Slow Cooker & Fat - Blend it back in?
I have a layer of grease on the top of my slow cooker. The recipie is a sausage & bean hotpot with smoked paprika and red wine. My issue is that I added a little too much liquid and now the fat has separated and risen to the top. As any good cook knows, much of the flavour is in the fat, plus the fat absorbs a lot of the spices.
I'm a believer in healthy food, but don't believe that all food should be healthy. As such, I'd like to blend everything back together and see how it goes. My thinking at this point is along two avenues:
- Add something starchy (Cornstarch, Lentils, Mashed Potato...) to allow the oil and water to bond.
- Add an emulsifier (Mustard, Egg Yolk, etc)
- Separate the liquids from the solids, transfer the liquids to a pan, and reduce. This should concentrate the flavour while allowing the solids already in the sauce to do technique #1 for me.
Right now I'm leaning towards egg yolks, a few lentils certainly wouldn't harm the flavour I'm going for either. Has anyone tried the above techniques, specifically with regards to a slow cooker? How did it turn out?
Best Answer
If you wish to continue down the road of a singular dish I would recommend the emulsifier. Incorporating the fat through blending it with some of the liquid in a side pan or pot with ground mustard would be easiest and most complete. You should be able to continue cooking without further separation.
However, if you are cooking the dish too hot you may be forcing some of the fat from the meat or otherwise loosing it from too much agitation and you will want to make any adjustments necessary.
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Does meat need to be submerged in slow cooker?
It should just cover the meat and vegetables. Don't overfill your slow cooker, or it may start leaking out the top, and the food won't cook so well. Half to two-thirds full is ideal \u2013 certainly no more than three-quarters.Should food be covered with liquid in a slow cooker?
Water or liquid is necessary to create steam. When cooking meat or poultry, the water or liquid level should cover the ingredients to ensure effective heat transfer throughout the crock. Some manufacturers of slow cookers recommend adding liquid to fill the stoneware 1/2 to 3/4 full.Can you overcrowd a slow cooker?
Because overcrowding, whether it's in a sheet pan or a slow-cooker, will make the dish cook unevenly. And our guess is you aren't hoping for mushy, half-cooked meat and veggies. For best results, fill the slow-cooker halfway to 1/3 of the way up\u2014if you can't fit the lid on tightly, it's definitely too full.Is 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.30 Days 30 Slow Cooker Recipes
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