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I was 'slow food' when slow food wasn't cool

Posted Oct 05 2007, 12:18 PM by Donna Freedman
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I remember when slow cookers first hit the market, back in 1970. To my cash-strapped family such things were luxuries, culinary toys for the rich. We felt the same way about popcorn poppers and the Fry Daddy.

But I don’t know how I would have made it as a struggling single mother eight years later without the slow cooker. It made most of the meals on which the baby and I subsisted: primarily bean soup, with occasional forays into minestrone and spaghetti.

One or two mornings a week, I’d put a pound of great northern beans in the pot with some grated carrot, chopped onion, pepper, and smoked neck bones or ham hock. When I got home, the smell of soup made me feel like someone had been cooking for me all day. It also took my mind off the sack of dirty diapers that I’d be washing on a scrub board later on.

After I married, it was years before I could even think about bean soup. But I still used the slow cooker for chili and sloppy joes, and that minestrone and spaghetti. I never did buy a cookbook for the appliance, because my impression was that far too many recipes involved cream of mushroom soup.

Bean counting
For the two years it took to get divorced, I was back to bean soup. And to pinto beans cooked with ham ends and served with cornbread. And to food-bank chili: a cup of government-commodity dry red beans simmered until tender, then mixed with a quarter-pound of ground beef (usually bought from the markdown bin -- the food bank rarely had meat), spices bought three-for-a-dollar at Walgreens, and canned tomatoes whose pinkish label bore the words, "Distributed by USDA in cooperation with state and local or tribal governments for domestic food assistance programs. Not to be sold or exchanged."

I also discovered that slow cookers do great baked potatoes. The food bank always had spuds, so I enjoyed many meals of potatoes with a side veggie, and leftover potatoes fried with eggs.

While I was married, I’d viewed the slow cooker as a convenience, like a microwave or washing machine. During the divorce years, when I also returned to college, I’d sooner have given up my bus pass than my slow cooker. Back to living on pennies, I once again realized how vital the slow cooker can be to the cash-strapped.

The original ‘slow food’
My finances have improved, so I no longer go to the food bank. (In fact, I find ways to donate to it.) But I have not lost my newfound appreciation for the slow cooker. The appliance is a busy college student/freelance writer’s best friend.

And I’m slowly branching out. Here’s a recipe from a former co-worker: put the cheapest pork roast there is into the slow cooker with a little water, and cook on low overnight. (If you like, you can rub it with spices first, like cayenne and basil and garlic.) Take a fork to it the next day and it’ll shred like a politician’s promises. Add barbecue sauce and serve on toasted rolls. It’s delicious and, yes, cheap.

Like many people who have been broke, I don’t see the reason to spend more money than I have to -- for food or for anything else. That’s why I think everybody should have a slow cooker. Low-end ones cost as little as $6.99. Look on the Internet for recipes, which have gotten much more adventurous. You won’t need a single can of cream of mushroom soup, unless you really want it.

Beans are optional, too.

Comments

 

What a nice reinforcer to read early in the day. I spent this morning setting up my crock pot for chili made from good quality, yet cheap, ingredients... low cost beef roast, trimmed of its fat (which the happy dog got), seared with a little flour, red beans (brought to a boil in a separate pot before adding to the mix), left over onion and peppers (chopped), drippings saved from previous meals, one can of seasoned tomatoes and three fresh ones that were on sale, some garlic and random seasonings piled in the pot, set on low and ready when we get home tonight. Son No. 2 has a friend coming over tonight and I figure this will work fine for hungry young men.

I love my slow cooker, and that's no crock!

I'm trying my best not to east out this month, but I'm so busy with school and work.  I'm going to dust off my crock pot!  I used in college just to keep nacho cheese warm for when our club had nacho sales.  I can't wait to start using it for real now!

I also want to start maximizing cooking time, so I can cook on the stove while something else is in the slow cooker.  

Lynn D: Do browse online for recipes, starting with the link in the article. There are a lot more options than there used to be....And thanks for reading.

