My wife came home with this item today. It is a crockpot/steamer/pressure cooker appliance.
We had 2 crock pots but after 30 years of use they gave up the ghost.
I also own 3 pressure cookers that I have NEVER cooked food in. They were used for canning when we made spaghetti sauce.
So this new gizmo intriqued me. I figured if I did not like the pressure cooking feature I could simply use it as a crock pot.
I searched the freezer and the only likely candidate for pressure cooking was a pork roast. I decided to make a pot roast. To me the convenience of the crock pot is the all in one pot meals. Most of the recipes I found on-line called for doing the meat and veggies separately. The total time would still be half of using the oven for a pot roast. But I did not want the inconvenience. My wife found one where everything was pressure cooked at once. I was a little leary thinking the potatoes and carrots might be mush. But went ahead anyway.
The cooker allows you to sear the meat and did much better than I was expecting.
While the meat was searing I prepped the veggies.
I added the veggies and some canned beef stock.
I set it to cook for 60 minutes on "high Pressure". The appliance has 2 steam vents. One is the weighted vent found on traditional pressure cookers. It serves as a safety feature. While holding the steam in the weigh just sits in a hole. The unit can never overpressurize as the excess steam escapes pass the calibrated weight. The weight also serves as an interlock - you cannot open the unit whilst under pressure. There is also a release vent to use to get back to atmospheric pressure once done.
The unit took 18 minutes to reach pressure. I heard the weight click into place. A moment later the time started counting down.
Once the 60 minute cook time elapsed I waited 10 minutes and turned the release valve. That vented for 3 minutes before the safety interlock released and I could open the lid.
So total time was 90 minutes. Less than half of the 3 to 4 hours I would slow cook a pot roast in the oven.
This is dinner. It was fork tender and delicious. The vegetables retained there shaoe and were not mush.
ML said clean up was a breeze. The unit has a removal lightweight teflon coated liner.
All in all I am pleased with our initial use. I look forward to cooking with it more.
We had 2 crock pots but after 30 years of use they gave up the ghost.
I also own 3 pressure cookers that I have NEVER cooked food in. They were used for canning when we made spaghetti sauce.
So this new gizmo intriqued me. I figured if I did not like the pressure cooking feature I could simply use it as a crock pot.
I searched the freezer and the only likely candidate for pressure cooking was a pork roast. I decided to make a pot roast. To me the convenience of the crock pot is the all in one pot meals. Most of the recipes I found on-line called for doing the meat and veggies separately. The total time would still be half of using the oven for a pot roast. But I did not want the inconvenience. My wife found one where everything was pressure cooked at once. I was a little leary thinking the potatoes and carrots might be mush. But went ahead anyway.
The cooker allows you to sear the meat and did much better than I was expecting.
While the meat was searing I prepped the veggies.
I added the veggies and some canned beef stock.
I set it to cook for 60 minutes on "high Pressure". The appliance has 2 steam vents. One is the weighted vent found on traditional pressure cookers. It serves as a safety feature. While holding the steam in the weigh just sits in a hole. The unit can never overpressurize as the excess steam escapes pass the calibrated weight. The weight also serves as an interlock - you cannot open the unit whilst under pressure. There is also a release vent to use to get back to atmospheric pressure once done.
The unit took 18 minutes to reach pressure. I heard the weight click into place. A moment later the time started counting down.
Once the 60 minute cook time elapsed I waited 10 minutes and turned the release valve. That vented for 3 minutes before the safety interlock released and I could open the lid.
So total time was 90 minutes. Less than half of the 3 to 4 hours I would slow cook a pot roast in the oven.
This is dinner. It was fork tender and delicious. The vegetables retained there shaoe and were not mush.
ML said clean up was a breeze. The unit has a removal lightweight teflon coated liner.
All in all I am pleased with our initial use. I look forward to cooking with it more.