Is It Time For You To Start Cooking With A Crock Pot?

By Susanne Myers

Is there really any truth to the assumption that cooking with a crock pot, or slow cooker, saves you both money and time? How exactly can a crock pot do this?

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!

Even standing over a stove and stirring a pot, watching it boil so to speak, is time that you could have for something else. Once the ingredients are in the crock pot, you can walk away and get on with your day and your errands. When you walk back into your kitchen, you have a delicious meal without that time-consuming pot watching. That's certainly a time saver.

You're on your way home after a hard day of work and errands, and realize that there is nothing in the house for dinner. A quick stop at the grocery store is now on your agenda, and, of course, there is no such thing as a quick stop at the grocery store. Half an hour later, you emerge with food you didn't want, too many prepared dishes that cost way too much, but you don't have time to fix anything else. That stop just cost you an awful lot of precious time. By planning your crock pot meals ahead and shopping at a scheduled time, you could avoid those hasty stops at the grocery store, or worse, the convenience store. That time spent could be put to much better use, like sitting and enjoying your family at dinnertime!

Save Money With a Crock Pot - There are a couple schools of thought here. One is saving on your food, and the other is saving on energy. How exactly can cooking with a crock pot save on your food budget? And why would running a crock pot for six hours be cheaper than running your oven for three hours?

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.

Considering the design of a crock pot, it just makes sense that you are using less energy when you cook with your crock pot for extended periods of time. Take, for instance, cooking a pot roast in your oven. That meal is committing your oven to roughly 2500 watts, whereas that same pot roast in a crock pot would be committing about 200 watts for the same meal. So, a 3 hour oven cooked pot roast would use 10 kWh, while a 6 hour crock pot cooked roast would use about 1.2 kWh. These are rough estimates, but you can see how using a miniature oven, your crock pot, to do extended cooking will save money on your energy bills.

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 - Cooking larger portions, and planning for your leftovers, is one way to save both time and money. With a large crock pot, a 6 quart size, you can cook larger cuts of meat, turn that meat into several dinners, then package up the leftovers for lunches. By cooking one large meal, you have now created several dinners plus lunches all in about the same time it takes to cook one meal. Not only are you saving energy by cooking more than meal at a time, but you're saving the time it takes each day to put together a new meal. Plus, if eating lunch out is a routine for you, just think of the money you'll be saving by bringing your own home-cooked meal to eat each day. And, maybe instead of using your lunch hour to run out and get something to eat, you can use the extra time to do something you enjoy.

These arguments for cooking with a crock pot to save both time and money should be sufficient to convince most folks. If that's not enough, consider your sanity. You have a busy family and when everyone is hollering about what's for dinner, you can finally relax and say "look in the crock pot! - 29956

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