I need some holiday gift ideas (that I will probably gift to myself as well)!

  • chronicledmonocle@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    Instant Pot (on sale): There is legitimately so many things you can make in these. Many of them do sous vide too, which is one of the best ways to cook meat.

    Powered ratchet: For anyone who works on their own vehicles, a cheap powered ratchet is a godsend. I bought one for oil changes and car repairs and it’s my most used tool in my bag. I’m mad I spent so much time without one. Walmart’s Hyper Tough brand powered ratchet is $40 and holds up very well. Extended reach one is often on sale for $50-55.

    E-Ink reader: Another often on sale item. If you have someone who loves books, having an entire library in your pocket with a built-in backlight for night reading that’s also easy on the eyes is a great thing. Coupled with Calibre and some…sourced epub files…and you can read a lot for free.

    Vacuum sealer: Never have freezer burned stuff again. And keeps things fresh in the fridge longer. Also works great for sous vide for the above-mentioned Instant Pot.

    • MIDItheKID@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      Can you share some instant pot meals/ideas? I got one and it barely gets used. Every time I look stuff up or ask peoole it’s the same “crack chicken” recepies.

      Mine is essentially a big power hungry medium boiled egg maker. Really wish it got more use.

      • chicken@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        11 months ago

        Dried beans (includes garbanzo etc). With an automatic pressure cooker like that cooking dried beans goes from an ordeal where you have to soak them overnight and watch a pot for 5 hours and probably get indigestion because they’re undercooked anyway to, spend 2 minutes throwing in the beans and water and pressing the button and then come back sometime between 1-5 hours later to perfectly cooked beans. Save money and space in your pantry getting rid of cans.

      • chronicledmonocle@lemmy.world
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        11 months ago

        Anything sous vide (if yours has a sous vide button). You can use ziplock bags in Leiu of a vac sealer. Chicken or steak sous vide and then quick seared in a hot pan for color is the best.

        Olive Garden style Chicken Gnocchi soup (dozens of copycat recipes online). You can buy pre-packaged gnocchi or make it yourself. Get a loaf of French bread to toast cheap at the grocery store and it’ll blow your mind.

        Basically any Chili recipe can be made 5-10x faster pressure cooked. No need to simmer it for hours.

        Use it as a rice cooker. Pressure cooked white rice tastes like Chinese restaurant sticky rice and take 10 minutes. Get a box of frozen orange chicken from Costco and you’ve got Orange chicken over rice in about 18 minutes. Or cook some refried beans, brown rice, and fried eggs for a quick breakfast. Nothing beats a salt and pepper runny yolk egg soaked into rice.

        Hard boiling eggs you mentioned already, but if you like egg salad it’s a great way to make easy peal boiled eggs for mashing into egg salad in the fridge.

        Those are just a few things I use mine for ranging from moderate to simple.

        • MIDItheKID@lemmy.world
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          11 months ago

          Hah. I think my problem might be that I have gadgets for all of these things already.

          I have a sous vide, so no need to use it for that

          Chili I usually make in my slow cooker because it yields larger amounts (I usually fill the whole thing up and freeze a bunch of it)

          I have a Zojirushi rice cooker, but I’m willing to try the instant pot if it is faster. I will check that out.

          Chicken Gnocchi soup sounds amazing though.

      • Stephen304@lemmy.ml
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        11 months ago

        Here’s my favorite recipes, I use it every week:

        Ribs - easy to get super consistent results, pressure cooking helps keep moisture in.

        Clam chowder - creamy New England style, I add a lot of different seasonings to amp it up. The clams I get in cans and bottled clam juice so the only non-shelf-stable ingredients are onions, carrots, celery, and garlic

        Spaghetti carbonara - my new cook book addition. grating the cheese adds more work, but overall still very simple as far as instant pot recipes go - saute the pancetta and reserve, saute onion and garlic, pressure cook pasta in broth, stir in butter, cream, cheese, egg, and pancetta when done

        Corn chowder - really similar to the clam chowder but good for if you’re not feeling seafood, like most of the recipes I favorite, the steps mostly amount to dumping all the ingredients in, pressure cooking, and stirring in something extra at the end (in this case cornstarch and half&half to thicken)

        I also use the instant pot some for other recipes but I lean heavily towards 1 pot meals and stuff where I can get away with putting 90% of the ingredients in for the pressure cooking step, that does mean a lot of soups but I’m working on adding more pasta dishes to my repertoire.

          • Stephen304@lemmy.ml
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            11 months ago

            The ribs are the simplest, at its most basic all you have to do is remove the membrane on the back and then curl it up on a trivet over a cup of water, pressure cook high for 25 minutes and let sit under pressure for 10-25 more minutes after it’s done (depending on how fall-off-the-bone you want, I usually like 25mins), glaze with bbq sauce and broil in the oven until it gets a bit of char.

            You can also salt & pepper it before putting it in, use apple cider vinegar instead of water, and/or add a few drops of liquid smoke in the instant pot. But it turns out great even when I forget to do those things so really all you need is ribs and sauce.

            I got the recipe from here: https://www.pressurecookrecipes.com/easy-bbq-instant-pot-ribs/

      • stealth_cookies@lemmy.ca
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        11 months ago

        A lot of my use for my instant pot is to make batches of chicken stock to stick in the freezer.

        Other than that these are a few of my most frequent recipes:

        Spicy Instant Pot Carrot Soup
        Chicken Tikka Masala
        Chicken Adobo
        Cilantro Lime Chicken

        The last one isn’t really a pressure cooker recipe, but you can make nearly any slow cooker recipe a pressure cooker recipe by just cooking it under pressure for about 30-45 minutes.

    • Justfollowingorders1@lemmy.ml
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      11 months ago

      If you have decent freezer space, there’s no excuse to not use a vac sealer. I have so many friends that constantly complain about meat prices but don’t take advantage of buying meat on sale in bulk. With a vac sealer, you can really get ahead. Also processing and preparing your own meat products (burgers, sausage).

      We also vac seal soups and broths!