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jaklumen
The beauty of pressure cooking (and any other kitchenware that's going to be around for a while) Mark Unseen   Apr 25 09:06 UTC 2002

I am so glad a friend of mine gave me a pressure cooker pot to use on 
the stove.  It is so quick and easy when you want to make mashed 
potatoes or cook a variety of meats.  As far as meat, I often buy 
small whole chicken fryers (you can remove the skin to reduce fat), or 
any cut of meat that will fit in it.

It's not the latest kitchen gizmo that will cut the fat (and man, I 
would love to have a RonCo Showtime Rotisserie someday), and so you 
have to hand cut the fat out, broil it, or any other traditional 
method, but it's very handy and very useful.

So, first, commentary on pressure cookers?
55 responses total.
keesan
response 1 of 55: Mark Unseen   Apr 25 14:59 UTC 2002

We use two of them to cook most meals - one for beans, one for grains or
potatoes.  Bring to pressure (15 pounds) and turn off and wait.
i
response 2 of 55: Mark Unseen   Oct 8 00:28 UTC 2002

Iron.  Cast iron.  I've recently read part of a book propounding its
virtues, purchased a couple small pieces, and looked around a bit on
the web.  One thing's clear - there's no agreement on how to season or
clean cast iron.  Or whether (WHEN well-seasoned) acidic foods can be
cooked in it.  "Don't store food in it" does seem agreed upon.  What
sorts of experience & wisdom with cast iron do folks around here have?
Is it worth the bother compared to stainless steel clad, non-stick and
other modern pan technologies?
scott
response 3 of 55: Mark Unseen   Oct 8 00:37 UTC 2002

Properly seasoning cast iron seems to require cooking a whole lot of greasy
meat on a regular basis.  :(  I mostly use my cast iron skillet for camping,
when that's the sort of food I'm cooking often.
keesan
response 4 of 55: Mark Unseen   Oct 8 02:08 UTC 2002

Cast iron works well for cooking eggs, and also for pancakes made from
chickpea flour, and probably other things that would stick to stainless steel.
Nothing seems to stick to the blackened iron.  I don't wash the pans unless
I have used liquid in them.  I never cooked meat in them.  We take the
lightest possible pans camping (on our bikes).

We recently acquired an electric teflon-coated pressure cooker.
glenda
response 5 of 55: Mark Unseen   Oct 8 03:24 UTC 2002

If you don't cook greasy food in them keeping them seasoned is just a matter
of wiping them occasionally with an oily papertowel when they are good and
hot.  Don't use soap on them, once they are properly seasoned rinsing with
HOT water is all that should be needed, with maybe a touch of a wet papertowel
for anything that doesn't come loose.
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