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BS: Crock pot recipes please

MBSLynne 19 Jan 08 - 03:20 AM
Janie 19 Jan 08 - 12:43 AM
Keef 18 Jan 08 - 09:00 PM
Stilly River Sage 18 Jan 08 - 06:41 PM
Maryrrf 18 Jan 08 - 05:16 PM
GUEST,pattyClink 18 Jan 08 - 05:11 PM
Bonecruncher 18 Jan 08 - 02:12 PM
MBSLynne 18 Jan 08 - 10:21 AM
GUEST,Janie 18 Jan 08 - 10:12 AM
Stilly River Sage 18 Jan 08 - 10:08 AM
GUEST,pattyClink 18 Jan 08 - 10:05 AM
MBSLynne 18 Jan 08 - 03:15 AM
Janie 17 Jan 08 - 11:26 PM
GUEST,Dani 17 Jan 08 - 10:57 PM
maeve 17 Jan 08 - 10:13 PM
Stilly River Sage 17 Jan 08 - 08:57 PM
GUEST,pattyClink 17 Jan 08 - 04:20 PM
open mike 16 Jan 08 - 06:34 PM
GUEST,pattyClink 16 Jan 08 - 05:10 PM
The Fooles Troupe 16 Jan 08 - 05:12 AM
The Fooles Troupe 16 Jan 08 - 05:09 AM
MBSLynne 16 Jan 08 - 02:53 AM
The Fooles Troupe 15 Jan 08 - 06:49 AM
MBSLynne 15 Jan 08 - 03:56 AM
Dave'sWife 14 Jan 08 - 05:47 PM
Dave'sWife 14 Jan 08 - 05:30 PM
MBSLynne 14 Jan 08 - 03:32 AM
GUEST,pattyClink 13 Jan 08 - 09:25 PM
MBSLynne 13 Jan 08 - 04:29 AM
MBSLynne 13 Jan 08 - 04:21 AM
Dave'sWife 12 Jan 08 - 03:57 PM
Amos 12 Jan 08 - 02:59 PM
GUEST,pattyClink 12 Jan 08 - 02:31 PM
Bill D 12 Jan 08 - 02:16 PM
open mike 12 Jan 08 - 02:06 PM
MBSLynne 12 Jan 08 - 01:57 PM
Stilly River Sage 12 Jan 08 - 01:57 PM
The Fooles Troupe 12 Jan 08 - 09:31 AM
The Fooles Troupe 12 Jan 08 - 09:22 AM
Maryrrf 12 Jan 08 - 09:16 AM
MBSLynne 12 Jan 08 - 07:33 AM
MBSLynne 12 Jan 08 - 05:05 AM
DougR 11 Jan 08 - 05:30 PM
Dave'sWife 11 Jan 08 - 11:49 AM
Maryrrf 11 Jan 08 - 10:38 AM
GUEST,leeneia 11 Jan 08 - 10:08 AM
GUEST,pattyClink 11 Jan 08 - 09:23 AM
Dave'sWife 11 Jan 08 - 08:47 AM
MBSLynne 11 Jan 08 - 03:26 AM
Bert 10 Jan 08 - 03:38 PM

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Subject: RE: BS: Crock pot recipes please
From: MBSLynne
Date: 19 Jan 08 - 03:20 AM

I NEVER buy lamb, or in fact any meat, which isn't British. We do get a lot from New Zealand though.

Love Lynne


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Subject: RE: BS: Crock pot recipes please
From: Janie
Date: 19 Jan 08 - 12:43 AM

I don't know sheep from shinola (sorry, couldn't help myself), but I'm guessing that the combination of heat and very high relative humidity that is typical of southeast USA summers would pretty tough on sheep.

Back to crockpots.    I don't use mine often, and haven't tried this lamb recipe, but it sounds good. It is from Healthy Crockery Cooking, by Mable Hoffman.

