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duajones April 9, 2009 10:57 AM

Pressure cooker recipes
 
Any of you folks use a pressure cooker? If so, please post your favorite recipes using your pressure cooker:D

akgardengirl April 9, 2009 12:47 PM

Good idea Duane...I use a pressure cooker but only for a few basic items like rice and beans. I would like to have a few good recipes also.
Sue

duajones April 9, 2009 01:47 PM

I bought mine a couple of weeks ago primarily to make chicken stock with leftover chicken, but have used it to make beef stew as well

lumierefrere April 13, 2009 08:36 AM

I wish someone had told me about this years ago! I knew they existed--I saw how Ricky Ricardo blew up the arroz con pollo. Scary! They're not scary anymore, they don't blow up.

What is great is the time factor. Instead of thinking about dinner at 1 pm and getting ready, you can think about it around dinner time. You can make stew in 15 min. Rice instead of boiling endlessly is 5 min. Steamed carrots 5 min. Mashed potatoes 5 min. Soup 10 min.

I don't have any recipes to share, to me this is just a method. But if I have a question of how to do something or an estimation as to time, I go to [URL="http://www.missvickie.com"]www.missvickie.com[/URL] The woman knows everything about PCs and has more recipes than you could use up in a lifetime.

Barb

Mischka April 14, 2009 04:09 AM

I use mine at least once a week. You can buy the toughest cuts of beef and they come out tender if you pressure cook them.

I cook eye round roasts in mine. Since this cut of beef is essentially fat-free, the traditional oven roasting method almost always converts it into something you can use to re-sole your shoes. Not so with the pressure cooker. Comes out flavorful and most importantly, chewable LOL!

I enjoyed that link to Miss Vickie's site, too.

Adenn1 April 14, 2009 09:05 AM

I had a small one that I used right after getting married. I probably used it at least once a week. I believe I lost the top (bell) and never replaced it.

Here some two decades later I am asking myself why I don't go get one. Some of my best memories are of my mother's pressure cooker making that memorable noise on the stove.

Believe I will be stopping by the store to day to look one over. I believe they now have some fancy ones that no longer use the bell on top.

duajones April 14, 2009 08:40 PM

[quote=Mischka;127622]I use mine at least once a week. You can buy the toughest cuts of beef and they come out tender if you pressure cook them.

I cook eye round roasts in mine. Since this cut of beef is essentially fat-free, the traditional oven roasting method almost always converts it into something you can use to re-sole your shoes. Not so with the pressure cooker. Comes out flavorful and most importantly, chewable LOL!

I enjoyed that link to Miss Vickie's site, too.[/quote]

You forgot the recipe for that eye round roast! :)

Mischka April 15, 2009 06:07 AM

[quote=duajones;127702]You forgot the recipe for that eye round roast! :)[/quote]


1 eye of the round (often called eye round) roast
4 teaspoons fine kosher salt or 2 teaspoons table salt
2 teaspoons grapeseed or peanut oil, plus 2 tablespoons. (I specify these types because they have a high smoke point)
3 tablespoons butter
3 tablespoons flour

1. Salt the roast evenly. For a smaller 2 ½ to 3 pound roast, reduce the amount of kosher salt to 3 teaspoons (1 ½ teaspoons table salt). Wrap it with plastic wrap and place it in the refrigerator and allow it to rest for 18 to 24 hours. Salt helps break down proteins to improve texture.

2. Remove the roast from the refrigerator and pat it dry with paper towels. Rub it with 2 teaspoons of oil and sprinkle it liberally with your favorite seasoning salt mix. I use Lawry's or Goya Adobo.

3. Heat remaining 2 tablespoons of oil in the pressure cooker over medium-high heat until it starts to smoke. Get it hot! Sear the roast until it is browned on all sides, about 3 to 4 minutes per side. While this won't affect tenderness, it will boost flavor.

4. Add 2 cans of beef broth OR 3 beef bouillon cubes and 2 cups of water, sprinkle meat with more seasoning and put the lid on. Cook at 15 PSI for 40 minutes for a 3+ pound roast or 35 minutes for 2 - 2½ pounds.

5. When the cooking time is up, remove pressure cooker from the fire, let the steam escape and allow the pressure to come down. DO NOT immerse the pressure cooker under cold running water, as this will create a reverse vacuum inside and will instantly cool the meat down to too cold to serve. Open the cooker after all pressure is released, remove the roast and set it aside on a plate to rest for about 10 minutes.

6. Pour out the meat broth from the pressure cooker and make your gravy or use it as-is, like the French do, [B]au jus[/B].