/Donna

I would love to buy a second crock pot so I can cook mashed taters in one, and a beef roast in the other.  We'd only have to cook a veggie and some fresh bread and we'd be set for a home-cooked dinner!  

Today, I put some pinto beans in the crock pot and the house smells sooooo good.  

What a great article.  Makes me want to slow cook tomorrow.  I'm going to try the  pork but I will have to use garlic.  

One day I cooked 50 pounds of Yukon Gold potatoes I got really cheap. I wrapped each one in foil and placed them in the oven. I had my boyfriend turn them on then when they were cooked put them all in an ice chest and bring them to my job. Co-workers brought potato topping including crock pots full of chili with and without meat as well as chopped onion, grated cheese, sour cream, chives, bacon bits and whatever anyone might like to have on a potato.We have enough food to serve all the employees who were left when the important people left town for annual trade shows. We called them Cat's Away parties, don't tell the boss Ok? The crock pots were a perfect way to keep the foods warm or reheat them. We had meatballs in a crockpot at a reception after a funeral with cold salads and things.

Thanks to Donna, I shopped the "loss leaders" at the market, and got 5 packs of red beans for 50 cents, so now it's time to make beans and hocks in the crock pot (with corn bread of course). I already made the pulled pork sandwiches in the crock pot, and they didn't last but a day. (had unexpected company).

I love the meatball idea. I've never made them in the crock pot. Always the stove. That'll be next:)

Great article....I am a true-blue lover of the crockpot.  I have used it for many years.

I want to share a great recipe with all of you crockpotters...very yummy!

Sweet and Sour Meatballs

1 bag of your favorite frozen meatballs  (or your own homemade ones)

1 bottle of Heinz Chili Sauce or generic version

1 large can or jar of Sauerkraut

1 can of cranberries, any style

1 cup of brown sugar (lite or dark)

1 can of water

Put everything in your crockpot for at least 4 or 5 hours on low.

I enjoy these on rolls as a sandwich or with toothpicks for an appetizer...(can cut in half)

Great for parties!!!

Enjoy....Lisa

I was also a single mother for a long time, and I have a ton of recipes but here is a good one that you can put in before you go to work or out for the day, and come home to a really good meat and potatoes type dinner for less than 10 bucks if you are a careful shopper. This requires a larger crock pot. You can totally cut this down to fit your needs though which would make you a few meals. When I was single and it was just me and the baby, I would make the whole meal and then freeze smaller portions to make my own frozen meals that can be put into the microwave for a really quick meal later.  Now I have to cook for a construction worker, 2 teenage boys in the midst of a growth spurt, and myself. This recipe works for us with some left over for lunch for us parents for the next day.

POTROAST

the cheapest 1 lb. beef roast you can find - lightly salted and peppered with lots of pepper. I also add montreal steak seasoning on everything, but that's your call. Put on the bottom of the pot, fat side down. (It does not matter what cut the roast is. Go at night, when they are close to closing time because they are marking down meat that is going to expire. I can usually find one for between 4-5 bucks)

Add Vegetables as following:

The carrots and potatoes can be substituted for canned if necessary.

2-4 stalks of celery chopped into 1/2 inch pieces (.79 cents for the bunch)

4-8 carrots chopped into 1/2 inch pieces (.79 cents for bunch. You can add more or less, its up to you. I do more because it really stretches out the meal.)

1-2 russet potatoes per each person. (3.89 per 10 lb. bag, we use a little less than half)

1 onion chopped into 1/2 inch pieces (about .40 cents)

I love my crock pot. One of the best pieces of equipment you can have in your kitchen. Actually we have two and one has two inserts so you can set one aside when done and use the pot to keep something else warm (that one was a splurge)

My husband even uses it. We make all kinds of dishes in it.

One we like that involes the dreaded cream of mushroom soup (you can't taste the

mushrooms when done and you could use cream of chicken).

Place enough chicken for your family (thawed) in the pot I use 3-4 md sized breasts

with 1 can of cream of mushroom soup and

1 cup of sour cream. Add 1 can of water to avoid drying out.

Cook on low and serve over rice.

Good meal and cheap too.

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