Lamb Shanks with Sweet Potatoes and Dried Fruit

2 medium sweet potatoes, peeled and cut crosswise into thick slices
1 8oz package (US ounce) mixed dried fruit
3-4 lamb shanks (1-1 1/2 lbs.)
1/2 cup orange juice
1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1/4 teaspoon ground nutmeg
1 clove garlic, crushed
1/4 teaspoon salt
1/8 teaspoon ground black pepper

Place the sweet potatoes in bottom of cooker. Top with dried fruit and lamb shanks. Combine all other ingredients and pour over lamb. Cook on LOW 8 to 10 hours or until tender.


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Subject: RE: BS: Crock pot recipes please
From: Keef
Date: 18 Jan 08 - 09:00 PM

I bought some crook pot.
Mostly seeds and stalks


Put on some Bob Marley

Whoooo!


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Subject: RE: BS: Crock pot recipes please
From: Stilly River Sage
Date: 18 Jan 08 - 06:41 PM

Most of the lamb we get here comes from New Zealand. My kids have always loved it, and with the ever increasing number of places that sell gyros around here, more and more people must be developing a taste for it.


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Subject: RE: BS: Crock pot recipes please
From: Maryrrf
Date: 18 Jan 08 - 05:16 PM

I think lamb for some reason just isn't very popular in the southern part of the United States. I live in Virginia and we never had lamb or mutton when I was growing up. It's available now, but you have to look for it and there isn't a lot of choice. And you never see mutton around here.


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Subject: RE: BS: Crock pot recipes please
From: GUEST,pattyClink
Date: 18 Jan 08 - 05:11 PM

No, we are still barefoot and without electricity here. Sorry, I was just asking a question.


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Subject: RE: BS: Crock pot recipes please
From: Bonecruncher
Date: 18 Jan 08 - 02:12 PM

Strangely enough, most of the world also has freezers and refrigerated transport for carcases! Don't you?
Most of the lamb/mutton sold in the UK comes from abroad.
Colyn.


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Subject: RE: BS: Crock pot recipes please
From: MBSLynne
Date: 18 Jan 08 - 10:21 AM

Patty clink, Australia has more sheep than people and the climate isn't exactly cool, so I don't imagine it's because of the temperature. Lots of hot places have sheep.

Love Lynne


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Subject: RE: BS: Crock pot recipes please
From: GUEST,Janie
Date: 18 Jan 08 - 10:12 AM

pattyClink,

Not sure just where you are. Dani & I both live near Chapel Hill on the northeast Piedmont of NC. There are a few local farmers who sell at the Farmer's Market and to local upscale grocers who raise sheep, along with a few goats, but not large herds of them.

Janie


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Subject: RE: BS: Crock pot recipes please
From: Stilly River Sage
Date: 18 Jan 08 - 10:08 AM

I always manage to find lamb, though it isn't a huge section of the meat department. Last time I looked for leg of lamb over at Sam's Club they didn't seem to have any, but that is unusual. This is in North Texas.

SRS


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Subject: RE: BS: Crock pot recipes please
From: GUEST,pattyClink
Date: 18 Jan 08 - 10:05 AM

Janie, how would our local farmer get his hands on lamb? Are you up in a mountainous area? Surely most of the southern climate is too hot for woolly beasts, isn't it? I know our hand-weavers tend to use cotton because it can be grown locally whereas sheep live in cooler climes. We see goats around, but never sheep.


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Subject: RE: BS: Crock pot recipes please
From: MBSLynne
Date: 18 Jan 08 - 03:15 AM

You can't get mutton here very easily either, these days, though it was an absolute staple 50 years ago and more. Lamb is as much eaten here as beef and pork. Asking my nice butcher yesterday about the cheapest cuts of meat, some of which you just can't get any more because people don't want the hassle of cooking them and many people wouldn't know what to do with them. Breast of lamb is .90 per lb, though is on the bone so not quite as cheap as it appears. The butcher was selling off English lamb shoulder before Christmas at £1.40 lb, which is really cheap. I bought quite a bit and put it in the freezer.

