresh lovage if at all possible for this recipe. If using fresh lovage, note that it will shrink like spinach. In a pinch, dried lovage leaves can be substituted using 1/3 the amount.

  3. Cook for several minutes constantly stirring.

  4. Add enough filtered water to cover.

  5. Simmer for about 20 minutes then whisk with a handheld blender (I use this one). The bouillon should now look like soup.

  6. Simmer uncovered on very low heat to reduce down, a few hours if possible.

  7. Allow to cool to room temperature, and then spoon the thickened mixture into ice cube trays (silicone ice cube trays if possible as the bouillon cubes are easier to remove later). If you don’t like to use silicone, you can use stainless steel ice cube trays instead.

  8. Place ice cube trays filled with bouillon cubes mixture in the freezer.

  9. Once frozen, the bouillon cubes can be removed from the ice cube trays and stored in freezer bags to save space and for very convenient use to add flavor to homemade stock or serve as a stock base alone in a pinch.

Recipe Notes

Virgin or expeller pressed coconut oil may be used instead of grassfed butter.

Substitute dried lovage in a pinch if fresh lovage is unavailable. Use 1/3 the amount of dried herb (7 ounces) versus what you would use fresh (21 ounces).

healthy DIY bouillon cube on a cutting board with herbs

More Information 

Chicken Broth: “No MSG” Labels are False!
Bone Broth and MSG: What You Need to Know
Headaches? MSG the Likely Cause
Stock or Broth? Are You Confused?

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Category: Stock & Broth Recipes, Vegetarian Recipes
Sarah Pope

Sarah Pope MGA has been a Health and Nutrition Educator since 2002. She is a summa cum laude graduate in Economics from Furman University and holds a Master’s degree from the University of Pennsylvania.

She is the author of three books: Amazon #1 bestseller Get Your Fats Straight, Traditional Remedies for Modern Families, and Living Green in an Artificial World.

Her four eBooks Good Diet…Bad Diet, Real Food Fermentation, Ketonomics, and Ancestrally Inspired Dairy-Free Recipes are available for complimentary download via Healthy Home Plus.

Her mission is dedicated to helping families effectively incorporate the principles of ancestral diets within the modern household. She is a sought after lecturer around the world for conferences, summits, and podcasts.

Sarah was awarded Activist of the Year in 2010 at the International Wise Traditions Conference, subsequently serving on the Board of Directors of the nutrition nonprofit the Weston A. Price Foundation for seven years.

Her work has been covered by numerous independent and major media including USA Today, ABC, and NBC among many others.

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Reader Interactions

Comments (29)

  1. Kimberly Potts

    Sep 29, 2024 at 5:40 pm

    5 stars
    Hi, Sarah, I have a question about any research you have done on ice cube trays – I am trying to save space in my small freezer, & really like my 3 small silicone trays that make tiny cubes… but the trays smell awful, & have since I purchased them. I have read that others also smell a plastic/rubber/chemical smell on silicone. This can’t be healthy….??? They transfer the taste to the ice cubes as well. What do you recommend?? Thank you!!!

    Reply
    • Sarah Pope

      Sep 30, 2024 at 12:13 pm

      Stainless steel ice cube trays (they were all stainless when I was a kid) is best.

    • Sarah Pope

      Sep 30, 2024 at 12:14 pm

      Stainless steel ice cube trays (they were all stainless when I was a kid) is best.

      Silicone is a hormone disrupting substance.

  2. Patty

    Sep 4, 2022 at 9:52 am

    5 stars
    So there is absolutely NO healthy store substitute out there anyone has discovered?

    Reply
    • Sarah Pope

      Sep 4, 2022 at 11:25 am

      Zero that I can find! They are all MSG-loaded.

  3. Jessica Smith

    Jul 17, 2022 at 9:44 am

    Wow! This has got to be the most expensive recipe for boullion in existence. $14.90 for 1.76 oz of dried lovage. You have to buy FOUR packs. $59.60 just for one batch of this recipe not counting other ingredients (which are minimal cost in comparison). Not very attainable for the average household I’m afraid.

    Reply
    • Sarah Pope

      Jul 17, 2022 at 9:58 am

      Best to grow your own or get locally! When this recipe was originally written many years ago, the cost of the lovage was very low.

  4. Carmen

    Jun 24, 2020 at 9:32 am

    Sarah, can you give a cup estimate of dried lovage? I have no idea how big or the weight of a bunch is.

    Reply
    • Sarah Pope MGA

      Jun 24, 2020 at 12:02 pm

      That’s a good question … 1 bunch of fresh lovage is about 7 ounces (200 g) according to America the Great Cookbook. If you use dried, it would 1/3 of this. Since the recipe calls for 3 bunches of lovage (21 ounces), that would be 7 ounces of dried lovage.

  5. Kitty B

    Jun 24, 2020 at 7:04 am

    instead of Lavage, you can use Fenugreek leaves, burdock root, black pepper, sea salt, 1 chili pepper, Bay Leaves in a little teabag throw it into the soup and remove after the soup is cooked. Most ingredients you can buy in Indian stores
    Burdock root ( Gobo ) in chines supermarkets are fresh or you can buy dried in herbal stores (a great blood cleanser )

    Reply
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