(dead) $99 Instant Pot

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Kaido

Elite Member & Kitchen Overlord
Feb 14, 2004
48,518
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Dec 30, 2004
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Yes, that's true - and the old-fashion stovetop kind can do it faster because most of them operate at 15 PSI rather than 11.6 PSI like the IP does, so it has a slight advantage for speed as well, not to mention cost (a basic 6-quart manual model is under $40 on Amazon).

For me, the benefit of an electronic model isn't setting it to come on 24 hours later or anything like that, it's simply the lack of babysitting required - I don't have to have the stove on (which also adds heat to my very tiny kitchen) & I don't have to stick around for it to complete the cooking cycle. That, plus the IP goes into a keep-warm mode so it's still edible when the other food finishes cooking. It's very useful when cooking multiple items, like if I want to go out & throw some fish on the grill while the rice is cooking or do up some burgers while the potatoes are cooking, I don't have to run back & forth between them.

well, you said you like to leave the meal a little undercooked so that when it's microwaved it's perfect.

so that sounds like all I have to do is follow the recipe to the T!
 
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Kaido

Elite Member & Kitchen Overlord
Feb 14, 2004
48,518
5,340
136
well, you said you like to leave the meal a little undercooked so that when it's microwaved it's perfect.

so that sounds like all I have to do is follow the recipe to the T!

Yeah. With the IP, you can do a natural pressure release, which can result in very tender meat, so sometimes that works out too (fully-cooked). Stuff like pan-fried or oven-cooked chicken can sometimes turn out very dry. What I've been doing lately is covering the container with a wet paper towel, which helps to keep the food from drying out since it kind of steams it a little bit as it reheats it. Lots of little tricks out there, depending on what you're making :thumbsup:
 
Dec 30, 2004
12,554
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I just hope I actually put it to use.

I have two ideas:

1. someone should build a website around organizing recipes by simplicity/number of ingredients. Starts with the basic stuff, so that all you have to worry about is keeping onion, garlic, meat, and vegetables in stock. Then, progresses to more complex recipes, at which point you understand how and why to build your spice rack.

2. deleted
 
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Dec 30, 2004
12,554
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at this rate, a woman isn't really going to be any use to me besides sleeping with me.

that makes her personality and kindness the only thing she could really do for me.

I'll have to adjust my tolerance for drama and BS accordingly once I've mastered this IP cooking

edit: BTW OP, you need to transition away from the plastics. They don't hurt NOW, but might as well avoid the cancer risk increase.

I'll probably be getting the rectangular ones which waste less space.
 
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M0oG0oGaiPan

Diamond Member
Dec 7, 2000
7,858
2
0
digitalgamedeals.com
Dec 30, 2004
12,554
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^thanks.

man this thread is great, thanks for the posts guys. This is building anticipation. I was afraid this was going to sit around

I'd recommend cooking only one style of cuisine (e.g. pho) per week so that you can try different recipes, understand/memorize the process better, and tweak as preferred. That simplifies mats purchase as well.
 

Kaido

Elite Member & Kitchen Overlord
Feb 14, 2004
48,518
5,340
136
I just hope I actually put it to use.

I have two ideas:

1. someone should build a website around organizing recipes by simplicity/number of ingredients. Starts with the basic stuff, so that all you have to worry about is keeping onion, garlic, meat, and vegetables in stock. Then, progresses to more complex recipes, at which point you understand how and why to build your spice rack.

2. deleted

There's a ton of websites out there like that (online "learn to cook" websites), so it helps to narrow down what you want to do because there's basically an infinite number of recipes & tools available. Do you want to bake, fry, grill, sous vide, pressure-cook, slow-cook? Do you like American, Thai, Japanese, Brazilian, Egyptian food? Do you prefer cooking or baking? Do you have any allergies or foods that you dislike? Are you Paleo, Vegan, omnivore? And that's just like 1% of the questions...you could literally try a new recipe for every meal until the day you die & still not have tried everything available on the planet, so it helps to limit your scope to start out with.