Love Lynne


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Subject: RE: BS: Crock pot recipes please
From: Janie
Date: 17 Jan 08 - 11:26 PM

I don't know about the northern USA, but here in the south, lamb is expensive. Rarely see mutton.   One of the economic reasons for the American Revolution was that England severely restricted sheep imports and the exportation of wool from the colonies to protect the English wool trade. After the Revolution, sheep were economically important in the north, but never spread to the south.

I was in my 30's before I ever tasted lamb.

Janie


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Subject: RE: BS: Crock pot recipes please
From: GUEST,Dani
Date: 17 Jan 08 - 10:57 PM

Lamb, not so much in stores around here (South US).

However, your friendly neighborhood farmer will have some, or know where to find it! Find a farmer's market, get to talk with the folks who do meat, and you can find just about anything; not just different animals, but different cuts, etc. We are blessed with several good markets, but a little surfing will get you in touch if you're not sure.

Dani


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Subject: RE: BS: Crock pot recipes please
From: maeve
Date: 17 Jan 08 - 10:13 PM

MBS Lynne-

Growing up in New Hampshire, we often had lamb and mutton. I learned to make mint jelly as a nine year old 4-H member for use with lamb.


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Subject: RE: BS: Crock pot recipes please
From: Stilly River Sage
Date: 17 Jan 08 - 08:57 PM

I've done lasagna in the crock pot. It came out very good.

SRS


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Subject: RE: BS: Crock pot recipes please
From: GUEST,pattyClink
Date: 17 Jan 08 - 04:20 PM

refreshing so people can see the lasagna links


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Subject: RE: BS: Crock pot recipes please
From: open mike
Date: 16 Jan 08 - 06:34 PM

i just received a message from the recipe czar or is it bizarre?

any wayk, there were several chicken recipes, but most interesting
was the lasagna recipe for crock pots or slow cookers...
(in the camping thread was another interesting note..a small micro wave
oven that runs on 12 volt d.c. or 110 a.c.)

Read this newsletter online with all the photos:
http://recipezaar.com/sitenews/
___________________________________________________________
SLOW, GOOD CROCK POT COOKING

Life is busy. Between taking care of your family, your career and your home, having to come up with nutritious and satisfying meals every night makes us tired just thinking about it! Dust off that crock pot and browse through our top-rated, slow-cooked, one-dish meals and you'll feel your heart rate slow down as tonight's dinner plan comes together in a snap. Before your busy day, assemble your ingredients in the crock pot, turn it on and forget about it. Half an hour spent earlier in the day will pay off beautifully hours later when a bubbly stew, chili, chicken or pasta dish is waiting for you and your hungry family. No matter what life throws at you today, because of your foresight and preparedness, your dinner is hot, ready and simmering on the counter -- not a bad way to end a hectic and harried day!
http://www.recipezaar.com/sitenews/post.php?pid=877


>>> Slow-Cooked Chicken Recipes <<<

"Crock Pot Chicken W/ Black Beans and Cream Cheese" by Jen Santiago
I love this recipe for two reasons: One my family loves it and two because it is so easy to make! I got this recipe from my sister ...
http://www.recipezaar.com/89204

"Chicken Delicious" by Musical Joy
This is a fantastic crock pot recipe! The chicken is so tender, it falls apart, and it makes incredible gravy. It's my most requested recipe ...
http://www.recipezaar.com/18872

"Crock Pot Garlic Brown Sugar Chicken" by Mirj
The house smells wonderful while this is cooking!
http://www.recipezaar.com/16531

"Crock Pot Cream Cheese Chicken" by ChipotleChick
This is a great recipe that I have been making for years. It is very rich though, so don't make this recipe if you are looking for something light!
http://www.recipezaar.com/43174


>>> Lasagna in the Crock Pot? Yes! <<<

"Crock Pot Lasagna" by Evan's Mommy
Use this basic recipe and then customize to your liking by adding your favorite Italian ingredients! Experiment with pepperoni and tomatoes ...
http://www.recipezaar.com/48671

