![]() |
|
Welcome to FoodBanter.com forums which provide access to the finest food and drink related newsgroups. You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most newsgroup discussions and access our other FREE features. By joining our free community you will have access to post topics to the food related newsgroups, communicate privately with other FoodBanter.com members (PM), respond to polls, upload your own photos and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today! If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact support. |
|
|||||||
| General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
|
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Search this Thread | Display Modes |
|
|||
|
I'm going to be doing the Slow Cooker Pepper Pork Chops from Good Eats
this evening: http://www.foodnetwork.com/food/reci..._35131,00.html He mentions in the episode that it can be done in a dutch oven, but prefers to do it in a slow cooker. I have a Lodge cast iron camping-style dutch oven (with the little legs), but no slow cooker, and want to try the recipe with the dutch oven. He browns the chops in a saute pan, transfers to the slow cooker for an hour on high and 4:30 on low. To do it in the cast iron, I was thinking preheat the cast iron the oven to 400, transfer to (gas) stove for browning, put back in 400F oven for 1 hour then lower the temp either to 200 or warm (the lowest 2 markings on the gas oven) for the 4:30. I was wondering if my temperatures sounds right, and whether having my dutch oven a half inch higher than most pans on the stove might inhibit the browning. |
|
|||
|
|
|
|||
|
Your plan sounds good, although as another poster pointed out, you
probably don't need the hour at 400F. I would go ahead and keep the oven on at 400 while the browning is going on, then immediately lower the oven setting to 200 when you put the pot back in. A good oven thermometer would be helpful since thermostats sometimes lose it at their extreme high and/or low setting (if they're even accurate anywhere in their range), and you don't want to go too far over or under a slow simmering temp. Since you're using gas, you'll probably have less problem keeping the dutch oven hot than with electric during browning, more so because it's cast iron. You'll probably have some oil or fat in the pan before adding the meat. When a very slight wisp of smoke start rising from the oil, it's hot enough - add the meat and brown away. Bob ============================== In article .com, says... I'm going to be doing the Slow Cooker Pepper Pork Chops from Good Eats this evening: http://www.foodnetwork.com/food/reci..._35131,00.html He mentions in the episode that it can be done in a dutch oven, but prefers to do it in a slow cooker. I have a Lodge cast iron camping-style dutch oven (with the little legs), but no slow cooker, and want to try the recipe with the dutch oven. He browns the chops in a saute pan, transfers to the slow cooker for an hour on high and 4:30 on low. To do it in the cast iron, I was thinking preheat the cast iron the oven to 400, transfer to (gas) stove for browning, put back in 400F oven for 1 hour then lower the temp either to 200 or warm (the lowest 2 markings on the gas oven) for the 4:30. I was wondering if my temperatures sounds right, and whether having my dutch oven a half inch higher than most pans on the stove might inhibit the browning. |
|
|||
|
What he said may make sense, assuming that the low heat setting will
take a LOT longer to get the pot and contents up to that same cooking temp. Also, a high altitude location could make the one-size-fits-all slow cooker control settings a bit hot, assuming they were set for sea level at "normal" barometric pressure. Bob ========================= In article .com, says... wrote: Even on low, my slow cooker heats to above boiling (in fact, the documentation says that low and high heat to the same tempeture. There is something wrong with your slow cooker or your reading comprehension. Sheldon |
|
|||
|
Thanks for the advice, Y.A.Bob and mcb... but I lost track of time this
afternoon and had to compress it from 6 hours in the oven to 3.5... so I'm going to try :30 at 400 and 3:00 at 250. |
|
|||
|
So much for the concept of "slow" cooking the recipe! :-)
At those temps, you might also want to put a drip pan under the pot. I'm guessing there will be some less-than-gentle boiling going on. Might actually work out better on the stove top where you can at least monitor and see what's going on... Bob ==================== In article om, says... Thanks for the advice, Y.A.Bob and mcb... but I lost track of time this afternoon and had to compress it from 6 hours in the oven to 3.5... so I'm going to try :30 at 400 and 3:00 at 250. |