The best tool I've found is Yummly, which is basically a search engine like Google, but specifically for other recipe websites, with filters built-in. The filters are awesome - add or remove certain ingredients, limit by dietary restrictions, set it for sweet or salty, low carb or high protein, basically just tons of variables. I can't even capture the full spectrum of filters, but here's a quick screenshot to give you an idea:



It also helps to figure out what you like & what you want. For example, for me, I have food allergies, so I can't do stuff like dairy or gluten. I also am into fitness, so I want to eat healthy - but I also love food, so I want it to be tasty. Plus, I like to eat multiple smaller meals throughout the day so that I stay full & don't cave to junk food. So that gives me a foundation to work from. Here's my current meal plan: (guidelines rather than rules)

http://catch42.pbworks.com/w/page/78929159/Meal Plan

I do the planning mostly on a week-by-week basis so I can change things up as needed, plus I have some freezer meals for emergencies. Some weeks are crazier than others so I kind of base what I prep on weekends vs. what I cook during the week. I'm a big fan of family dinners & like to get the family involved in cooking dinner, so I currently don't do 100% of my meals as make-ahead meals. For you, you have to see what your goals are & what you can handle. I have a fast metabolism, so 5 to 7 meals a day works awesome for me, in smaller meal sizes. Like, my 10:30am meal this morning was a simple chicken & broccoli with salt & pepper in a little round plastic Tupperware-like container:



Dirt simple, made it when I was cooking breakfasts, tastes decent enough to eat, and fits within my goals (small, healthy, tasty meal). So if you can kind of narrow your scope down, whether you want to lose weight, or are diabetic, or just want to eat healthier, or whatever, basically just putting it down on paper & getting started is the most important first step. I literally did not know how to boil water when I started cooking, and now I have dozens of kitchen appliances & cook nearly every meal myself. It's doable, but you kind of have to define what exactly it is you want to do first.
 

RossMAN

Grand Nagus
Feb 24, 2000
78,794
266
116
I'm so excited I just might sell my LG G2 and open my IP (inside joke)
 

Kaido

Elite Member & Kitchen Overlord
Feb 14, 2004
48,518
5,340
136
at this rate, a woman isn't really going to be any use to me besides sleeping with me.

that makes her personality and kindness the only thing she could really do for me.

I'll have to adjust my tolerance for drama and BS accordingly once I've mastered this IP cooking

edit: BTW OP, you need to transition away from the plastics. They don't hurt NOW, but might as well avoid the cancer risk increase.

I'll probably be getting the rectangular ones which waste less space.

I use & like Pyrex, but the problem is even the small Pyrex/Tupperware containers are quite bulky, and also extremely expensive compared to thin disposable plastic trays. What that means is that when I cook in bulk, I can afford to both store all of the food & actually fit it all in my deep freezer thanks to the cheap plastic containers.

Also, while I don't think plastics are great for you, especially when microwaved, I'm not too worried about it. I sit in front of computer monitors for about 12 hours a day, so I'm already getting some fun radiation from that, not to mention the outgassing of every factory-produced thing in my indoor environment. Plus I've been eating & drinking through plastics for 30+ years & I don't have cancer yet, so I'll take my chances with homemade TV dinners because my DIY meals are healthier than eating at McDonalds, and if it boils down to a Big Mac vs. chicken & broccoli in a plastic container, I'd go with the healthier food option with the plastic risk for sure. You kind of have to pick your battles.
 

Kaido

Elite Member & Kitchen Overlord
Feb 14, 2004
48,518
5,340
136
this thing looks like a real pain to clean

do you have to do that every time? yikes

The inner bowl is removable, just rinse it out like you would a pot or pan. I also wipe down the silicone ring & upper lid from time to time. That's it. No more work than anything else. If the bowl gets stained because you didn't clean it right away, just throw some vinegar & baking soda in there, let it sit, then scrub it out (it's stainless steel, pretty easy to maintain).
 

Kaido

Elite Member & Kitchen Overlord
Feb 14, 2004
48,518
5,340
136

Her website & book are excellent. I constantly find neat things to try on her site. She has some videos too, through a team-up with Instant Pot:

https://www.youtube.com/user/TheInstantpot/videos

Hmm, I'd never thought about try Pho in the IP before, nice!
 
Dec 30, 2004
12,554
2
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I'm so excited I just might sell my LG G2 and open my IP (inside joke)

I don't know what's happening to me, I actually want Lollipop and am tiring of KitKat.

Additionally, I no longer care about doing a good job, and am OK with 80/20

something is definitely up

I'll try cooking the LG G2 in the IP next
 
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Kaido

Elite Member & Kitchen Overlord
Feb 14, 2004
48,518
5,340
136
I'm so excited I just might sell my LG G2 and open my IP (inside joke)



If you do pop it open, I recommend trying rice. Get a big bag from the local Asian or Indian food store & do a few batches until you've nailed the consistency you like. That alone makes it worth the money!
 

RossMAN

Grand Nagus
Feb 24, 2000
78,794
266
116


If you do pop it open, I recommend trying rice. Get a big bag from the local Asian or Indian food store & do a few batches until you've nailed the consistency you like. That alone makes it worth the money!