"Slow Cooked Lasagna" by carolinafan
This has become a favorite of mine; just put it in the crock pot and forget about it for a few hours.
http://www.recipezaar.com/163010

"Easy Crock-Pot Lasagna" by Lanae Peterson
Who would have thought you could make LASAGNA in the CROCK-POT!! DH likes this version more than the oven-baked one.
http://www.recipezaar.com/144144

I OFTEN BAKE LASAGNA IN ONE STEP.. BY LAYERING THE FLAT NOODLES AND ALTERNATING WITH TOMATO SAUCE AND RICOTTA AND MUSHROOMS/PEPPERS/OLIVES IN A CASSEROLE PAN AND BAKING THEM ALL AT ONCE . THIS ELIMINATES THE STEP OF BOILING THE NOODLES FIRST. THIS IS ESPECIALLY GOOD WITH HOME MADE TOMATO SAUCE THAT IS ON THE RUNNY/LIQUID-Y SIDE. THE EXCESS JUICES ARE ABSORBED BY THE NOODLES. DO'T FORGET THE PESTO!! OIL THE PAN WITH OLIVE OIL AND PUT A LAYER OF TOMATO SAUCE IN THE PAN FIRST,
THEN ALL OTHER INGREDIENTS IN LAYERS ON TOP OF THAT. TOP WITH CHEESE.
MOZZERELLA IS BEST, AND SPRINKLE PARMESAN ON THE OTHER LAYERS!


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Subject: RE: BS: Crock pot recipes please
From: GUEST,pattyClink
Date: 16 Jan 08 - 05:10 PM

Lamb was an every-once-in-awhile thing when I lived in the North, but in the south it is usually absent from the stores; perhaps a few legs of lamb at Easter. I've often wondered what the history of this is; inthe South there's kind of a revulsion to the meat that must go back generations.

Meanwhile, we have more and more too-busy, rushed mommas who rely very heavily on convenience foods. And lots of professionals working in test kitchens whose job it is to make up good recipes using their company's products. Scratch cooking has becoming a gourmet hobby for the upper class and a lost art among the rest of us. Of course, lots of exceptions, growing numbers of from-scratch cooks among those interested in health.


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Subject: RE: BS: Crock pot recipes please
From: The Fooles Troupe
Date: 16 Jan 08 - 05:12 AM

Oh - I forgot, you can use a stock, or water and some 'standard 'vege stock vegetables' - usually a carrot, celery stick, etc.


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Subject: RE: BS: Crock pot recipes please
From: The Fooles Troupe
Date: 16 Jan 08 - 05:09 AM

Another useful tip.

Here in Oz, chicken necks and chicken frames are often available in 'bulk' or in packs of a couple of Kg each fairly cheaply.

Now they are great for long slow cooking, as you can dissolve part of the cartilage into the brew, but the problem with long slow cooking is that they tend to break up (especially if stirred!) and spread tiny little bone fragments right thru the whole pot. These are a thorough pain to try and remove, almost impossible, and can become a health hazard if swallowed.

You can use the old fashioned 'muslin bag' technique, or I found that you can put the meat in one of those 'chip baskets', and then just lift the whole lot out at once. If you are using a crock pot, you could probably cut off the normal lifting handle, and maybe even cut it down to fit, and this would let you put the lid on. You would need tongs or something to assist in removing the 'bone bag'.

Once you have removed the 'bone bag', letting the draining liquid not go to waste, you let it cool sufficiently so that you can then separate it with your fingers - you can easily feel any small bones that way. You will 'lose' a bit, but no more than you would if you hand picked a cold chicken anyway. Return the scavenged meat to the brew.

Yum!


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Subject: RE: BS: Crock pot recipes please
From: MBSLynne
Date: 16 Jan 08 - 02:53 AM

Having now looked at a number of sites with crockpot recipes, I noticed a couple of things about the American recipes which surprised me. Firstly, on sites where the recipes are split into sections, they seem to have beef, pork, chicken but no lamb. Isn't lamb eaten in the US?

