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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

 

As long as you have access to the Internet (free at your local library) you NEVER need to buy another cookbook ever again!

great article.   i own 7 crock pots all of various sizes.   i keep two at our camper, one large and one small.   i use my crock pots 4-5 days a week all year long.   i do not get home from work until 5:30 or so and i would hate to "start" dinner then.  that way i have a hour or so to relax before we sit down to eat.   i feel sorry for my coworkers who are eating dinner at 7:30 and cleaning up at 8: 30 pm.   this weekend my girls and i went to the beach.  i threw hot dogs in the crock pot.  at noon we returned for lunch.   delicious!!!! and done!!!!

I've never learned to use a crock pot except to keep food warm.  My first attempt was cooking beans - they never got done.  Is there a secret.  I do love beans with hamhocks and cornbread.  Bought a cookbook for the slow cooker, but did not find any recipes in it appealing.  Any ideas?

Yes, I used mine the other day after a discussion with a friend.  He used his and I had forgotten about mine.  I pulled it out and made a yummy vegetarian chili last night that I served over rice, with a side of cornbread.  

Everyone complained about being full.  

When I was really broke, I used to make soup in it all the time.  I had thought those days were past, but guess again!  Flashback, back to soup.  It's nutrious, healthy and will feed a crowd for days.  I make 'kitchen sink soup' with leftover bits of veggies, some stock, either leftover rice or pasta, and everything can go in it (hence the name).  Variations include leftover beans, broccoli, potatoes, corn, okra, squash.

It's a great way to use the odds and ends of food that we sometimes toss out.  

We used ours for the 4th for pull apart pork. A lot cheapier then buying it. We use it for bbqing chicken, porck chops and ribs. Along with roast, chicken noodle and beans. We sometimes try things that would not even think about trying in there. Sometimes it is better and cheapier then in the oven

Would you guys stop, (just kidding), Oh my I love crock pots and beans and corn bread. I live in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, unfortunately not a lot of people use crock pots that I know, I'm from Eastern Kentucky, but that one cooker is the favorite in my kitchen. Thanks for this, now I don't feel so all alone down here. Hugs!

Angela's recipe for pot roast is great. As a variation, use the same recipe with a 1/2 can of Guinness (or other stout beer) Drink the other half. I put some frozen pearl onions in too. Another variation is chicken parts browned quickly with a half a bottle of cheap but drinkable red wine (save the other half for service with dinner) Poor mans coq au vin ...Elegant and cheap.

Cooking Soups....was / is a traditional growing up in my normal--middle class-Irish American Household.  A Croc-pot is great !....but, you can do the same thing with just a ..big ..oversized..steel...cooking pot, with a heavy lid....

I reccommend, just buying...dried green peas..., ...and or/lentils...and then, washing them once in cold water to scoop off the "floaters/debris".  Then, put in a couple of bags...and ...some bullion cubes...or...real chicken stock. Put it on overnight, and of course...always include some full onions, and or/chopped and bulk garlic, and a bunck of rough cut carrots.  I throw in a smoked ham hock...or just a big ham bone, with the meat left on it, and go to sleep......wake up..and put it in a bowl, with a ..nice drop of sour creme...BUY some good...$ 1.50/fresh Italian Loaf of Bread..slathered with butter....

Hungry boys can eat it for breakfast.  Later when they get home from school, for lunch, and again for dinner.....NOTE---REAL FOOD...is ...CHEAP...We could feed 5 men, in our house...+...two girls...for a total of maybee $ 15/day..including 1 gallon of milk per day.

I couldn't decide which I love more: my crock pot or my pressure cooker.  The crock pot is great for those days when I don't feel like heating up the kitchen... good for those meats that just fall apart when they're done.  For some excellent recipes, try the Sandra Lee's Semi-Homemade Slow Cooker Books.  They're simple and delicious.  The pressure cooker is great for cooking dinner quick, when you're out of time but need it done right away.  It's also a great way to prepare veggies and potatoes quick and with very little water so they don't lose their nutrients.  

I recieved a huge slower cooker as an apartment warming gift when I first moved out of my house. I fully admit I put it in a lower cabinet, and never thought I would use it- I was one person, so I would never need that big of a crock pot. I revised my opinion several weeks later. One of my favorite tricks is to cook a whole chicken in the crock pot with a little liquid. It keeps the chicken really moist, and the breasts, legs, and thighs mean that I can eat for several days. Usually the legs and thighs become stand alone main courses, and the breasts get chopped into salads, or added to other ingredients to make jumbaliah, or something similar. Then I strip the rest of the meat from the carcass to use in things like creamed chicken on toast, or a quick chicken pot pie recipe I have. When that's done, I usually return the bones (with the little remaining meat) to the crock pot and add some veg and water to make stock- which can serve for soups, stews, or be used as an ingredient. I generally get enough meat for 6 meals out of one chicken- and that can go up to 8 if I really stretch out the *** meat and shreds I get off the carcass, and I don't have to buy broth/stock from the market- which saves me money, and means I can control the amount of sodium I take in.

Another thing I like to do is make my own pasta sauces- since I use them in so many different applications (marinara is surprisingly good to cook a roast in with a few add ons), I like to mix it up. I usually buy the huge cans of tomatoes when they go on sale, and combine them with vegetables, herbs, spices, garlic, and red wine (either 2 buck Chuck, or a bottle I've gotten as a gift). I usually make two batches every 3 months- one vegetarian and one with meat. The vegetarian can be used for cooking roast, making pizza (if I hit a sale on cheese, dough is cheap to make), and can be combined with things like seafood to produce a good stew when you're having company over. The meaty sauce can be either served as a classic marinara with meat, or I can add dairy to mix things up. It usually goes over straight pasta, or is broken out to combine with other ingredients to make baked pasta dishes for company nights, if I need to make something for a sick friend, or to freeze for later.

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