slow cooker

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Another great use for the slow cooker

Thursday, August 4th, 2016

Onions (grown here). A little olive oil, red wine, salt, and fresh thyme. Eighteen hours on low.

Caramelized onion confit. Melty sweetness.

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Homemade seitan

Friday, May 9th, 2014

We really like seitan. If you’re not familiar, it’s a meat substitute made from wheat gluten (the protein part of wheat). You can cook it pretty much like chicken. It’s more flavorful and has a better texture than tofu.

Unfortunately, like many things, it isn’t easy to get here. It’s mostly available at health food type stores, which are in short supply.

Imagine my delight when I found a recipe for making your own in one of my new slow cooker books!

The first recipe I found described what seemed like a complicated method for getting gluten out of regular wheat flour by rinsing and kneading a dough several times to separate the gluten. Then I discovered you can buy wheat gluten. I was able to get 5 pounds for about $13. Pretty cheap.

Last week I tried making it. The process was quite simple. You mix wheat gluten and a few other ingredients (in this recipe, chickpea flower, nutritional yeast, soy sauce, onion and garlic powder, salt and pepper) with water. You knead the resulting dough for just a couple minutes. It was quite springy unlike usual bread dough. Here’s what the dough looked like before cooking.

seitan1

Then you cook the dough in the slow cooker in a broth of water, soy sauce, and onions for a few hours. Here it is what it looked like after that – pretty much looks like what we buy at the store. (Note: You cook it again after this to make the final dish.)

seitan2

And finally here are a couple dishes made with seitan. The first is ropa vieja, a Cuban dish normally made with shredded meat.

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Then there was this barbecued pulled pork…um, seitan.

pulled seitan

The slow cooker period of karen’s cooking

Thursday, April 10th, 2014

As you might remember, a couple months ago, when the new kitchen provided more space, I got a slow cooker (aka a crock pot).

I started out slow with it, making some things you’d expect like soups and stews.

Then I started thinking about it as a way to save propane. (Since we’re on solar, using anything electric is preferable. And surprisingly, the slow cooker doesn’t draw a lot of electricity.) So I went to the library to get some books on what exactly you could do with one of these things, and I found two of the most amazing cookbooks ever (which I promptly ordered several copies of):

Oh my gosh! I had no idea.

Here are a few of the things you can make with a slow cooker: granola (which I often make…it takes hours in the oven, not only using a lot of propane but heating up the whole house), baked breads and brownies, breakfast porridges, baked potatoes (which I love, but hesitate to heat the whole oven up for), enchiladas, eggplant parmigiana, curries, fruit butters, chutneys, and much more!

Here are some more pictures of things I’ve made so far.

I’m gradually working my way through many new recipes and will update this picture set as I do.

If you have a slow cooker and haven’t used it much, do yourself a favor and get one of these cookbooks and give something new a try.