The other thing is that a large proportion of the recipes call for cans, packets and jars of stuff as ingredients. Is this general? I always use basic ingredients, partly because I cook to get away from processed foods and partly because it works out rather expensive to buy jars and cans to put in one's recipes.

Love Lynne


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Subject: RE: BS: Crock pot recipes please
From: The Fooles Troupe
Date: 15 Jan 08 - 06:49 AM

Incidentally, if you are on a strict budget - it helps to eat 'companion foods' - those which when consumed together have a balance of amino acids that allow the body to efficiently make proteins - from memory, I think beans and corn is one such combination.


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Subject: RE: BS: Crock pot recipes please
From: MBSLynne
Date: 15 Jan 08 - 03:56 AM

Thanks for that Dave's wife. It sounds great. I'll certainly give it a try.

I have quite a few bones in the freezer (also free) so today I've put a load in the crockpot and am cooking them up to make bone stock. Should work well I think.

Love Lynne


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Subject: RE: BS: Crock pot recipes please
From: Dave'sWife
Date: 14 Jan 08 - 05:47 PM

Here's a basic Brunswick Stew Recipe that can be adapted:

Hearty Corckpot Brunswick Stew
Serves/Makes:   6

Ingredients:
1 pound boneless, skinless chicken thighs, cut into 1-inch cubes (You can use Rabbit)
1/2 pound ham steak, cut into 1-inch cubes (You can sub 2 ham hocks_
1 can (14.5 oz. size) diced tomatoes, undrained
1 cup frozen lima beans
1 cup frozen whole kernel corn
1 cup peeled and diced all-purpose potatoes
1/4 teaspoon crushed red pepper flakes
1 envelope dry onion soup mix (I would just chop a good sized onion, toss in some beef cubes if ya have 'em and a little bit of water o dissolve)

Directions:

In slow cooker, combine all ingredients. Cook covered on LOW 8 to 10 hours or HIGH 4 to 6 hours.


You can double the corn if you like corn but be careful with the Lima beans - some people ahte them.


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Subject: RE: BS: Crock pot recipes please
From: Dave'sWife
Date: 14 Jan 08 - 05:30 PM

MBSLYnne - Game meat does very well in a slowecooker, especially rabbit so you're lucky to have a source of free rabbit meat! Here in the US, in the southeast, people still make Brunswick Stew with Squirrell meat but Rabbit meat will do just fine. I cooked up a big batch of Brunswick Stew with chciken thighs a couple weeks ago in the crockpot.

Brunswick Stew is a regional specialty in the Southeastern USA but I bet you'd like it just fine. I'll see if I can sacre up a recipe for it. I know it's been posted in other threads....


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Subject: RE: BS: Crock pot recipes please
From: MBSLynne
Date: 14 Jan 08 - 03:32 AM

Not yet...I have several questions to ask him when I go on Thursday. I will also ask him about chine. Up to now I've been using things like mince, belly pork etc to be cheap, but now I need even cheaper, and I know there are some cuts that don't get displayed these days cos no one uses them.

Fortunately, a lot of local people go shooting and we have let everyone know that we are happy to have the things they usually throw away like pigeon and even rabbit. (Can you believe it??). It doesn't get much cheaper than free and I imagine that those sort of things will do particularly well in the slow cooker. I intend to try rabbit stew in it in the very near future as we have two in the freezer.

Love Lynne


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Subject: RE: BS: Crock pot recipes please
From: GUEST,pattyClink
Date: 13 Jan 08 - 09:25 PM

Using a crockpot is much cheaper than using a standard stove, I've seen figures to that effect. (Particularly good here in the summer, where air conditioning is a bigger cost than heat, and an oven or open burner works against us)

Cheap cuts: well, meaty ham hocks are wonderful for making pea soup or red beans and rice Lousiana style. I've got a fab recipe for RB&R if you want it let me know.

Apparently barbeque was invented by blacks trying to tenderize the miserable cuts of meats they could get their hands on. And the Asian 'red cooking' method is supposedly long cooking in liquid that tenderizes, haven't tried it myself.

