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Those in the know cook things with pressure. It makes homemade meals a lot quicker. It forgives you when you forget to soak the beans. It makes thin soups just a tad bit thicker and bolder, stubborn root vegetables just a smidge (or more) softer. Pressure cookers are inexpensive, about the cost of any decent pot, and for a do-it-yourself chef, they are a godsend.
Plus — yes, there’s more — they are energy-savers. For all the time spent simmering and soaking, the pressure cooker gets it done with less gas, water and electricity. And — yes, there’s more — pressure cookers are the device for cooking stuff up moist and delicious. An oven dries things out, a pressure cookers celebrates the steam.
Here are five incredible things to do with your slow cooker. Besides just cooking rice and soup, these little uses below make living a plant-based diet a lot easier (and tasty).
1. Vegetable Stock
Composting is great and all, but before you do that, it might be worth saving all those nubbins of vegetables and even fruits (like apple and pear) to make a quick and potent DIY vegetable stock.
Simply collect onion skins, garlic ends, carrot tops, celery leaves and whatever else. Put them in the pressure cooker with an assortment of spices and herbs (pick your favorite). Fill it with water just to the top of the veg. Ten minutes in the steam and bang. Strain out the vegetables, and the liquid that remains is seasoned stock.
Stock can be stored by freezing it in ice cube trays (a perfect serving size) or refrigerated to use within a few days. Basically, anywhere water or broth is called for in savory dishes, like rice, beans, stuffing and stew, a little added homemade vegetable stock gets the job done even better and without unwanted additives.
2. Big Time Beans
Forget those sodium-crusted beans from aluminum cans, and go for the gusto by making your own in the pressure cooker. Beans are the pressure cooker at its best. As anyone who has attempted to cook their own beans knows, even after a day or two of soaking, it takes forever, like an hour or three. In the pressure cooker, it’s about twenty minutes. (Note: Beans should still be soaked before hand to release the gases that give us, well, gases.)
But, that’s not all. The best part of pressurizing beans is that it is the perfect opportunity to pack them with flavor. Cook them with herbs, spices and a normal amount of salt so that all of that flavor really melds together into some astoundingly delicious legumes. With a bit of practice, you’ll know the right amount of time (and water) for whole beans, mushy beans (as in for hummus) and even bean soups.
3. Scrumptious Stew
Any stew connoisseur knows that the crux of a good stew is the broth. It needs to be infused with flavor, and it needs to be thick. Those qualities just so happen to be pressure cooker specialties: pushing flavor into stuff and squeezing starches out (and into the sauce). Potatoes, sweet potatoes, carrots and all sorts of starchy root veg break down into awesome sauces that have soaked up whatever flavors were tossed in. Mix in some beans and assorted veggies: That’s dinner.
4. Caramelized Veggies
5. Jams, Jellies & Marmalades
Making jam is both awesome and time-consuming, sometimes hours of simmering to attend to, but a pressure cooker cuts those hours away. The pressure makes the fruit breakdown more quickly, even the resistant bases like apple and pear. With a pressure cooker, the heat stays low, the fruit juices don’t all escape and the end product won’t have all the excess sugar or additives. DIY jam is simple, and it’s much faster with a pressure cooker.
Well, here we are, five wonderful uses in and only just beginning. There are still so many possibilities: soups, sauces (from marinara to apple), sides (awesomely smooth mashed potatoes), rice dishes and even desserts. Suffice it to say, some dishes just thrive under pressure.
Learn How to Cook Plant-Based Meals at Home
Reducing your meat intake and eating more plant-based foods is known to help with chronic inflammation, heart health, mental well-being, fitness goals, nutritional needs, allergies, gut health, and more! Dairy consumption also has been linked to many health problems, including acne, hormonal imbalance, cancer, and prostate cancer, and has many side effects.
For those of you interested in eating more plant-based we highly recommend downloading the Food Monster App — with over 20,000 delicious recipes it is the largest plant-based recipe resource to help reduce your environmental footprint, save animals, and get healthy! And, while you are at it, we encourage you to also learn about the environmental and health benefits of a plant-based diet.
Here are some great resources to get you started:
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