Anonymous wrote:I'm vegetarian and Indian and make food in the instantpot 3-4 times a week. There are very few dishes that I'd say actually taste noticeably better on the stove.
That said, I used the regular (stovetop) pressure cooker before my IP nearly as often, and my results are much the same. The main advantages are that (1) you can walk away from your kitchen (because it's on an electric timer), (2) you can time it on "delay" so that a meal is waiting for you when you walk in through the door, and (3) the inner pot is much easier to clean that the old-time pressure cookers. Those factors alone made it a good purchase for me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can someone tell me how to cook dried beans in the IP? One recipe I found had a pre-cook stage in the IP. That doesn’t save me as much time as I’d planned.
Also, can you tell me how to adjust cooking time if my meat is froze ?
I just got an IP and am experimenting. I love the hands free nature of it. Set and forget. I don’t like how long it takes to come to pressure and release.
We eat lots of beans and would like to eat more. I made hard boiled eggs in it and it was so, so easy compared to stovetop.
For 1 lb. of dried beans, I just rinse the beans well and add them to the instant pot, then cover with about 8 cups of liquid. Cook on high pressure for 45 minutes.
I usually use beef broth instead of just water, and add salt and other seasonings for more flavor. Depending on how firm or soft you like your beans, you can either do a quick release or a natural/slow release after the beans are cooked.
Anonymous wrote:Can someone tell me how to cook dried beans in the IP? One recipe I found had a pre-cook stage in the IP. That doesn’t save me as much time as I’d planned.
Also, can you tell me how to adjust cooking time if my meat is froze ?
I just got an IP and am experimenting. I love the hands free nature of it. Set and forget. I don’t like how long it takes to come to pressure and release.
We eat lots of beans and would like to eat more. I made hard boiled eggs in it and it was so, so easy compared to stovetop.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can someone tell me how to cook dried beans in the IP? One recipe I found had a pre-cook stage in the IP. That doesn’t save me as much time as I’d planned.
Also, can you tell me how to adjust cooking time if my meat is froze ?
I just got an IP and am experimenting. I love the hands free nature of it. Set and forget. I don’t like how long it takes to come to pressure and release.
We eat lots of beans and would like to eat more. I made hard boiled eggs in it and it was so, so easy compared to stovetop.
I don't have one because the reviews are so mixed I can't figure out whether it would be used. But how do eggs get easier than on the stovetop? I made eggs this morning. I covered the eggs with cold water and turned on the stove until boiling, then turned the stove off and let them sit in covered pot for 10 minutes. What's easier than that? Thanks
Anonymous wrote:Can someone tell me how to cook dried beans in the IP? One recipe I found had a pre-cook stage in the IP. That doesn’t save me as much time as I’d planned.
Also, can you tell me how to adjust cooking time if my meat is froze ?
I just got an IP and am experimenting. I love the hands free nature of it. Set and forget. I don’t like how long it takes to come to pressure and release.
We eat lots of beans and would like to eat more. I made hard boiled eggs in it and it was so, so easy compared to stovetop.
Anonymous wrote:What else can you cook besides dried beans?
I understand that in some cuisines, beans play bigger role. For example in Indian meals... which btw is excellent. But we don't eat much beans and other stuff I made in the crock pot never tasted that great. I ended up giving away the crock pot. I can't see plunking down $100 for instant pot when I can just buy a can of beans occasionally.
Anonymous wrote:beans, basically. you can go from a bag of dried beans to perfectly cooked in under an hour, with 5 minutes of prep and otherwise totally hands off.
also handy for cooking meat from frozen if, like me, you are bad at planning ahead, but quite like meals that consist of chicken thighs + delicious sauce of your own devising (or from a bottle, no judgment here).
I've tried a few other instant pot recipes and don't really get the hype for the most part. but I use it for those two things pretty regularly. I cook a big pot of beans at least once/week and do some chicken + sauce at least every other week.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can't explain it. Crock pot food is nasty. Fast crock pot food is even nastier. Resist!
It's a pressure cooker, dummy.
Same! Pressure cookers produce really disgusting food.
It's not the appliance's fault if you are a terrible cook.
I am quite confident in my cooking skills as I went to culinary school. But crock pots and pressure cookers ruin most food. They are good in very specific instances, but almost no home cook who wants to make good tasting food needs one.
If you actually went to culinary school, you would not be on the DCUM cooking forum, you would be on chef talk with all the other real chefs. Go try to make your idiotic imposter statement there and watch how fast you are crushed by the real chefs.
You can believe what you want. I did go. It was a second career for me after being a lawyer.
i completely agree and I did not go to culinary or law schoolBoth are made for people in a time crunch or limited cooking skills.
As an Indian cook, your ignorance is outstanding. I guess that is what is to be expected when dealing with the average American.