Clueless about that beef chine, but great that you have a real butcher. We have one 20 miles away, can't get there too often. I take it you've already mentioned to him that you're looking for cheap cuts.


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Subject: RE: BS: Crock pot recipes please
From: MBSLynne
Date: 13 Jan 08 - 04:29 AM

We have something called "Economy 7" electricity here which gives cheaper electricity between midnight (Ithink) and 8am. My washing machine is on a timer and I do all the washing overnight. The saving is only very small, but the more you use it the more saving there is and I do a wash load every night. If I cook on it too it should mount up

Love Lynne


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Subject: RE: BS: Crock pot recipes please
From: MBSLynne
Date: 13 Jan 08 - 04:21 AM

I never buy supermarket chicken...and after Jamie Oliver's latest series, from what I've heard, not many other people will be either! Whole chicken is the cheapest way to use chicken and the carcass can be used for stock, etc. Though I'm lucky enough to be given woodpigeons regularly so I guess I could substitute pigeon breast for chicken in those recipes.

Patty, I'm not planning to go totally meatless, though we do have at least a couple of veggie meals a week, for health's sake as well as cost. The bean recipe sounds great. What I'm trying to find out now is which meat cuts are the cheapest. I believe there are quite a few that not many people use these days. We are lucky to have a really good butcher...they do their own slaughtering and have a board outside the shop giving the name and farm that each type of meat comes from. They sell nothing but local meat. I already use brisket a lot, which is much cheaper and I think has more flavour than the more expensive roasts. I know oxtail is cheap and makes a lovely soup or stew. I want to have a go at scrag end recipes too. I have been given a piece of beef chine, but i can't find it in any of my cookbooks or on google. Does anyone know what I should do with it?

Love Lynne


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Subject: RE: BS: Crock pot recipes please
From: Dave'sWife
Date: 12 Jan 08 - 03:57 PM

MBSLynne - Anything that calls for a chicken breast can usually be converted to less expensive by simply substituting bonesless chicken thighs and legs. Most stores will sell these boneless thighs frozen and in 3 to 5 pound bags for less than half the cost of frozen breasts. You can also buy large family packs of Chicken legs with the bone in and break them up into manageable size packets and freeze.

Chicken legs and thighs work great in a crockpot. Just toss some in with a cup of broth or 2, some fresh raw and cleaned up root veggies, a tablespoon of Mrs. Dash seasoning or any similar multi-spice seasoning and go about your day. An hour before serving, add some single cream or.. dissolve some cream cheese into the liquid and viola : creamy chicken stew. You can also do this at night and when you wake up, turn the pot off, take the liner out and stick in the fridge. Then an hour or two before you want to eat, put the liner back in the port and turn on low.

If you google Corckpot breakfast recipes, you'll find a number of yummy breakfast casserole dishes that you can clet bubble away at night. Most involve eggs. I make crockpot french toast casserole often but it's a bit of a production because I like fancy breakfasts.


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Subject: RE: BS: Crock pot recipes please
From: Amos
Date: 12 Jan 08 - 02:59 PM

Historically the best crack-pot recipe is along these lines:

Take one small brain and marinate in a rich sauce of money and undeserved privelege. Carefully trim all merit.

Add two spoonfuls of egocentric unfounded beliefs, carefully ground up.

Blend with a tablespoon of arrogance.

Be sure to provide frequent bail-outs during roasting.

Place in a large white house and serve.

Has been known to make folks sick. But is definitely world-class crackpot.


A


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Subject: RE: BS: Crock pot recipes please
From: GUEST,pattyClink
Date: 12 Jan 08 - 02:31 PM

For cheaper stuff, do you mean meatless? If so my only help would be to tell you you can do baked beans wonderfully in them. You do your soaking overnight, then while you have breakfast in the a.m. boil the beans in water with with bacon grease or whatever (no salt or seasonings yet) on the stove til they just start to get soft (maybe 1/2 hour to 40 minutes), then drain and put in the crock with your molasses, seasonings and however much fresh water your recipe calls for.