Lump-free gravy made easily. Melt 3 tbsp. of butter in a large skillet. Add 3 tbsp. flour to the melted butter and work it over medium heat until flour starts to turn light brown. [I]The trick is not to scorch the flour.[/I] Use a metal spatula and make sure you keep moving it around in the pan.

As soon as the flour turns light brown and foamy looking, whisk in your broth, [I]slowly[/I] until mixed well. Continue to heat and whisk the gravy until it starts to bubble and thicken. Remove from fire immediately. Season to taste with salt and pepper. (There will be some salt in it already)

7. Now slice your roast crosswise (not WITH the grain) [B]as thinly as possible. [/B]I use an electric knife. Serve with your gravy and enjoy!

MMMmmm MMMmmmm - now I want to run to the market and buy one to pressure cook! :yes: :roll: :lol:

duajones April 16, 2009 07:56 PM

thank you sir! Have to give it a try sometime

lumierefrere April 17, 2009 12:07 PM

I found eye of round on sale at Price Chopper this morning for $1.99 a lb. I got one just because of your rave. I'll let you know how it turns out.

Barb

Mischka April 25, 2009 04:49 PM

[quote=lumierefrere;127904]I found eye of round on sale at Price Chopper this morning for $1.99 a lb. I got one just because of your rave. I'll let you know how it turns out.

Barb[/quote]

Still waiting to find out...;)

lumierefrere May 1, 2009 06:58 PM

Oops. So I got the thing home and put it in the fridge. And I waited like 3 days. Oh boy I better make this but then I really read the recipe and you have to let it sit in the salt for a day or more. I wasn't sure if I was too late so I got out my kitchen aid grinder attachment and turned it into hamburger. It was $1.99 a lb don't look at me like I am crazy! It's good hamburger and oddly enough I used some tonight in a quick spaghetti sauce.

Mischka May 3, 2009 12:43 PM

Good save on the meat, LOL!

Hopefully, you'll try it with the next eye round roast you buy. ;)

Earl February 14, 2010 12:34 PM

Great Northern Beans

2 cups beans
6 cups water
1 T. oil [to curtail frothing]

cook for 25 minutes, let pot sit to cool and de-pressurize

add salt/pepper to taste

I use a 6 qt. Mirro pressure cooker

For me 25 minutes gives a very soft bean and should be eaten or added to other ingredients without further cooking. If you want beans a bit al dente you may need to lesson the cooking time.

I cooked some a couple days ago and put them in a great White Chili recipe from CHOPTAG President JerryL which he served at a function sometime back.

akgardengirl February 14, 2010 01:22 PM

Earl,
I am going to cook these this week. Would you post the white chili recipe? I would like to try it.
Sue

tjg911 February 16, 2010 09:36 PM

[quote=Earl;157436]Great Northern Beans

2 cups beans
6 cups water
1 T. oil [to curtail frothing]

cook for 25 minutes, let pot sit to cool and de-pressurize

add salt/pepper to taste

I use a 6 qt. Mirro pressure cooker

For me 25 minutes gives a very soft bean and should be eaten or added to other ingredients without further cooking. If you want beans a bit al dente you may need to lesson the cooking time.

I cooked some a couple days ago and put them in a great White Chili recipe from CHOPTAG President JerryL which he served at a function sometime back.[/quote]

earl you did not state that you soaked the beans for X hours so i'm wondering if you pc them without soaking them? i suspect that the answer is no because that's a LOT of water to use for 2 cups of beans! i've used a pc since 1985 for cooking brown rice and different beans. i always soak beans for at least 6 hours before pc them and i use an equal amount of water as there are beans after they soaked.

matilda'skid February 17, 2010 06:23 PM

My new stove has a ceramic top. The henny penny sky is falling appliance repair man who came to work on my dishwasher said not to use a pressure cooker to the ceramic top. I am not sure this is true. Do any of you use a pressure cooker on a ceramic top stove?

I understand how the big canning pressure cookers might be too heavy and would not risk that. That may be what he was thinking of.:?!?:

veggie babe February 18, 2010 06:08 AM

You will see both you can use and you can't. The applicance store doesn't bother telling you the full info on these stoves. I bought a ceramic top stove when we built our home 2 years ago, I love to cook on it but do not pressure can on it. I do BWB jelly etc. in tall stock pot for the recommended time (usually 10 minutes). The bunner goes off and on while you are cooking and this causes a problem as well as the heavy weight of a canner. Kat has a smaller canner and she uses her stove (maybe she and others will comment on this for you)

Neva

matilda'skid February 18, 2010 11:52 AM

I just want to cook the roast in a small inexpensive p cooker from Wal-Mart. What makes me think the appliance man is wrong is he thought it would be too heavy and get too hot. I think he must not be thinking of the small pressure cooker. Also french fry grease gets hotter than anything I think.:?

