

Some
slow cookers are supplied with recipe booklets; many slow cooker recipes are
to be found in cookbooks and on the internet. A small number of cookbooks
provide recipes for making complete dishes in a slow cooker using fewer than
five ingredients, while others treat the slow cooker as a serious piece of
culinary equipment capable of producing gourmet meals. With some experience,
timing and recipe adjustments can be successfully made for many recipes not
originally intended for these cookers. The long, moist nature of the cooking
method gives good results with cheaper (and tougher) cuts of meat.
Advantages:In a slow cooker, the temperature is low enough to avoid badly
overcooking food even if cooked for far longer than necessary. However,
success will rely on careful timing, as in all cooking. Meat may become
nearly tasteless or "raggy" if overcooked, but the slow cooking process is
especially useful to tenderize cheaper cuts. Some foods are better cooked at
temperatures below boiling.
In particular, the tough connective tissues of meat are broken down without
affecting the texture of the meat.Slow cookers enjoyed a surge of popularity
in the 1970s and 1980s, as former housewives joined the workforce and
enjoyed the prospect of a hot meal available on returning home from work.
The lengthy cooking times allowed them to start dinner cooking before
leaving for work. Overnight cooking, utilizing economy rated power, cuts the
cost of the meal. For best results, many cooks part-cook root vegetables and
sear meat prior to inclusion; then the slow cooker finishes the process of
blending flavours, adding convenience and reducing washing up, as this is a
"one pot" cooking method. Disadvantages:Vitamins and other trace nutrients
are lost, particularly from vegetables, partially by enzyme action during
cooking. When vegetables are cooked at higher temperatures these enzymes are
rapidly denatured and have less time in which to act during cooking. Since
slow cookers work at temperatures well below boiling point and do not
rapidly denature enzymes, vegetables tend to lose trace nutrients.
Blanched vegetables, having been exposed to very hot water, have already had
these enzyme rendered largely ineffective, so a blanching or sauteing
pre-cook stage will leave more vitamins intact. Green colors are retained
better when vegetables are cooked quickly as plant cells are less likely to
lose acids.Kidney beans, and some other beans, contain a toxin,
phytohaemagglutinin, which is destroyed by cooking at boiling point but not
at the operating temperature of a slow cooker. They become safe to eat after
boiling for a minimum of ten minutes, or if they come precooked (ie, in a
can). Such precautions must be observed if kidney beans are included in slow
cooker recipes, as the relatively low temperatures in a slow cooker will not
destroy the toxin adequately, and serious food poisoning may occur.
Moreover, kidney beans can be as much as five times more toxic if cooked at
80 °C than if eaten raw, so exposing them to a high temperature for an
adequate time prior to slow cooking is vital.
Slow cookers do not typically provide sufficient heat to compensate for frequent additions and removals of food in perpetual stews (pot au feu, olla podrida); nor do they cook quickly enough to cook newly added food thoroughly before the next withdrawal becomes likely.
Slow Cooker
A slow
cooker or crock pot (a trademark often used generically) is a countertop
electrical cooking appliance that maintains a relatively low temperature for
many hours, allowing unattended cooking of pot roast, stew, and other
long-cooking dishes. History:The Naxon Utilities Corporation of Chicago
developed the Naxon Beanery All-Purpose Cooker. Rival Industries bought
Naxon in 1970, and reintroduced it under the Crock-Pot name in 1971. In
1974, Rival introduced removable stoneware inserts. The brand now belongs to
Sunbeam Products, a subsidiary of Jarden Corporation. Design: An oval slow
cooker.A slow cooker consists of a lidded round or oval cooking pot made of
glazed ceramic or porcelain, surrounded by a housing, usually metal,
containing a thermostatically controlled electric heating element. The lid
is often transparent glass and is not hermetic. The ceramic pot, or a crock
pot, acts as both a cooking container and a heat reservoir. Slow cookers
come in a variety of sizes, from 500 ml (16 oz) to 7 liters (quarts).
Due to the placement of heating elements (generally at the bottom and often
also partway up the sides), there is usually a minimum recommended liquid
level to avoid uncontrolled local heating.Many slow cookers have two or more
temperature settings (eg, low, medium, high, and sometimes a "keep warm"
setting). A typical slow cooker operates at (more or less) 80°C (176°F) on
low, 90°C (194°F) on high, and 1 hour at 90°C followed by 80°C on medium.
Some slow cookers sold in the US in the past several decades did not slow
cook at all: all of the settings brought the contents to a full boil, with
the only difference in setting being the amount of time to come to a boil.
This may have been due to concerns about product liability from unsafe food
holding temperatures.citation needed Operation:Raw food, and a liquid which
is predominantly water, such as water, wine, stock, but not oil without
water, are placed in the slow cooker. Some recipes call for pre-heated
liquid. The cooker lid is put on and the cooker is switched on.
Cookers often have high and low heat thermostat settings. Some cookers
automatically switch from cooking to warming (maintaining the temperature at
62°C–72°C/145°F–165°F,) after a fixed time or after the internal temperature
of the food, as determined by a probe, reaches a given goal.The heating
element heats the contents to a steady temperature in the 80–95°C/175–200°F
range. The contents are enclosed by the crock and the lid, and attain an
essentially constant temperature. The vapor that is produced at this
temperature condenses on the lid and returns as liquid.The liquid transfers
heat from the pot walls to the contents, and it also distributes flavours. A
lid must be used to prevent warm vapor from escaping, cooling the contents.
Recipes:Recipes intended for other cooking methods must be modified for slow
cookers. Often water must be decreased, as ordinary cooking at higher
temperatures requires enough liquid to allow for evaporation, whilst slow
cookers prevent vapor loss.





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