Ditto for pinto beans or try your own favorite dried bean recipe.

Another thing if you're not going completely meatless; CHILI! Night before sautee onions and ground beef or venison. Drain & refrigerate in a Ziploc bag or whatever. In the a.m. dump that in the crock with whatever goes in your favorite chili recipe (you may need to reduce the water somewhat though), let cook on low all day. Stir in drained canned beans when you get home, turn to high while you get the rest of dinner together, just long enough to heat up the beans.


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Subject: RE: BS: Crock pot recipes please
From: Bill D
Date: 12 Jan 08 - 02:16 PM

In some places it does. Utilities may charge less for power in off-peak times in order to put less demand on generation during high usage...so cooking at night may be a teeny bit cheaper.


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Subject: RE: BS: Crock pot recipes please
From: open mike
Date: 12 Jan 08 - 02:06 PM

electricity costs different amounts at different times?


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Subject: RE: BS: Crock pot recipes please
From: MBSLynne
Date: 12 Jan 08 - 01:57 PM

Yes, I'd read about hay box cooking and was actually thinking about giving it a go.

Love Lynne


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Subject: RE: BS: Crock pot recipes please
From: Stilly River Sage
Date: 12 Jan 08 - 01:57 PM

I don't know if it saves energy, but it can save time. Once you figure out which recipes are suitable for cooking for 8-10 hours, you can set up a pot of stuff in the morning and when you come home from work the house smells wonderful and you can serve it as soon as you're ready to eat. Our dinner is usually quite late here at the house because we don't get in until around 7pm and then I have to cook something. The crock pot is good for that reason. I think I'll take a chicken out of the freezer and do one on Monday!

I do add a lot of the stuff mentioned, I just don't pay attention any more, it's automatic. And I do highly season the skin, though I don't always put olive oil on it. I do oil the inside of the pot because it makes it easier to clean later. I don't brown the bird, but I do brown beef or pork chops that are going in the crock pot.

SRS


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Subject: RE: BS: Crock pot recipes please
From: The Fooles Troupe
Date: 12 Jan 08 - 09:31 AM

"Does anyone have any idea if it really saves electricity?"

Actually 'haybox cooking' involved bringing a pot to the boil for long enough to ensure everything inside was up to temp, then placing it in a highly insulated box - originally hay - nowadays there are modern versiona.


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Subject: RE: BS: Crock pot recipes please
From: The Fooles Troupe
Date: 12 Jan 08 - 09:22 AM

"can you cook the stuff for too long"

If you 'overcook' meat, it dissolves into soup... potatoes disappear, etc - it all just 'vanishes into the goop' - whether it destroys 'goodness' i dont; know - but it CAN IMPROVE taste!


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Subject: RE: BS: Crock pot recipes please
From: Maryrrf
Date: 12 Jan 08 - 09:16 AM

Lynne, I am sorry about your job - what a shame. And you loved the job too. As regards the crockpot, if you cook on low you probably won't overcook so don't worry about that too much


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Subject: RE: BS: Crock pot recipes please
From: MBSLynne
Date: 12 Jan 08 - 07:33 AM

So now (see "May I weep and wail a bit" thread) I need REALLY cheap slow cooker recipes! How to feed a family on £50 a week less than what was already not enough. *Sigh.

Love Lynne


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Subject: RE: BS: Crock pot recipes please
From: MBSLynne
Date: 12 Jan 08 - 05:05 AM

I did try Googling for crockpot recipes and there were just loads of sites. I looked at a few, but a lot of them were these sort of directory sites which send you to other places. When I did look at recipes, a lot of them were using rahter expensive meat...loads of recipes for chicken breasts and so on. I gave up trying to trawl through it all to find the good ones.

I'm getting the idea though and I think I'll try cooking a rabbit in it next week. One thing though....can you cook the stuff for too long? It would be useful to be able to cook a meal overnight when the electricity is cheaper, but it might have to be on for a bit more than eight hours. Would that matter?

