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I pulled my crock pot from the basement and made a beef stew. I guess using these things is not as brainless as I'd thought.
I had to brown the beef at the front end. Then at the tail end I had to take out the liquid, reduce it, and add flour to thicken. The main advantage I found was that I could leave the cooker on and leave the house for 4+ hours. But with a pressure cooker I can get the same thing done in 1 hour anyway. So, if space becomes an issue, I'm keeping the pressure cooker and pitching the cooker. Vash, you need a pressure cooker. The pot can be used as a regular pot, so the only extra piece you'd storing is the pressure lid. |
anything you need to brown first will take an extra step. but if you dont nothing like prepping the night of morning of. place the cooker on the top of the stove if you have limited counter space. leave for work. 8hrs later come home to a house smelling of foody goodness and a dog drooling on the floor looking for handouts he has been smelling all day. ;)
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The best place to buy a Crock Pot is a THRIFT STORE...about $5.00...like Vash many people deep six em...
The Crock Pot is just the modern version of a Clay Pot or even Dutch Oven... I have had mine for over 30 years... |
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john..for a thickener IN the slow cooker, a tablespoon of minute tapioca creates a smooth silky sauce..perfect vicosity. the tapioca can hold up to the long process of a slow cooker without breaking.. |
one word: brisket
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Tapioca - cool. Wait, what is "minute tapioca"?
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http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1301955014.jpg |
I find it is the best way to do raccoon...
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