I would really like to go to bed, but the slow cooker isn't done
I've got a 6.5qt slow cooker going, with about 7lbs of corned beef in it. I had put it on HIGH around 4:30pm, figuring that it would take six to eight hours to cook. Well, it's half-past midnight, and it's not done: the meat is chewy in exactly the way corned beef shouldn't be, due to an abundance of insufficiently cooked connective tissue.
What do I do now?
If I put it on LOW and go to sleep, it will be eight more hours of cooking, which seems like rather a lot.
I'd been planning on cooking the cabbage in the broth, after the meat was done, overnight. I could fish the meat out, put it in the fridge, and go ahead and cook the cabbage, then tomorrow morning, swap out the cabbage and continue cooking the meat. Since I have a commitment tomorrow, that means I'm still going to be stuck leaving the meat in the cooking for an additional 5hrs minimum.
Should I leave the meat in there on WARM overnight? Will that (1) be safe, and (2) be sufficient to cook it?
No, I don't have a slow cooker with a timer; no, I am not waking up in the middle of the night; no, I can't take the ceramic liner out and park it in the fridge (it's bigger than my fridge.)
Best Answer
Warm isn't guaranteed to be safe. On some cookers it might be, but unless you've checked yours already, you can't say for sure. I suppose you could try it and check the temperature in the morning, and if it's above 140F everywhere, it's okay, but I'm not sure you want to risk that.
So I think you're stuck either cooking it overnight (on low, not warm) or moving it to the fridge and cooking more tomorrow.
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Can I leave a slow cooker on while I sleep?
Slow cookers are designed to be left to cook for long periods of time, so the truth is that it's entirely safe to leave your slow cooker on overnight, if you're out the house or if you're at work all day, as long as you follow all the directions and the manufacturer's instructions.Can you leave a slow cooker on high overnight?
You can leave a crockpot on low or warm overnight, but not on high. Most slow cookers run on 50-300 watts. If you take the right precautions, then the risk of fire is minute. Most recipes would not call for a crockpot to be left on high for more than 4 to 6 hours because the food would overcook.Can you turn a slow cooker off and back on?
\u201cTechnically, you could stop and restart a slow cooker for a short period of time if you don't let the food get below 140 degrees Fahrenheit, but I wouldn't risk it.\u201dIs 4 hours on high the same as 8 hours on low?
The difference between the two settings isn't a higher temperature, it's the time it takes for the slow cooker to reach the simmer point. On high, that's around three to four hours, and on low, it's seven to eight, according to Crock-Pot. So imagine if your dinner is cooking away on high all day while you're at work.Turkey Wings \u0026 Gravy In A Slow Cooker: Slow Cooked Smothered Turkey Wings
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Answer 2
Slow cookers vary quite a bit, it's impossible to predict what your cooker will do. That being said, leaving it on low overnight will typically be quite safe: the higher heat inside the cooker will mean that moist air is escaping the cooker, not entering it, so you're not going to run any added risk of contamination. And if eight hours at low heat is not enough to cook the dish sufficiently, then it's not likely that chilling and then giving it five hours at high heat will do any better. If you find yourself in this situation again, I would suggest you leave the cooker on low heat and sleep well.
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