Love |Lynne


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Subject: RE: BS: Crock pot recipes please
From: DougR
Date: 11 Jan 08 - 05:30 PM

I get most of my recipies online these days. My favorite site is All Recipes.com   Just GOOGLE "Crockpot Recipes" and you will call up a ton of sites containing them. Maybe even one that would call for using one of Bobert's old shoes!

DougR


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Subject: RE: BS: Crock pot recipes please
From: Dave'sWife
Date: 11 Jan 08 - 11:49 AM

If you want the meat brown - you can always sear it on the stove first in a sautee pan. A lot of folks do that.

For dark colour - you can always add a tablespoon or so of Kitchen Bouquet or Gravy Master - those are 2 brands of bottled Caramel colouring & Seasoning you can usually find near the canned and bottled gravies in the grocery store. I prefer Gravy Master but that's a Yankee brand and so I have to have my Mum ship me a few bottles every so many years. I can only ever find Kitchen Bouquet here in Los Angels and then only once in a while. (Never near thanksgiving when you need it to help darken the Turkey gravy!)


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Subject: RE: BS: Crock pot recipes please
From: Maryrrf
Date: 11 Jan 08 - 10:38 AM

One thing about crock pot cooking is that it does't really brown the meat. So I usually like to add something with some color - soy sauce, worcestershire sauce, paprika, etc.


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Subject: RE: BS: Crock pot recipes please
From: GUEST,leeneia
Date: 11 Jan 08 - 10:08 AM

oops. In the recipe I posted above for pork roast with seeds on it, I believe I forget to mention that you put a small amount of soy sauce on the meat. When cooking a small roast, I use a teaspoon.


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Subject: RE: BS: Crock pot recipes please
From: GUEST,pattyClink
Date: 11 Jan 08 - 09:23 AM

And the simplest of all: Put a beef roast in the pot, sprinkle with a packet of onion soup mix, add 6 oz water, cook on low all day.


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Subject: RE: BS: Crock pot recipes please
From: Dave'sWife
Date: 11 Jan 08 - 08:47 AM

SRS - the next time you roast a chicken in your corckpot try this - coat the chicken with a little olibve oil and rub all over. Then Spinkle one packet of Good Seasons Italian Dressing mix (the dry kind in the pouch) all over said chicken. Stuff the cavity with an onion. Toss in some peeled carrots cut in half, some peeled taters cut in half, A parsnip or turnip peeled and cut in large sections, one small can of drained black olives, set the thing however you set it and walk away.

When done, you will have a zesty roasted chicken and sweet roasted root veggiesthat soak up lots of that yummy seasoning. Save the liquid to use as gravy. yum yum yum yum.

I used to do this in the oven and call it Chicken Inez after Inez Sepe who taught me the recipe. Over the years Chicken Inez devolved into "Chicken Italiano".


Lemon-Thyme Roasted Chicken:
You can do the same basic thing but use 1/2 cup of lemon juice mixed with 1/3 cup of your best oilve oil or roasted garlic olive oil and 3 tablespoons of freshly chopped thyme. Stuff the inside of the chicken with a couple of bunches of parlsey and pour half the oil mixture inside the chicken and rub the rest on the outside of the chicken. Toss in some of the peeled root veggies as before and roast in crockpot or oven. If you want more lemon flavor, zest a lemon or two and put the zest inside the chicken. You get the most wonderfully arpmatic roasted chicken ever!


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Subject: RE: BS: Crock pot recipes please
From: MBSLynne
Date: 11 Jan 08 - 03:26 AM

Hmm..I'm getting the idea. I bet you can do steamed or boiled puddings in it too?

Does anyone have any idea if it really saves electricity?

Love Lynne


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Subject: RE: BS: Crock pot recipes please
From: Bert
Date: 10 Jan 08 - 03:38 PM

I used to have a great aunt who did really great stuffed lambs hearts. She just stuffed them with sage and onion, and cooked them for hours.


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