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I bought a Crockpot for when I cook meals for my mother outside of Manhattan. When not in my well-stocked Manhattan kitchen, it is handy for meals I normally need all 4 stove burners and oven to prepare.
I recommend sticking with the original Crockpot brand. It gets hotter than its competitors, up to 450°F, so you can cook dinner faster than at most slow cooker speeds. Whole chicken, beef, or pork roasts fit better inside the oval-shaped slow cookers.
I think in the suburbs, a Crockpot is great for entertaining friends. You can cook hearty one-pot dinners such as a beef stew, roast chicken with potatoes and carrots, meatloaf, or hearty soups without having to leave your friends sitting on the couch while you spend time in the kitchen tending to the food. Furthermore, you can leave the setting on warm for still moist second portions. Later, the cleanup is a breeze too! The lift-out pot is dishwasher safe.
In Manhattan, we usually don't entertain a lot of people at one time.
With this 7-quart Crockpot, you could have up to 6 people for dinner. I leave the space and a comfortable seating arrangement for you to figure out.😁
So far in the Crock-Pot, I've made my pea soup, adding 1 cup of brown rice, a 12-ounce bag of frozen mixed vegetables, and 4 extra cups of water to the recipe, turning the soup into a one-Crock-Pot meal. I ate my soup vegetarian style and topped my mother's soup with diced deli ham. With protein, carbs, and vegetables covered, it's lazy cooking that gets the job done!
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You cooking always looks great, and I'd love to have some of your pea soup. I have had two slow cookers over the years, and got rid of both of them. It just wasn't my thing, to be slow cooking anything. But many friends swear by them. I rarely eat meat, so that may explain my lack of motivation here. I'm looking forward to my holiday, and no cooking for about three weeks, he he.
ReplyDeleteSo far, I haven't made any of the possible meat dishes in my mom's new Crock Pot, just batches of soup. So convenient here, not necessary in Manhattan. I can't wait to see your vacation photos, Trish!
DeleteYour reflections on slow cookers offer a practical perspective on how cooking needs shift depending on location and lifestyle. It’s interesting how the convenience of a Crockpot becomes more useful outside of Manhattan, where space and meal prep dynamics are different. Your pea soup adaptation sounds like an easy, satisfying one-pot meal, perfect for minimal effort with maximum flavor.
ReplyDeleteBy the way, I’ve just shared a new post on melodyjacob.com. I’d love for you to take a look and share your thoughts.
Thanks for stopping by, Melody. I'll jump on over to see your post also! :)
DeleteSomewhere along the way, in an unlikely convo (for me) re cooking, someone told me about Instantpot, which I got here for my suburban/ exurban kitchen. It works for making soup, also I've made my grits mix in it- but with the grits, it's much easier to do in a small pot on the stove so I can see what's happening/ mix it / turn the flames up and down. The pressure cooker feature on the Instantpot has come in handy, speeding up times for making chicken, for example.
ReplyDeleteWow, you're joined the Instantpot set, Barry! People who use them seem to love them. I'm behind the times. Next for you will be an Airfryer. Sometimes I'm curious then remember the days when my family bought a waffle maker that after one use stayed in its box on a shelf.:)
DeleteI love French fries, but I bake them in an oven and think it's better for my waistline to have to wait for them to bake and restrict myself to one portion whenever I feel like taking the time to peel potatoes and bake them.