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cooking with a Slow Cooker

 
                    
Posts: 177
Location: Bay Area, California (z8)
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Anyone else have a deep and abiding love for their Slow Cooker?

Roasted garlic/Garlic Olive Oil:
* Toss whole cloves of garlic into the pot
* Just barely cover with olive oil ("gluck gluck gluck")
* LOW for about 3 hours, stir once
* Seperate the magnificent garlic from the fantastic oil and try not to nom all at once

A little bit of Garlic Olive Oil, honey, and herb vinegar makes a magnificent salad dressing!


Rendering Lard
* Whack your fat into little bitty bits.
* Lob them into the Slow Cooker.
* Turn it to LOW until they're rendered.

oh... fresh lard makes the best tamales...!
 
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I loved my slow cooker for years until it finally died. Then I got a new one. And another new one. And yet another new one. And NONE of them were like the old pot. Everything tasted overcooked and burned. I used them now and then for "quick" things, kind of like an oven really, even though crockpots were supposed to be about SLOW cooking.

Then a week ago I scored! A mint condition 1975 crockpot for $5 at the Goodwill! Hurray!! FINALLY!!! A good "slow" cooker once again. All the new fangled ones cook at way too high a temperature, even on low, because of the manufacturer's fears of being sued for improperly cooked food. Everything has to be cooked to death these days or I guess we'll all die. : If you Google this subject, you'll see how many people actually lament loosing the old crockpots. People sell the old ones on eBay a lot. I'm not selling mine, LOL!

I've always rendered my lard on the stove because I like the fried cracklings, but your garlic and olive oil recipe sounds divine!
 
steward
Posts: 7926
Location: Currently in Lake Stevens, WA. Home in Spokane
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Crock pots are great for the scorching hot days of summer. When you go out to do your day's chores, set it up on your covered porch/patio, and when your day is done, dinner is ready, without heating up the house.

Great way to carmelized onions also...no tending the pot, and no burning.
 
                                  
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I love ours, nothing like preparing a beef stew in the morning when you aren't hungry and then six hours later when you are, BAM, dinners done.
 
                    
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Location: Bay Area, California (z8)
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JP - very much so, yet another reason I love my Rice Maker as well. Zojirushi makes a 'fuzzy logic' ricemaker that makes perfect rice or porridge, every time. It's great to pair with meat off the grill and a salad from the garden. How does one do caramelized onions in a slow cooker?

ML - cracklings in a slow cooker happen, too. They just happen much more slowly, and it helps if you pour off most of the lard when they're about done. The cracklings are crisp all the way through.

OH -

 
Melanie Lee
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Hmmmm, well P. Thickens, I may just have to try it for rendering lard then. How many pounds of fat do you use, and do you have an older crockpot or a newer one? Do you set it to low, and how long do you keep it on? Would be nice to not have to watch the pot like a hawk. You know how rendering lard can be! Oh, and I have the same rice maker as you. LOVE it. So spoiled with our modern conveniences, huh?

John, I would also like to know how you carmelize onions in a slow cooker. Thanks!

EDITED to ask if you've ever tried that roasted garlic and olive oil thing in one of those "Little Dipper" crockpots? A small amount would be perfect. Thanks.
 
                    
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ML, I usually render up 5 - 8 lbs of fat at a time. It went in on HIGH in the old crock and LOW in the new one. Worst comes to worst, you can render out 80% of the lard in 3 hours in the slow cooker, then dump it into a pot and whip up some cracklings real quick. The rendered lard from the slow cooker is clean and white -- beautiful, hardly needs to be strained at all.

Nope, never tried the roasted garlic and olive oil thing in one of those "Little Dipper" crockpots, though I'm sure it'd be just fine. I wouldn't go with less than 3 C of fresh garlic cloves, though.
 
steward
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I have a big one I use towards the end of big projects. Fill it with meatballs and sauce, drag it to the jobsite with rolls and cheese, the guys have a field day.
 
John Polk
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A friend made the carmelized onions. She put the onions in with a big chunk of butter, and walked away for the day. I am not certain if she used low, or high (I'm guessing High). They were perfect. I'd try it on High, and check/stir every couple hours until you find the correct timing for how you like the onions. Some people like them done more than others.
 
Melanie Lee
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Thanks PT and JP. I'm going to have to try the lard and the onions (separately, I mean, LOL).

I am always interested in things I can do with my crockpots. It was only 10 degrees when I woke up today, so I won't be using the smoker, LOL. Got some nice seasoned pork going in my "Goodwill-find" crockpot right now. Gonna make some pulled pork. Not as good as a smoker, of course, but not half bad when it's freezing outside. Plus I get to try out my new old crockpot. I can't wait to see how it does!! Wish I had some pork shoulder, but it was too expensive. Got a good price on some pork loin though, and even though it's less fatty I'm counting on my new OLD crockpot to make it tender and not dry like my new NEW crockpot would. Ahahaha!

Anybody ever make lasagna in a crockpot? I've got a recipe for it if any of you want it, and it comes out pretty darn good too. Let me know.

Three cups of garlic! I think I'll save that for when I'm mad at my husband and then eat the whole pot.
 
steward
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I have been using my Instant pot as a slow cooker.

The other day I made a pork chop dinner with potatoes and a gravy.

Today I am using it to cook a tough top sirloin steak as a roast.  Some water, steak, bay leaves, salt, pepper, bouillon cubes, diced potatoes and onions.

Have you used your slow cooker or instant pot as a slow cooker?
 
pollinator
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I use my slow cookers most days (I have two).  This morning my husband put some beef fat to render in the big one.  I put two cans of black beans + some diced onion into the smaller one, and at dinner time mashed them up for refried beans.  

About two hours before dinner the beef tallow was fully rendered so I poured it out and drained/salted the cracklings (yum), then put in some spicy minced beef I'd just sauteed along with some frozen pureed squash;  it's too hot today to simmer on the stove top so into the slow cooker!  And as the meat was fully cooked when I put it in, I had no fears about food safety;  it was perfect after two hours (didn't even bother cleaning out the tallow residue), and delicious with the refried beans.
 
Anne Miller
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Unfortunately, dear hubby got to the slow cooker and turned up the temp so I think that tough sirloin is still going to be tough.  Maybe this will teach him a lesson ...
 
pollinator
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We just use the slowcook setting on our instapot for chilli/stews/soups if we're planning ahead, and the normal "insta" setting if we're not.
 
Anne Miller
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I was pleasantly surprised that the tough sirloin came out really tender.

Now to figure out what to cook next ...
 
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i needed something to eat all week and work was up to here, so Monday morning I made a big pot of red beans (for red beans and rice, recipe https://www.camelliabrand.com/recipes/slow-cooker-red-beans-and-rice/ ) in the crockpot. At the end, made some rice in the cooker. Almost no effort for a week of food.
 
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