The Best Chicken Broth and Stock You Can Get in the Store (2024)

The research

  • The best
  • Other good chicken broths
  • The competition
  • How we picked and tested

The best

The Best Chicken Broth and Stock You Can Get in the Store (1)

Our pick

Luscious and meaty

Like homemade broth simmered from roasted chicken bones, but without the work.

Buying Options

$4 from Target

Of all the broths we tried, the Target house brand has the truest, most robust chicken flavor. We’re confident that this is an excellent all-purpose broth for any braise, soup, or side dish (like rice pilaf). Former Wirecutter editor Winnie Yang, my fellow taster, ranked the Good & Gather broth as her favorite in a blind tasting. In her notes, she said it tasted and smelled “like something I could have made from a roasted chicken carcass.” It’s luscious and full-bodied, with a dominant deep roasty flavor. Good & Gather’s chicken-y assertiveness might taste too pungent for some folks, though. If you’re looking for a lighter and brighter alternative, the Imagine Organic Free Range Chicken Broth is a great choice.

The Best Chicken Broth and Stock You Can Get in the Store (3)

Our pick

Imagine Organic Free Range Chicken Broth Low Sodium

Light and aromatic

A classic stock that tastes clean and bright, and won’t overpower other ingredients in your recipes.

Buying Options

$18 from Amazon

You won’t get in-your-face, intense roasted-meat goodness from this broth, but we really liked its clean and subtle chicken flavor, as well as its aroma, which, quite frankly, reminded us of Campbell’s Chicken Noodle Soup (no shade). At first taste, the Imagine broth, when it was piping hot, delivered more intense aroma than flavor; it wasn’t until the broth cooled a bit that we could detect more chicken on the palate. The Imagine broth made a comforting bowl of soup, and the chicken flavor became more pronounced after it reduced a bit from boiling with egg noodles and Napa cabbage. The addition of lemon juice did, however, overpower this broth a bit. That said, we think this is a solid all-purpose broth that’s ideal for braises, poached fish, sauces, soups—really, any application where you want to add a little extra flavor while letting the other ingredients shine.

The Best Chicken Broth and Stock You Can Get in the Store (5)

Our pick

Inexpensive and tasty

Get this if you like a stronger aromatic vegetable flavor in your chicken stock.

Buying Options

$2 from Target

It kind of blew our minds that Target’s chicken stock was one of our favorites yet also cost the least of all the competition. It isn’t nearly as rich as the Good & Gather bone broth, but it is more robust than the Imagine broth. The Good & Gather stock tastes the most vegetal of our three top picks, due to the organic vegetable flavor and cabbage juice concentrate in the ingredients list. It made a fine bowl of simple noodle soup. However, I think this stock is better suited for recipes in which it isn’t the main ingredient, such as meat braises and stuffing. One thing to note is that this broth has 1 gram of added sugars per serving; it doesn’t impact the flavor much, but folks who are concerned about their sugar intake should keep that in mind.

Other good chicken broths

If you want a lighter bone broth with greater ingredients transparency: Pacific Foods Organic Bone Broth Chicken Unsalted (about $5.50 per quart) is a respectable runner-up to the Good & Gather bone broth. Compared with that one, this bone broth is lighter in body and chicken flavor, and it’s more rounded out with vegetables, herbs, and spices. The Pacific Foods bone broth also stands apart from the competition in that the label fully spells out the ingredients, listing water, organic chicken, organic vegetables (onions, carrots, celery), and so on. On most of the broths and stocks we tasted, the labels listed only “chicken broth” or “chicken stock” as the first ingredient. The Pacific Foods bone broth is a good all-purpose choice for most recipes, and it would even make a fine soup base with additional carrots, onions, and fresh herbs.

For a decent and economical supermarket option: The College Inn Unsalted Chicken Stock (about $2.60 per quart) is a solid choice. It got different grades from the testers: I thought it was okay, and Winnie ranked it as her number-two pick. In her notes, Winnie wrote that this stock had “decent chicken flavor” that was “pleasant and clean.” She also found it “surprisingly rich” given the “fairly clear straw color.” I put the College Inn Unsalted Chicken Stock squarely in the middle.

For a supermarket brand with more intense, chicken-y flavor: Swanson Unsalted Chicken Cooking Stock (about $3.20 per quart) is inoffensive and was available at most of the supermarkets I shopped at while researching this guide. Winnie and I were split on the flavors we picked up in this one—she detected a charred onion flavor, whereas I thought it had a pleasant bit of gaminess, like a stock made from a more mature chicken. We think it’s one of the better-tasting big-brand chicken stocks that most folks can find at their local supermarket.

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The competition

Swanson Organic Low-Sodium Free-Range Chicken Broth (about $4 per quart) doesn’t taste terrible so much as it doesn’t taste like much of anything. Even though this broth had a “cleaner” flavor than most of the others we dismissed, it was insipid, thin, and described as “weaksauce” by our blind-taster.

The Pacific Foods Organic Free Range Chicken Broth Low Sodium (about $3.30 per quart) was too weak on chicken flavor and aroma for the price. An onion-powder flavor, while not overtly offensive, dominated and lingered on the palate.