RiverRat February 19, 2010 08:10 AM

Reading this thread got me thinking about the fact that a pressure cooker might be the very thing to deal with my less-than-tender free-range geese and hens. I'm wondering what kind of pressure cookers you all like, or perhaps this is the wrong thread for that?

Mischka February 19, 2010 10:38 AM

I own an 8 qt. Presto, a 22 qt. Mirro and a behemoth American Foundry 41.5 qt. canner.

The Presto is made of stainless steel, which is a just a tad easier to clean versus aluminum. All three work equally well but unless you do a LOT of canning, I wouldn't buy anything larger than an 8 quart size. It's perfect for larger cuts of meat, stews, etc.

RiverRat February 19, 2010 10:54 AM

Mischka, I don't want it for canning since I freeze everything; I was thinking of cooking with it. I do want stainless steel, and I was looking at Fagors and Kuhn Rikons for ease of use. You don't think an 8-qt is too large? I tend to do lots of stews also.

Mischka February 19, 2010 04:28 PM

An 8 quart size is perfect because you don't want to overfill a pressure cooker. Having some space around the food is necessary, so that the atmosphere inside can build up and do it's job properly.

Another reason you don't want to overfill a pressure cooker is to avoid having the food inside boil up and clog the steam release valve.

RiverRat February 19, 2010 04:38 PM

Aha, that's good to know. Thanks, Mischka! Kuhn Rikon has a 7-something that looks good. Maybe I can hint about it for Mother's Day...

recruiterg February 19, 2010 04:44 PM

[quote=matilda'skid;157933]My new stove has a ceramic top. The henny penny sky is falling appliance repair man who came to work on my dishwasher said not to use a pressure cooker to the ceramic top. I am not sure this is true. Do any of you use a pressure cooker on a ceramic top stove?

I understand how the big canning pressure cookers might be too heavy and would not risk that. That may be what he was thinking of.:?!?:[/quote]

I think you can buy electric Pressure Cookers. Look at Williams Sonoma's web site. They are on sale for $99.

Mischka February 19, 2010 05:43 PM

[quote=RiverRat;158075]Reading this thread got me thinking about the fact that a pressure cooker might be the very thing to deal with my less-than-tender free-range geese and hens. I'm wondering what kind of pressure cookers you all like, or perhaps this is the wrong thread for that?[/quote]

I'm not sure if you know this, but Kentucky Fried Chicken pressure fries their chicken and has always done so, beginning with Colonel Harland Sanders himself.

Check out this link -------> [URL]http://www.kfc.com/about/pressure.asp[/URL]

It's the best way to turn a tough bird into a tender one. :D

[IMG]http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/8/84/Harland_Sanders.jpg[/IMG]

RiverRat March 5, 2010 07:56 AM

Just checked back on this thread. I've ordered a pressure cooker and have been reading some cookbooks, and they seemed to say that you need to use a fattier meat for the pc. So it was reassuring to find Mischka sharing a recipe for an eye-round roast, since I'd like to use the pc for deer meat as well as other things, and that's very lean.

Any suggestions about how long to cook a free-range chicken or goose? I also read that overcooking can result in tough, stringy meat, which is just what I'm trying to avoid!

Here's a delicious sounding recipe for a whole chicken in a pc, by the way, but I think it's a younger bird than mine are:

[url]http://www.recipezaar.com/pressure-cooker-whole-chicken-369106[/url]

Mischka March 5, 2010 07:42 PM

When cooking cuts of meat in a pressure cooker, it's very crucial that you do [B][U]not[/U][/B] add too much liquid.

Liquids cannot be compressed, unlike a gas (i.e. the air in your pressure cooker). If the meat is mostly covered in broth or water, it will not benefit from pressure cooking and it will be tough, since you are essentially just [B]boiling[/B] it. [I][U]You want the pressurized steam to cook the meat.[/U] [/I]The temperature of compressed steam is much hotter than water, as water cannot reach above 212° F before it converts to steam.

This is why food cooks much faster in a pressure cooker versus other methods. ;)

I use 1 cup of water at most when I PC cuts of meat. Don't worry about it evaporating before the meat is cooked. It takes quite a long time for 1 cup of water to be converted to steam and then escape through the tiny opening in the weighted valve. Your meat will be cooked well before this happens.:yes:

RiverRat March 5, 2010 08:15 PM

Thanks, Mischka. That sounds like an excellent rule of thumb. I will remember that!

Earl March 6, 2010 07:11 PM

All I did to the beans before cooking was sort out the culls and wash. I read somewhere that if you bring the pot to to steam on med-heat it will help keep the hulls from separating. I'll try that next time.


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