Slow Cooker
Basics
In today’s world,
families are always busy. Whether it is your schedule or
your children’s, a good home-cooked meal can be hard to come
by. Enter the slow cooker. It provides families with another
way to prepare delicious meals for their household. The best
part is that you don’t even have to be there while it’s
cooking.
Slow cooker is another
way to say “crock pot.” Most of us are used to hearing the
latter, but the terms are interchangeable meaning the same
thing. Now, if you are considering using a slow cooker (and
I suggest that you do), there are a few things you should
know before you start to enhance your chances of creating a
successful meal. Yes, even a slow cooker meal can be
horrible if some basic tips are not adhered to. No one wants
to come home with a hearty appetite and find a pot full of
mush. Yuck!
So let’s start with
the purchasing of a slow cooker. You can crock pots in
various sizes.
From as small as one quart to as large as five quarts,
you’re sure to find one that fits your needs. If you come
across a larger one, that’s even better. Depending on your
family size or the amount of people you’ll be preparing
meals for with it, you may find the larger the slow cooker
the better it will work.
Slow cookers also come
with removable inner pots that allow for easier serving at
the dinner table. A removable inner core allows everyone to
sit and relax as they spoon their food onto the plate
instead of standing at the stove. Some even come equipped
with a non-stick inner pot, making clean up less messy.
Temperature settings
vary among slow cookers. Many offer a range of temperature
settings to meet the needs of the cook. Some have as little
at two setting (high and low) and others include five
settings that vary from high (two hours) to really slow
cooking (ten hours). There may also be a warm setting in
case the food has finished cooking but any accompanying side
dishes still need to be prepared. This setting is also great
for times when everyone isn’t ready to eat their meal just
yet.
Be careful with your
heat settings, however. As with ovens, temperatures and
settings on the dial are a rough estimate. Don’t be like me
who, at the expense of my meal, overcooked a roast the first
time. Even
though I had it set to the eight hour setting to cook
throughout the day, my slow cooker has a high temperature
and cooks boneless meats quickly. I could have put it in the
cooker when I got home and still had a delicious meal in
less than two hours.
Just goes to show, you
live and you learn. To avoid such a food crisis, test your
slow cooker on the weekend when you are at home. Start a
meal in the late morning hours, using the lowest setting and
see how long it actually takes for the meal to cook. You may
need to make adjustments to cooking times when you are away
based on what you discover.
A slow cooker can be
an extremely useful tool for busy families and even single
people alike. With the suggestions above you’ll get used to
preparing meals with your slow cooker while you’re not
around in no time.
A slow cooker is a
useful tool for any busy household. All that is required of
you is to add your ingredients to the crock pot and be ready
to eat a sumptuous meal when you return. Slow cookers come
in many sizes to accommodate singles and larger family
units. Before you begin to lick your lips, here are some
basic tips about how and what to cook in your slow
cooker.
First, there are slow
cooker cookbooks on the market. They turn some of our
favorite stovetop and oven recipes into slow cooker
sensations. Dishes you may never thought of cooking in a
crock pot cooker can be prepared without you even being
there. I don’t know about you, but that idea sounds
fantastic to me.
What you must remember
when cooking anything in a slow cooker is the liquid
component. There must be some type of liquid in the bottom
of the cooker to begin the cooking process. Without it, your
dish will cook to the bottom and burn. There doesn’t need to
be a lot of it, just enough to cover the bottom in most
cases. The juices within the meat will mingle with the other
liquid during cooking to create more of a
stock.
When using a crock pot
it should be at least half full for maximum cooking
potential. Keep in mind that the more food you add to the
cooker, the slower it will cook. The temperature will cook
the food evenly without overcooking if the heat settings are
adjusted accordingly. If you aren’t careful and don’t adjust
the crock pot heat settings, you may find that an eight hour
setting cooked your dinner in two and spent the other six
drying it out.
Meats are the most
common food cooked in a slow cooker. People use a crock pot
to cook main dishes for dinner since this is the meal we
struggle with preparing most on a busy schedule. Any meat
used needs to be thoroughly drained before adding it to the
cooker. Since meat takes longer to cook, they need to make
up the bottom layer. This will also help keep the meat moist
since it will cook into the liquid underneath.
For safety, cook meats
at least three hours so that an internal temperature that is
high enough for proper cooking can be reached. This is not
usually a problem since many use the crock pot at its lowest
setting (six to ten hours depending on the brand of cooker).
Just a word of advice, whole chickens should not be used in
a slow cooker. The internal temperature needed to safely
cook that much chicken properly can’t be reached in time for
eating at such low temperature settings.
If you plan to cook
vegetables in your slow cooker, here are some tips. Tough
fibrous veggies like carrots and potatoes can be tossed in
at the beginning with the meat. It takes longer for the
fibers to be broken down and the vegetables to be cooked all
the way through. More delicate vegetables like tomatoes,
peppers, and mushrooms should be added half an hour before
the meal is done.
Slow cooking makes
dinner a cinch when you are on the run. Just be sure to
experiment with various dishes the first time to get an idea
of how long your slow cooker takes to create the particular
meal. Layering foods correctly and testing heat settings
will ensure your meal will be delicious every time.
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