So far I'm looking forward to:

steel cut oatmeal
chickpeas from dried to ready to eat in 45 minutes
brown rice
 

Kaido

Elite Member & Kitchen Overlord
Feb 14, 2004
48,518
5,340
136
So far I'm looking forward to:

steel cut oatmeal
chickpeas from dried to ready to eat in 45 minutes
brown rice

Yeah I'm really liking the chickpea stuff, been doing homemade hummus & those awesome chickpea PB cookies. I tried a dried-chickpea energy bar the other day & it was pretty good, I think I'm going to to try replicating it but making it better because it had a pretty good texture. You can also make chickpea flour from the dry beans in your Vitamix for stuff like socca & falafel:

http://tasty-yummies.com/2014/09/16/make-chickpea-flour-socca-pizza/

As far as brown rice goes, try throwing in a spoonful of tumeric (the yellow powdery spice). Makes a kind of golden rice, looks pretty cool (more appetizing than regular brown at any rate!).
 

Kaido

Elite Member & Kitchen Overlord
Feb 14, 2004
48,518
5,340
136
6qt on sale per slickdeals:

6-qt. Instant Pot 7-in-1 Pressure Cooker (3rd Gen) + $12 in Rakuten Cash $105 + free shipping
deal [rakuten.com]

in cart apply coupon code STORES30 to drop price to $105 + free shipping
in cart apply coupon code REWARDME for extra $12.60 in rakuten cash

http://slickdeals.net/f/8037597-6-q...-gen-12-in-rakuten-cash-105-free-shipping?v=1

Looks like a similar deal may still be live from another seller:

http://slickdeals.net/f/8037597-6-q...-3rd-gen-12-in-rakuten-cash-105-free-shipping
 

B-Riz

Golden Member
Feb 15, 2011
1,530
676
136
I bought one of these a few months ago after seeing an infomercial about a different brand, wanting the stainless steel liner instead of a non-stick.

The only drawback is that it does not do true high pressure; 15 psi, only 11.6 psi max. And you cannot use it for canning if you wanted to try it, as it automatically regulates pressure instead of temperature.

Other than that, it is great, makes an amazing pot of chili among all the other things.

For beans, use the sauté function on high and quick boil for 5-10 mins, then, bean cooking should take 22-25 mins after pressure is reached. More time for softer beans.

This may be blasphemous to some, but cooking frozen strip steaks works well; though it is more like a mini piece of roast beef than grilled steak.

Brown the frozen steak with some olive oil using sauté, then add some salt n pepper to both sides and a bit of Worcestershire sauce, put lid on and pressure cook for ( check manual for time, I forget! :\ ).

Next on the list to make is pork and sauerkraut in it.
 

Kaido

Elite Member & Kitchen Overlord
Feb 14, 2004
48,518
5,340
136
I bought one of these a few months ago after seeing an infomercial about a different brand, wanting the stainless steel liner instead of a non-stick.

The only drawback is that it does not do true high pressure; 15 psi, only 11.6 psi max. And you cannot use it for canning if you wanted to try it, as it automatically regulates pressure instead of temperature.

Other than that, it is great, makes an amazing pot of chili among all the other things.

For beans, use the sauté function on high and quick boil for 5-10 mins, then, bean cooking should take 22-25 mins after pressure is reached. More time for softer beans.

This may be blasphemous to some, but cooking frozen strip steaks works well; though it is more like a mini piece of roast beef than grilled steak.

Brown the frozen steak with some olive oil using sauté, then add some salt n pepper to both sides and a bit of Worcestershire sauce, put lid on and pressure cook for ( check manual for time, I forget! :\ ).

Next on the list to make is pork and sauerkraut in it.

Pork is awesome in it; try that kalua pig recipe posted earlier. Actually, she has a Top 10 pressure cooker recipes post up now with a lot of good stuff in it:

http://nomnompaleo.com/post/125878339293/my-top-10-paleo-pressure-cookerinstant-pot

Regarding "true" high pressure, I've cooked with my friend who has a 15 PSI stove-top PC, but it's not really any different...you just add a few minutes of cook time to the IP (the Nom Nom Paleo lady says between 7 to 15%, so on a 20-minute cook, you're only adding like 3 minutes max...meh). And yeah, gotta get a pressure canner if you want to can, otherwise, you know, botulism I got one of the "smaller" 21.5-quart models when it was on sale (first time in like 5 years) & actually just dug it out to play with now that I'm done with my summer courses, looking forward to doing some food storage with it!

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00004S88Z

But that's a whole different ballgame from pressure-cooking. Just similar names is all. Oh yeah, I think chili was one of the first things I made in my IP, came out great!
 

ReefaMadness

Golden Member
Mar 28, 2005
1,075
4
81
Dang! Quick delivery for Free Shipping...ordered late afternoon on the 10th & received on the 12th.

Now to open it up & give it a try...most likely something simple like rice.
 
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