I have the Cuisinart 6 qt automatic electric pressure cooker its first try-out today.
Very interesting.
I have memories of a fairly scary old pressure cooker on top of the old gas range when I was a kid about 50 years ago. My mom used to make a wonderful sort of lamb stew with celery she called "chop suey" but of course wasn't anything like Chinese food. Still, it was delicious. We were all warned to steer clear of the pressure cooker when it was in operation, and I guess at one point it blew its top leaving an interesting pattern on the ceiling.
The reason for firing up the modern version was a bag of four "jumbo" artichokes. The recipe called for four in the cooker, but since these were larger, I could only fit three. So I added a minute to the cooking time (9 minutes instead of 8) to compensate for the thicker bases, and let her rip. Took about 10 minutes for the cooker to get up a head of steam, but then it went through its paces quietly and without any drama. But when it came time to release the pressure quickly: whoa! No problems, just a LOT of steam being ejected at high speed. The owner's manual wasn't kidding when it said to use some tongs or other method, not the hand, to flip the quick release lever.
The result: three jumbo artichokes perfectly steamed. Next time I might try reducing the time to 8 minutes, cause I prefer them a little al dente, but these were fine as they were.
Now I''m thinking this thing will get more use, next time for a batch of mayacoba yellow dry beans. And maybe for some brown rice as well.
Very interesting.
I have memories of a fairly scary old pressure cooker on top of the old gas range when I was a kid about 50 years ago. My mom used to make a wonderful sort of lamb stew with celery she called "chop suey" but of course wasn't anything like Chinese food. Still, it was delicious. We were all warned to steer clear of the pressure cooker when it was in operation, and I guess at one point it blew its top leaving an interesting pattern on the ceiling.
The reason for firing up the modern version was a bag of four "jumbo" artichokes. The recipe called for four in the cooker, but since these were larger, I could only fit three. So I added a minute to the cooking time (9 minutes instead of 8) to compensate for the thicker bases, and let her rip. Took about 10 minutes for the cooker to get up a head of steam, but then it went through its paces quietly and without any drama. But when it came time to release the pressure quickly: whoa! No problems, just a LOT of steam being ejected at high speed. The owner's manual wasn't kidding when it said to use some tongs or other method, not the hand, to flip the quick release lever.
The result: three jumbo artichokes perfectly steamed. Next time I might try reducing the time to 8 minutes, cause I prefer them a little al dente, but these were fine as they were.
Now I''m thinking this thing will get more use, next time for a batch of mayacoba yellow dry beans. And maybe for some brown rice as well.