Is It Time For You To Start Cooking With A Crock Pot?
Cooking with a crock pot, or slow cooker, is said to save time and money. Is there really any truth to this assumption?
Save Time With a Crock Pot – If your meal is going to be in the slow cooker for 8 hours or so, doesn’t saving time seem like an oxymoron? The time savings comes in a few ways, but certainly being able to walk out of your kitchen while your meal is cooking does save you some time to do other things.
Assuming that one person can take on the job of “chief cook and bottle washer” is simply not a reality in today’s family. No hot burners or open flames mean that you can safely ask your youngsters to help out in the kitchen, adding ingredients to the crock pot, washing vegetables, and the like. Time you and you alone would have spent preparing your meal is no longer necessary. Because everyone can help, you are now free to take care of something else!
A watched pot never boils, and this is never truer than when you’re in a hurry to get dinner on the table. If you don’t have to stir a pot and watch it to make sure it stays on simmer, you can go about your business. After the ingredients are in the crock pot, you are free to take care of what you need to the rest of the day. Time spent over a hot stove is wasted time, indeed.
Frantic stops at the grocery store to quick grab something for dinner are a huge waste of time. You know you’re going to spend 30 minutes or more wandering around the store trying to think of something to cook for dinner. Of course, as time goes by, the choices for dinner start to narrow as time starts to slip further and further away. Planning two or three simple crock pot meals for the week allows you to consolidate your shopping trips into one instead of wasting time stopping every night trying to figure out what to cook. The time it takes to plan the meals and the shopping trip never adds up to the time you spend stopping every night in a panic. And, it’s so nice to come straight home after a busy day to enjoy a delicious meal.
Save Money With a Crock Pot – You’ve got to cook dinner anyway, so how can cooking in a crock pot save money? Food is food – it all costs the same, right? But, there are a couple ways that you can save money both in the grocery store and on your energy bill when you use a crock pot.
When you’re at the grocery store looking at beef, for instance, you’ll want to walk right by those expensive cuts and move over to the bargain cuts. Why? Slow cooking meat, at a low temperature, in a moist environment, is the best way to cook less expensive cuts. The sinew and connective tissues of the budget cuts break down under those conditions and the meat becomes tender, falling apart with a fork. More expensive cuts simply don’t cook as well, either, and are not worth the money. Good old rump roasts, pork shoulders, and the like are perfect for your crock pot – and your budget! Soups and stews, classic budget-friendly meals, are also a perfect match for your crock pot.
Even though you would cook a pot roast in the oven for half as long as you would cook it in a crock pot, the oven uses a lot more energy. Your oven uses 2500 watts, while a crock pot is normally rated at about 200 watts. That means that a 3 hour pot roast in the oven uses 10 kWh, while a 6 hour pot roast in the crock pot uses about 1.2 kWh. These are estimates, of course, but you must admit that even the most efficient full-sized oven can’t compete with a crock pot when it comes to energy savings. A crock pot can be considered a miniature oven just to get an idea of how and why it would save you money spent on your energy bill.
When the evening rush is upon you, it’s not the time to start panicking about dinner. If you’ve ever had to call the spouse to stop and pick up dinner somewhere, you know how much money that just cost you. Your family food budget cannot survive many of those last minute meal decisions. Instead, as you’re driving the family around after work and school, stopping for piano lessons, shopping for some school event, or running any of those last minute errands, your crock pot can be working for you, cooking a great, hearty meal for the whole family to enjoy when you finally come in through the door. No call for take out, no more money wasted on instant meals!
Save Both Time and Money With a Crock Pot – With a larger crock pot, say a 6 quart size, you can put together a big meal, cook it once, and plan to turn the leftovers into several more meals that will last the rest of the week. If you normally buy a lunch out every day, you can also save money by bringing your own home-cooked meal to work. Along with that, you can skip running around for lunch, saving your time for something more important. By cooking more than one meal in the same eight hour period of time, you are also saving energy. Cooking once and eating, two, three, or more times is a big way to save on both time and money.
Saving time and saving money seem to be pretty evident in these examples. Crock pots, when put to work, are an excellent way to not only save your budget and your time, for possibly your sanity, too. You have a family to take care of and a household to run. You definitely don’t need to have that nightmare every night of your hungry family crying “when’s dinner?” Now, you can answer “it’s in the crock pot!
Crockpot Recipes that will tempt the taste buds, save money, and save time? That’s certainly reason enough to try your hand at crockpot cooking!
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