|
|||
|
Sheldon wrote: wrote: Even on low, my slow cooker heats to above boiling (in fact, the documentation says that low and high heat to the same tempeture. There is something wrong with your slow cooker or your reading comprehension. Sheldon My slow cookers Low setting is distinctly cooler than its High setting. Maybe he's using a different brand or something. |
|
|||
|
|
|
|||
|
You were going to cook pork chops for 6 hours (!) in the oven and now
you're going to cook them for 3.5 hours (!), did I get that right? The plans changed, so I managed to cook them for 5 hours at 200 after the browning... After you've thereby produced petrified pork paperweights, what do you plan to eat for supper? .... and they were WONDERFULLY moist. These were nearly 2 inches thick (they call them Iowa chops) |
|
|||
|
Sounds like "ya done good". Costco sells thick boneless chops like that
(sometimes at really low prices). They're very low-fat and meaty, but can be as dry and taste-free as paper if not prepared properly. Braising is one sure-fire way to get them to come out moist, tender and flavorful every time. Bob =============== In article .com, says... You were going to cook pork chops for 6 hours (!) in the oven and now you're going to cook them for 3.5 hours (!), did I get that right? The plans changed, so I managed to cook them for 5 hours at 200 after the browning... After you've thereby produced petrified pork paperweights, what do you plan to eat for supper? ... and they were WONDERFULLY moist. These were nearly 2 inches thick (they call them Iowa chops) |
|
|||
|
Sheldon wrote: wrote: Even on low, my slow cooker heats to above boiling (in fact, the documentation says that low and high heat to the same tempeture. There is something wrong with your slow cooker or your reading comprehension. Sheldon From page 5 of the manual: Whether cooked on Low or High, the final temperature of the food is the same, about 200°F. The only difference is the amount of time the cooking process takes. http://hbps.johnsonrauhoff.com/HBPS_...HB/8496700.pdf b. |
|
|||
|
wrote: Sheldon wrote: wrote: Even on low, my slow cooker heats to above boiling (in fact, the documentation says that low and high heat to the same tempeture. There is something wrong with your slow cooker or your reading comprehension. Sheldon From page 5 of the manual: Whether cooked on Low or High, the final temperature of the food is the same, about 200°F. The only difference is the amount of time the cooking process takes. With that particular brand. And anyway, if it isn't a higher heat level changing "the amount of time required for the cooking process," then exactly what is changing it? http://hbps.johnsonrauhoff.com/HBPS_...HB/8496700.pdf b. |
|
|||
|
It sounds like it's just the rate of temperature rise in the cooking
vessel that's changing. The cooker could be cycling a single heating element on and off at two different rates for "high" and "low". The element gets equally hot at either setting, but it's allowed to stay "on", and thus stay hot, longer in the "high" setting. Maybe it's on constantly in "high" and cycled on and off at some rate in "low". Just guessing, since I have no idea how that particular model works. But there does seem to be a greater emphasis in the advertising for the newer slow cookers on how quickly they get up to safe cooking temperatures. Perhaps there was some customer dissatisfaction or a liability issue with the older, "real" slow cookers (?). Bob ====================== In article .com, says... From page 5 of the manual: Whether cooked on Low or High, the final temperature of the food is the same, about 200°F. The only difference is the amount of time the cooking process takes. With that particular brand. And anyway, if it isn't a higher heat level changing "the amount of time required for the cooking process," then exactly what is changing it? |
| Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
| Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads
|
||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| Recipe Trade | Jess | General Cooking | 9 | 11-09-2005 08:58 PM |
| rec.food.sourdough FAQ Recipes (part 1 of 2) | Darrell Greenwood | Sourdough | 1 | 02-09-2005 06:31 AM |
| rec.food.sourdough FAQ Recipes (part 1 of 2) | Darrell Greenwood | Sourdough | 1 | 29-12-2004 06:27 AM |
| rec.food.sourdough FAQ Recipes (part 1 of 2) | Darrell Greenwood | Sourdough | 2 | 10-09-2004 06:16 AM |
| Tapioca-my new secret delight | Goomba38 | General Cooking | 32 | 06-04-2004 12:28 AM |