by OTW » Fri Nov 17, 2017 5:54 am
Well now that I've had the IP for a few days, I've been playing with it nonstop. Partly because I'm finding it to be THE most convenient and versatile appliance I've ever met, and partly because with something this multifunctional, it's a learning curve. I've found that for steel cut oats to fully bloom, it takes 20 minutes (not 12-13 as most recipes seem to call for) and then it's worth it to let it hang out on Keep Warm for 30 minutes or so because the little rim of water remaining fully absorbs (if not calling for just a tad more than 3:1 for that reason) but not only do you get the most tender steel cut oats but also the dried cranberries rehydrate to a beautiful state. I also discovered that when making yogurt (a biggie for me), after letting it go through its milk heating mode (erroneously called "boil" on the machine), to hit Cancel and re-do that same mode a second time, which keeps the milk at 180 for a bit longer, resulting in a much thicker end result. This would be very hard to do stovetop, requiring focused hands-on tending. I did get the same half-quantity amount after greeking it, but it's not sloppy to begin with and the end consistency is the best I've ever gotten, ever! And that's after many times with 2 dedicated yogurt machines plus the ice chest method.
So this thing to me is a total no-brainer keeper. Its Set-and-Forget aspect is worth its weight in gold because it eliminates the tending and babysitting of otherwise cooking, and a whole lot of extra clean-up of pots/pans/utensils involved in prep otherwise too. Plus its auto Keep Warm feature lets me get distracted or finish an email with no compromised food product. In all, it's just way easier than my stovetop pressure cookers and leaps and bounds easier than non-pressure cooking. Love it. I'm still working on soft boiled eggs that are runny enough to treat as poached eggs on toast but where none of the runny is "glutinous" (whatever's a right word for snotty). But soft or hard cooked eggs, either/both are just primo tasting in this thing. I always cold-bathe my boiled eggs which helps a lot in easy peeling and thought that was why people found IP eggs to be so easy to peel, but they actually are even more so when pressure cooked IMHO.
I did try a single serving of beef stew in it (didn't want to chance wasting a whole package of beef in case I missed) and found the cooking times given in ALL the published recipes I've found are just way too long. So while not sure, I used as a guide my proven stovetop pressure cooker timing for beef stew but accounting for the lower pressure this thing reaches (only 10-12 psi vs. a stovetop's 15 psi) I added a guessed 3 add'l minutes for a total of 12 minutes on High Pressure. I'm not recalling if I did natural depressurization all the way or if I did it for 10 minutes or whatever, then quick released the rest but will remake it again in small quantity and nail that down. So that's the learning curve right there. It'll take some time of experimentation, but the potential for pretty perfect results is most definitely there. And the convenience? Just completely unparalleled.
As for the size of the 3-qt. both in storage (especially in an RV) vs. its smaller capacity, while the 6-qt. would make more, I would not make that added size trade-off if cooking for 1-2 people. I mean 2 quarts of chile or stew or whatever - it's enough for leftovers even for 2. Cooking for 3 daily, marginal and for 4, iffy. But I'm beyond thrilled with this size and it definitely earns its storage space. LOVE IT!!