A few years ago, Crock-Pot offered Versa Ware, slow cookers with crocks that could be used on the stove for sauteing but not searing. The instructions tell you to coat the crock with fat and add the food before you put it on the stove over heat no higher than medium, something Martin Yan would never forgive. Like Pyrex Flameware, you needed a diffuser to use it on electric coil burners. It didn't stay on the market very long probably because people were hoping they could sear their stew meat or pot roast in the crock instead of dirtying up another pot. It wasn't as "versa" as the name inferred.
Now, if you were to make the crocks from (yeah, you already know where I'm headed) Pyroceram or, even more classy-looking, Calexium (the transparent amber stuff VISIONS is made of), you'd have a slow cooker with a crock that could really go from searing on the stove to simmering in its heating base to under the broiler and, after dinner, into the fridge or freezer with a fitted plastic storage lid. You CAN sear meat in Pyroceram and Calexium. It comes out with a caramelized crust similar to searing in cast iron.
If a Sear & Simmer Slow Cooker really existed, would anyone here be likely to buy it? Whaddya say, world?
Now, if you were to make the crocks from (yeah, you already know where I'm headed) Pyroceram or, even more classy-looking, Calexium (the transparent amber stuff VISIONS is made of), you'd have a slow cooker with a crock that could really go from searing on the stove to simmering in its heating base to under the broiler and, after dinner, into the fridge or freezer with a fitted plastic storage lid. You CAN sear meat in Pyroceram and Calexium. It comes out with a caramelized crust similar to searing in cast iron.
If a Sear & Simmer Slow Cooker really existed, would anyone here be likely to buy it? Whaddya say, world?