Target’s (about $2 per quart) is very affordable for an organic product, and we think we know why: In our tests it was watery and barely tasted like anything, chicken or otherwise. If buying organic is a priority, you’re better off spending slightly more for a quart of the Imagine organic low-sodium broth.

“Milky white” and “bland” best describe Whole Foods 365 Organic Chicken Broth Low Sodium (about $2.50 per quart).This broth stood out for its lack of both flavor and color. We detected a faint chicken aroma, and that’s about it.

To paraphrase Winnie, our blind-taster, the Progresso Chicken Broth Unsalted (about $2.70 per quart) tasted like the plastic from the carton more than anything else. I also thought this one was plasticky, with a strong onion-powder and yeast aftertaste.

Intense onion flavor dominated Swanson Unsalted Chicken Broth (about $2.50 per quart). The chicken flavor was there, but the yeast extract in the ingredients took over and lingered on the palate for a while. If Swanson broths and stocks are the best option at your local supermarket, skip this one and grab either the Unsalted Chicken Cooking Stock or the Organic Low-Sodium Free Range Chicken Broth.

I don’t like to drag subpar products through the mud, but the Rachael Ray Stock-in-a-Box Low-Sodium Chicken Stock (about $3.00 per quart) was one of the worst we tasted. It had no discernible chicken flavor or aroma. Instead, it was watery and plasticky tasting, with an unidentifiable off-flavor that lingered way too long on the palate. The Rachael Ray stock is the only one we tested that’s made from watered-down chicken stock concentrate, not chicken stock or broth. And the difference was glaringly obvious.

We don’t know which ingredient made Kitchen Basics Unsalted Chicken Stock (about $3.30 per quart) taste so sour. The only clue we could gather from the ingredient list was “natural flavor.” In our tasting notes, we agreed that the strong acidic flavor was the most memorable characteristic. Winnie called it “thin” and mused that it “might be worse” than the Rachael Ray stock.

How we picked and tested

The Best Chicken Broth and Stock You Can Get in the Store (7)

We started out with simple criteria: low-sodium chicken broths and stocks that folks could find at supermarkets or big-box stores. By culinary definition, you make stock from simmering bones (likely with some meat still attached) and aromatics like carrots, onions, and celery, while broth gets its flavor from meat. If you were to poach a whole chicken in water, for example, at the end you’d have broth (and a cooked chicken). But in the context of labels, “stock” and “broth” seem to be used interchangeably—except in the case of bone broth, which is richer and more concentrated than normal stock or broth.

We settled on low-sodium and no-salt-added chicken broths because they allow people to have more control over how much salt they use. Every chicken broth and stock we tested had 6% daily value or less of sodium per 1-cup serving. We found many options on store shelves labeled “reduced sodium” and “40% less sodium” (compared with the brand’s full-sodium offering), but oftentimes those broths still listed upwards of 24% of the recommended daily value of sodium per 1-cup serving.

Before we tasted anything, we assumed that stocks with a higher protein percentage would be more robust. That turned out to be true, but we also found that more protein didn’t necessarily equate to a stock with more intense chicken flavor. In the case of high-protein bone broths, while they did taste like chicken, they also tended to have a muddier, deeper flavor. That’s fine for meat and poultry dishes, but it would probably overwhelm if used in a pan sauce for delicate fish like sole or fluke.

Many store-bought broths (including bone broths) and stocks add natural chicken flavor and other ingredients to make them more flavorful. We found that the most common ingredients in packaged low-sodium chicken broth included the following:

  • Chicken broth or stock: This was the first ingredient in most of the contenders we tasted, and listings don’t usually break it down further into its components.
  • Yeast extract: This flavor enhancer is derived from brewer’s or baker’s yeast. According to Jonathan Campbell, PhD, associate professor of animal science and extension meat specialist at Pennsylvania State University, “[Yeast extract] is simply used to replace sodium … and add more of a savory flavor.”
  • Onion powder: Most people have used this potent seasoning before (you probably have some in your cupboard). It was in many of the broths we tested that had a roasted- or charred-onion aftertaste.
  • Natural flavor: The FDA rules say that, among other things, “natural flavor” can be derived from plants, eggs, poultry, or meats. Other than that, it’s a mystery unless you have an exceptional palate.
  • Natural chicken flavor: This was another ingredient we couldn’t quite pin down. We asked Campbell what, exactly, natural chicken flavor was. “I guess from a simplistic standpoint, it would more than likely be the use of [poultry] fat,” Campbell responded. As the saying goes, fat is flavor.

In 2020, we couldn’t host a group of taste testers as we’d usually do. I researched, bought, and tasted all the broths and stocks at home on my own. I heated each broth to a simmer, poured it into a clear drinking glass, and tasted it at various temperatures as it cooled. After I tasted each one, I packaged the broths in pint-size deli containers and took them to Wirecutter editor Winnie Yang, who tasted the brand-concealed broths on her own at her home. We took note of each brand’s intensity of chicken flavor and aroma. We also tasted for any off-flavors or overwhelming flavors other than chicken.

After culling the contenders we liked the least, I made a simple soup with each of the finalists that consisted of homemade egg noodles, napa cabbage, lemon, salt, and pepper, and I tasted the soups on my own.

This article was edited by Winnie Yang and Marguerite Preston.

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The Best Chicken Broth and Stock You Can Get in the Store (2024)
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