Originally Posted by lewdog:
Cooked two things in the Instapot today. We did get the 8qt with the air fryer lid as well.
Frozen chicken breast dumped in for teriyaki chicken. I can't believe how awesome the texture of the chicken was and this is going to be amazing for me to meal prep during the week.
At night I cooked 8 wings on the pressure cooker setting and followed that with 20 minutes with the air fryer. Well I'll be damned, they were juicy yet crispier than any wings I've made using the oven before.
I think we have a winner. And thank you for talking me into the bigger size.
Tonight's fish taco iteration is beer battered Alaskan Black Rockfish dressed simply with cabbage, guac slices, cilantro and lime. Corn tortillas to change it up.
Not dinner. When I was very young my Grandpa taught me how to make soft boiled eggs. Wasn't much to teach but it's a great standby breakfast. The trick is to cook the whites but keep the yoke yokey. Add some jalapenos, hot sauce and crumble up some bread and mix it all up. Mm Mm good! [Reply]
Vailpass's electric pressure cooker chicken enchiladas recipe from DC. Pretty damn good kids loved them. It still a little time intensive but not bad. If I could and kids would still eat I would add more heat. Also needs more tomato sauce and chicken broth than what recipe calls for. The 3 chicken breasts soaks up a lot of the sauce so it was just a bit dry. Maybe a cup and a half chicken broth and 3 instead of 2 8 oz cans tomato sauce
Direct out the oven.
typed with my trusty nose picker using Tapatalk [Reply]
Remember, once done, VERY hot pan, grape seed or avocado oil, and a quick sear..
Originally Posted by Megatron96:
Pics please, or it didn't happen . . .
No pics but it turned out pretty good. The texture was just amazing and it's crazy that the time window is so variable, which makes dinner timing very easy. I cooked at 135 degrees for 1 hour and 20 minutes.
I seared each side for 1 minute in a very hot cast iron after the Sous Vide. However, it didn't taste as good as a steak cooked just in the cast iron. I seasoned the steak before placing in the bag but should I be timing the seasoning differently? Normally I season steaks with salt/pepper and let them sit in the fridge overnight before cooking. [Reply]
Originally Posted by lewdog:
No pics but it turned out pretty good. The texture was just amazing and it's crazy that the time window is so variable, which makes dinner timing very easy. I cooked at 135 degrees for 1 hour and 20 minutes.
I seared each side for 1 minute in a very hot cast iron after the Sous Vide. However, it didn't taste as good as a steak cooked just in the cast iron. I seasoned the steak before placing in the bag but should I be timing the seasoning differently? Normally I season steaks with salt/pepper and let them sit in the fridge overnight before cooking.
Interesting.. I've never had it taste different. That being said, I Sous Vide mine with fresh Rosemary (I LOVE IT), and that really helps me get more of that infused into the steak.
But yes, Sous Vide REALLY helps with timing dinner. Once you know the "out of the water, through the pan, and onto the plate" time, all the other things, including visitors being chatty and late, simply don't matter. Make the sides when you want, the steaks will be ready.... [Reply]