Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I make Mississippi roast with beef all the time in the crock pot and it comes out tender and juicy without fail. I use well-marbled chuck. I substituted top round once and that wasn’t as tender.
https://belleofthekitchen.com/mississippi-pot-roast/
I've used this recipe multiple times, too. Never dry.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've never made that recipe, but if I did I'd use thighs instead of breasts.
Unfortunately, my family doesn’t eat dark meat.
They will not know it’s “dark meat” once is shredded and covered in sauce.
My husband definitely will!
Anonymous wrote:I make Mississippi roast with beef all the time in the crock pot and it comes out tender and juicy without fail. I use well-marbled chuck. I substituted top round once and that wasn’t as tender.
https://belleofthekitchen.com/mississippi-pot-roast/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why on earth would you make this with beef? Of course it came out Dry! The butter and chicken will have enough liquid – chicken releases liquid liquids as it cooks.
It’s a classic beef dish, dimwit.
You likely didn’t cook the beef long enough to relax the proteins. As intended, it is fall-apart delicious with beef.
This is possible, but it’s shrunken and dry after about 3 hours on high. I made it with a former crockpot and it was delicious, but I got a new cuisinart one and it cooks super fast.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've never made that recipe, but if I did I'd use thighs instead of breasts.
Unfortunately, my family doesn’t eat dark meat.
They will not know it’s “dark meat” once is shredded and covered in sauce.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've never made that recipe, but if I did I'd use thighs instead of breasts.
Unfortunately, my family doesn’t eat dark meat.
Anonymous wrote:I've never made that recipe, but if I did I'd use thighs instead of breasts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why on earth would you make this with beef? Of course it came out Dry! The butter and chicken will have enough liquid – chicken releases liquid liquids as it cooks.
It’s a classic beef dish, dimwit.
You likely didn’t cook the beef long enough to relax the proteins. As intended, it is fall-apart delicious with beef.
Anonymous wrote:Why on earth would you make this with beef? Of course it came out Dry! The butter and chicken will have enough liquid – chicken releases liquid liquids as it cooks.