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Why have more than one Instapot??
Seriously, we know a few women/mothers who own multiple Instapots. It’s like some sort of status symbol. I don’t get it. We have one that was a gift and it’s gathering dust. Maybe we just need a better cookbook because the last dish we made in it wasn’t very good. Lots of leftovers that ended up in the trash. Also, what have more than one Instapot going? That’s just weird I think.
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We have one and it’s awesome - we use it all the time - but we don’t need two.
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We got rid of ours in short order too. Slow cooker is better and never found a good use for the Instapot.
No clue why you would need more than one. I thought the whole point of them was to reduce the number pots/pans/etc needed to cook a meal. |
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I don’t really see the need for more than one unless those people you know with more than one are also the ones who are prepping a whole week of meals on Sunday. I think of ours like an electric pressure cooker. If it’s something you’d do in a pressure cooker, you can do it in an instapot Which reminds me. Time for some stuffed cabbage. Which was the impetus for the instapot in the first place. |
I like my Instapot, but want a bigger one to make Hawaiian food. Mine is a CrockPot brand and is out of action because of a recall on the lid. Just waiting for the new lid to arrive.
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Anything you can do in a slow cooker in 4 hours can be done in 20 minutes in an insta pot. |
It is great for corned beef. Throw it in the pot, set for a little over an hour and it is done. No need to watch it like on a stove.
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We use ours a lot. You can do some great slow cooked meat dishes, pressure cook beans, stews, etc.
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We cooked beef stew in ours and it tasted bloody. I don’t know what I did wrong so maybe I’ll find another recipe and give it a second go.
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Elevation might matter - we're at ~7300' and things take forever without pressure. Heck, I'd still be waiting on Saturday's brown rice if all I had was a sauce pan.
We're old school though and have two pressure cookers. One old rattletop and a Kuhn Rikon springtop. We don't need no stinking bluetooth in our cookers! (shakes his walking cane at the clouds...) But hey, if it gets people cooking better, it's worth it I guess. |
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And fish sauce in everything! |
We use ours a lot as well. Well - my wife uses ours a lot!
Our most common use - take a pot roast - 3 lbs or so - a can of onion soup and a can of golden mushroom. Add some garlic, onion, pepper and cook for about 2 hrs or so. The pot roast will fall apart. We usually have one dinner meal out of it - adding mashed potatoes, steamed broccoli, and rolls. Then we take the left over roast and have sandwiches for another meal or two. Also - we don't through out the gravy sauce/juice from the original meal. We will save it in the freezer and use it as the base for the next roast we cook - maybe adding just 1 can of either the onion soup or the golden mushroom soup. |
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We use ours and I could see needing two depending on how many folk you have to feed and what you are cooking in it.
Wife has a VERY good coq au vin recipe |
Are all your friends Mormon or something?
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Insta pot makes the best hard boiled eggs, the shells ALWAYS just peel right off and the yoke is always done perfect.
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What is an instapot? Is that a crockpot that directly posts your dishes on Instagram?
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We have a crock pot, and a pressure cooker. It is weird to cook chicken in 22 minutes, but the pressure sure makes it tender. The crock pot sure is better for beans or chili. I don't have an Instagram account, so no need of an instapot. Just do NOT get a Facebookpot, those are really out of date and old fashioned. |
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Instapot. |
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