Copyright 2013
by the Editors at Americas Test Kitchen
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any manner whatsoever without written permission from the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews.
Slow Cooker Revolution
Volume 2: The Easy-Prep Edition
1st Edition
Paperback: $26.95 US
EPub 978-1-936493-76-0
ISBN-13: 978-1-936493-57-9
ISBN-10: 1-936493-57-8
Library of Congress control number:
2011279393
Manufactured in the United States
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
DISTRIBUTED BY
Americas Test Kitchen
17 Station Street, Brookline, MA 02445
EDITORIAL DIRECTOR: Jack Bishop
EDITORIAL DIRECTOR, BOOKS: Elizabeth Carduff
EXECUTIVE FOOD EDITOR: Julia Collin Davison
EXECUTIVE EDITOR: Lori Galvin
SENIOR EDITOR: Dan Zuccarello
ASSOCIATE EDITORS: Kate Hartke, Alyssa King
TEST COOKS: Sara Mayer, Ashley Moore, Stephanie Pixley
ASSISTANT TEST COOK: Lainey Seyler
DESIGN DIRECTOR: Amy Klee
ART DIRECTOR: Greg Galvan
ASSOCIATE ART DIRECTOR: Beverly Hsu
DESIGNER: Allison Pfiffner
PHOTOGRAPHY BY: Keller + Keller
STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER: Daniel J. van Ackere
ADDITIONAL PHOTOGRAPHY: Stephen Klise, Carl Tremblay
PHOTO EDITOR: Stephen Klise
FOOD STYLING: Catrine Kelty, Marie Piraino
PHOTOSHOOT KITCHEN TEAM:
ASSOCIATE EDITOR: Chris OConnor
TEST COOK: Daniel Cellucci
ASSISTANT TEST COOK: Cecilia Jenkins
PRODUCTION DIRECTOR: Guy Rochford
SENIOR PRODUCTION MANAGER: Jessica Quirk
SENIOR PROJECT MANAGER: Alice Carpenter
PRODUCTION AND TRAFFIC COORDINAT OR: Brittany Allen
WORKFLOW AND DIGITAL ASSET MANAGER: Andrew Mannone
SENIOR COLOR AND IMAGING SPECIALIST: Lauren Pettapiece
PRODUCTION AND IMAGING SPECIALISTS: Heather Dube, Lauren Robbins
COPYEDITOR: Barbara Wood
PROOFREADER: Ann-Marie Imbornoni
INDEXER: Elizabeth Parson
PICTURED ON COVER:
Welcome to Americas Test Kitchen
This book has been tested, written, and edited by the folks at Americas Test Kitchen, a very real 2,500-square-foot kitchen located just outside of Boston. It is the home of Cooks Illustrated magazine and Cooks Country magazine and is the Monday-through-Friday destination for more than three dozen test cooks, editors, food scientists, tasters, and cook-ware specialists. Our mission is to test recipes over and over again until we understand how and why they work and until we arrive at the best version.
We start the process of testing a recipe with a complete lack of conviction, which means that we accept no claim, no theory, no technique, and no recipe at face value. We simply assemble as many variations as possible, test a half-dozen of the most promising, and taste the results blind. We then construct our own hybrid recipe and continue to test it, varying ingredients, techniques, and cooking times until we reach a consensus. The result, we hope, is the best version of a particular recipe, but we realize that only you can be the final judge of our success (or failure). As we like to say in the test kitchen, We make the mistakes, so you dont have to.
All of this would not be possible without a belief that good cooking, much like good music, is indeed based on a foundation of objective technique. Some people like spicy foods and others dont, but there is a right way to saut, there is a best way to cook a pot roast, and there are measurable scientific principles involved in producing perfectly beaten, stable egg whites. This is our ultimate goal: to investigate the fundamental principles of cooking so that you become a better cook. It is as simple as that.
You can watch us work (in our actual test kitchen) by tuning in to Americas Test Kitchen (AmericasTestKitchenTV.com) or Cooks Country from Americas Test Kitchen (CooksCountryTV.com) on public television, or by subscribing to Cooks Illustrated magazine (CooksIllustrated.com) or Cooks Country magazine (CooksCountry.com). We welcome you into our kitchen, where you can stand by our side as we test our way to the best recipes in America.
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Preface
I grew up, at least in part, on a Vermont farm and was used to a kitchen that had no appliances to speak of, just a wood-burning Kalamazoo cast-iron stove, a hand pump for water in the sink, and a lot of elbow grease.
Since that time, however, many time-saving appliances have appeared, including the food processor, stand mixer, microwave, pressure cooker, toaster oven, and slow cooker. Of those devices, it is only the slow and pressure cookers that offer a whole new way of preparing finished dishesthe others are there to help prep food, not cook it through.
At first, the slow cooker was nothing more than plug-in convenience; dinner cooks while you are at work or out in the fields. When we published Slow Cooker Revolution three years ago, we decided to take a fresh look at this appliance, to use slow cooking as an advantage, not a restriction. To date, we have sold over 300,000 copies.
To do a second book (like Spider-Man 2) is risky business. One is apt to produce something half as good and twice as long! But we had a very clear goal in mind with this second volumewe wanted easier preparation (many of the recipes in the first book required front-end sauting, browning, and flavor development), and we also wanted to explore new territory, including complete pasta dinners, creamy dips, usually quick-cooking seafood recipes, and desserts such as cheesecake, brownies, and even crme brle.
Lets start at the beginning. This book includes 200 all-new recipes; there are no repeats from our first volume. All of the recipes in this second volume require no more than 15 minutes of active prep time before everything goes into the slow cooker. We also redefined the slow-cooker time-line. Some recipes are done in an hour or two, and others in 3 to 4 hours. You dont have to wait all day for dinner anymore.
Every year, around April, my neighbors Tom and Nancy and I have a game dinner, usually based on rabbits that ended up in the freezer during the hunting season. One year, we had a dozen or so rabbits that ended up in an all-day slow cooker along with a tomato-based spaghetti sauce. The results were quite good but not ideal since the meat turned out a bit dry. The point is simplethe slow cooker can be an instrument of good cooking or bad; one simply has to pay attention to its strengths and weaknesses.
That, of course, is what we do in our test kitchenfind the good ideas and eliminate the bad ones. Through this process we find that, sometimes, cutting corners works out just fine and other times it doesnt. That reminds me of the story of the Vermont sexton who had held onto his job as the town grave-digger, although he was not known as a model of industry. One day, the head of the cemetery association decided to have a talk with the man and said, Jeb, I dont like to mention this but it seems that every new grave you dig is a bit shallower than the one before. Jeb replied, Well, you havent seen anyone climb out of one yet, have you?
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