Showing posts with label Food Network.. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Food Network.. Show all posts

Thursday, April 24, 2014

Pressure Cookers, Part 1: How I chose the one that's right for us



As regular readers of my blog (both of you) know, I made a resolution to try one new recipe a week in 2014.  I've mostly been doing that - missed a few weeks, but often will do two or three new recipes a week, so it all evens out.  But I have not been nearly as faithful about blogging my new recipes.  This is because many of them have been done in my pressure cooker, and I wanted to do  introductory posts on how to select and use one. 

Many of us mid-century kids grew up with our mom's pressure cookers.  They would rattle, hiss and rumor has it, some would blow up.  No mishaps to report at the Johansen homestead, but my mom made the most delicious porcupine meatballs in the pressure cooker.  Stew, too.  But by the '70s, the Crockpot had supplanted the pressure cooker for convenient cooking, and in the '80s, the microwave oven became the go-to appliance for quick meals.  Decades went by before I thought about the pressure cooker again.

A few years ago, I became a great fan of Food Network programs, including "Chopped." In that show, chefs - mostly professional, but some amateur cooks too - compete to make the best dish out of an eclectic mix of ingredients under time pressure.  A few would speed the process by using a pressure cooker.  I remembered my mom's porcupine meatballs, and thought that maybe it was time to add a pressure cooker to my culinary arsenal.  (Perhaps not the best metaphor, given that about the time I was shopping for mine, two terrorists killed and maimed innocent people at the Boston Marathon using a bomb made out of one.)

I was looking for a model that cost around $100.  I started and ended my research at America's Test Kitchen, and was sold by their recommendation of the Fagor Duo 8 Quart Steel Pressure Cooker. (OK, it came in second, but was more affordable than the winner.)  I found mine at Amazon and managed to catch a sale to get it for slightly less than $100.  Today it's a bit more expensive.  Macy's, Bed, Bath and Beyond, and other stores also have occasional sales, so if you have time, shop around.

About.com also has a helpful guide for selecting and using a pressure cooker.  Alas, they don't have a newsletter devoted to pressure cookers yet, but it appears to be included in its Busy Cooks and Home Cooking forums if you want recipes delivered.

Other reviews for each model can be found on the Amazon site, at Consumer Research, or just by googling "pressure cooker reviews."  And, of course, ask a friend.  We're very happy with our Fagor, and the 8-quart seems the right size for us - though if we do spend part of our retirement years in an RV, we might go for the 4-quart model. (Yes, we love ours so much we can't imagine being without it.)

Once you get yours - and I can't stress this enough - read the instructions, and refer to them each time you cook.  There are minimum and maximum amounts that can be cooked in the pressure cooker - see video above at the top of the blog - which is why it's important to choose the right size for your family.  (The maximum fill line is engraved inside the Fagor, but can be hard to see.)  My husband thought he could use the pressure cooker like a slow cooker and filled it nearly to the top with spaghetti sauce.  It never came to pressure, but burned on the bottom. 

For those who are more visual, Alton Brown demonstrates how to use a pressure cooker to make chicken stock in this handy videoFagor also has its own video, but the best I found specific to my model was this one on Helen's Kitchen Channel.

In my next blog on this subject, I'll recommend some cookbooks and other recipe sources.  If you can't wait to get started, my first stop was at my local library, where I checked out "Pressure Cookers for Dummies."  Not only did it have some good, basic pressure cooker dishes, but it also suggested how to convert traditional recipes.

Happy shopping!

Monday, January 2, 2012

Use that freezer!

Each of our bio kids represents an appliance. After I returned to work in 1983 after maternity leave, we bought our first microwave oven. Our dishwasher gave out when our second son was born in 1986; with two young children, we replaced that baby right away. And then, in preparation for our third child's arrival in 1988, we bought our first chest freezer.

All three appliances are essentials in my book, but the freezer has a special place in our home (and I don't mean downstairs in the laundry room). It has allowed us to buy meat on sale, prepare meals (or at least parts of meal) to serve between work, picking up the kids at school, and going out again to a school or church function, and prepare meals ahead for holidays and parties.

My first freezer bible was "Once a Month Cooking" by Mary Beth Langerborg and Mimi Wilson. I'm still using the 1986 version, but it was updated and now available in paperback at Amazon. They give options for cooking an entire month of meals, or two weeks at a time. We found that, with leftovers and meals eaten out at church, family and other functions, they lasted twice as long. Eventually, I would do a modified version of the plan, doing only chicken or beef dishes. All of the recipes were delicious, but my favorite remains the Hearty Hamburger-Tomato Stew.

Last year we were introduced to Zacon Foods, an online company that makes quality bulk foods available to consumers on-line. After signing up, you receive notices of upcoming events. Next for me is the chance to buy boneless, skinless chicken breasts at $1.69 a pound. It's only available in 40-pound cases, so you have to plan ahead with a strategy for using it. A couple of young moms - Kate Anhl and Angela Davis - have put their ideas in a great booklet available online, "The Ultimate Guide to Freezer Friendly Meals: Chicken." Cost to download is $3.99, and it's well worth it if you're intimidated by what to do with a case of meat.

Finally, got this helpful guide from Paula Deen, one of my favorite food personalities but not one I associate with fast, frugal or fit! She has good, basic tips for using the freezer. (By the way, Bobby Dean has lightened up many of his mom's recipes. I can't wait to watch his new show, Wednesdays at 9 p.m. on Food Network, "Not My Mama's Meals."