What's the fastest way to cook oatmeal porridge?
I often eat porridge for breakfast, and the way I've been cooking it is by adding oats & milk/water to a bowl, putting it in the microwave until it boils, and waiting for it to cool.
The problem with this method is that the whole process takes 20-25 minutes, mostly due to the time taken for everything to cool down to a level that doesn't scald my moth.
Unfortunately this amount of time is often unacceptable in the mornings. Is there an alternative way that is faster? I could shave a few minutes by adding boiling water to dry oats, but there is still 15-20 minutes to wait for everything to cool.
Best Answer
For my daughters, I usually have a speedy porridge process that goes like this:
- Oats, sugar and water to cover (we don't use milk, but it would be the same) in the bowl.
- About 3 minutes in the microwave, just to boiling point.
- This makes a fairly thick porridge, which is stirred for a minute to let steam out.
- Drop an ice cube into the bowl and stir until it's gone.
Voila, edibly warm porridge that isn't scalding hot.
The whole thing takes about five minutes, and for the three of those that the bowl is in the microwave you can do other things.
Pictures about "What's the fastest way to cook oatmeal porridge?"
How do you cook oatmeal fast?
Place 1/2 cup regular (old-fashioned) rolled oats and 1 cup water into a microwave safe bowl, along with a pinch of salt, if desired. (If you like your oatmeal a little soupier, use 1/3 cup oats) Cover bowl with a lid or inverted plate and microwave on high for 2 \xbd to 3 minutes. Voila!How do you cook Quaker oats fast?
Directions:How do you cook oatmeal in the microwave without boiling it over?
You need water almost the level of oats and a little bit more so the oatmeal will get cooked nicely. Add the sweetener. Now microwave in high for 2 minutes. Your oats should have been cooked by now.How long does porridge take to cook in microwave?
Mix the porridge oats, milk or water and a pinch of salt in a large microwaveproof bowl, then microwave on High for 5 minutes, stirring halfway through. Leave to stand for 2 minutes before eating.Minecraft wait what meme part 255 (Steve's heart)
More answers regarding what's the fastest way to cook oatmeal porridge?
Answer 2
If you want to save time in the morning, you can do so by doing it overnight and avoiding cooking all together. Combine it cold and leave in the fridge. Obviously, you can also elaborate on that for more interesting results.
Answer 3
My strategy:
1. Cook in microwave
Cook porridge in microwave as per packet instructions (quick oats are obviously quicker).
2. Add cooling ingredients
Add the right amount of cooling ingredients.
I typically add a splash of extra milk and a few frozen berries.
Around 10 frozen blueberries for a good serve of porridge adds a few extra vitamins, more taste, and makes it ready to eat straight away. Adding frozen Rasberries, nutella, and pistachios is also delicious.
Mix it up and it's ready to eat straight away. It's a two-minute process from preparation to starting eating.
Answer 4
I may be a heretic, but I use quick oats. It takes about a minute and a half in the microwave and I let it cool, covered, for about another minute.
Answer 5
When I want to have oatmeal porridge, I cook it in my rice cooker. It has a timer and a porridge setting, so I can set it up the night before, have it run at 6am or whatever is appropriate, so it finishes 15-20 minutes before I am ready to eat it. That way it cools off appreciably, and I can add milk/etc. to cool it further.
Disadvantage of this is you can't cook it with milk as the liquid, since that would go bad (similarly to cooking bread in bread machine overnight, no egg/liquid milk allowed).
Answer 6
There are two options as near as I can see:
Switch to quick/instant oats - they are cut much finer, so they have a higher surface area and absorb liquid much quicker. You can usually cook quick oats to the consistency of porridge in 2-3 minutes. Pour some cool milk on top and you are at optimum eating temperature within 5 minutes.
Buy a thermos and cook your oats over night. This is cheap effective and use can use higher quality or less processed oats. Before you go to bed pre-heat your thermos by letting some boiling water stand in it for a few minutes. Then pour in oats and boiling hot water at the right ratio before quickly sealing the container and leave it to cook overnight.
The second option gives you slow-cooked oats without the cost of running a slow cooker overnight.
Answer 7
Related to @AlexandreRafalovitch's answer: Hot cereals such as oatmeal can be slow-cooked overnight in a crockpot. The amount of water may need adjusting... but it does work.
Answer 8
Don't use a bowl to cool them in, use a large baking tray or flan dish
By spreading them out they will cool in a couple of minutes
Also be more precise in the amount or milk/water you add, and cook in the microwave for the minimum time required (usually three minutes). Some experimentation will usually show you can get away with less added liquid, and less time in the microwave
Answer 9
Cook the porridge before you shower, so you have something to do while it cools. The porridge will also cool faster in a shallower bowl with a spoon in it: shallower gives more surface area for conducting heat away and the spoon acts as a heat sink.
Answer 10
Easy 4 minutes
Get your bowl and measure out enough rolled oats.
Put oats in pot.
Add milk - no water - enough to cover - you don't want them swimming - but you don't want them gluggy.
Turn on heat and stir gently until steam just starts rising.
Here is the tricky bit: You need to catch them before they boil. You will get a couple of glugs as steam pushes through the oats - this is ok - keep stirring - just don't let the milk burn - the volume of steam will get quite high.
Remove from heat - add sugar.
Mmmmmm Enjoy.
One of the universe's greatest simple foods - oats, milk, sugar - the other being homemade custard - eggs, milk, sugar.
Answer 11
Oatmeal, like many foods, cooks faster in a pressure cooker.
To cool quickly, place near a fan to speed the diffusion of heat.
Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.
Images: Markus Spiske, Piotr Arnoldes, Joshua Welch, Andrea Piacquadio