Monday, January 15, 2024

snow and rain and ice and soup

Do you use an "instant pot" or other pressure cooker? I bought a 6-quart Gourmia during a holiday sale a couple of years ago, and it earns it's footprint in my tiny kitchen.


It's become my method-of-choice for vegetables and bulgur, both of which I cook often. Also for hard-boiling eggs. There's been a lot of experimenting and note-taking, to get the timing right - at first it's incomprehensible how short the cooking time can be - and sometimes my experimenting produces a nice surprise like this one:

The Easiest Soup Ever.

I take one jar of pasta sauce:

The shelf of What Was On Sale

And one package of Barilla tortellini.


And I make tortellini soup:


In case anyone wants to try it, here's the detailed description.
  • 1) Pour a whole jar of pasta sauce into the pot.
  • 2) Rinse the jar by filling it with water and shaking it, then add the water to the pot.
  • 3) Repeat step 2 and give it a stir. You have added 2 full jars of water to 1 jar of sauce.
  • 4) Turn on the pot - lid off - to a setting that will heat the liquid. I use "Saute" because it was the first one I tried, and it worked.* It takes just a couple of minutes to see steam rising from the sauce. Turn off the pot.
  • 5) Add the package of tortellini to the pot, give it a stir, put on the lid and set to Pressure Cook for 4 minutes.
  • 6) As soon as the 4 minutes are up, release the pressure and take the pot out of the base so it won't keep cooking from the residual heat.
  • 7) You are done making soup.
*I do Step 4 because it can take 10 minutes or so for the closed pot to come up to pressure, and I think preheating the liquid gives the pot a head-start. That way the tortellini isn't sitting in liquid, not cooking, for more time than is necessary. It's just my theory, but like the Saute button, it was an experiment and it worked, so I'll probably keep doing it forever.

So far I've tried six or seven different sauces, and the results were good every time. Sometimes different in consistency - once the sauce I used was quite watery all by itself, so adding 2 jars of water made a lighter soup than usual - but always tasty. Sometimes after cooking the sauce is still so thick, I add even more water to it when I reheat it. This is what happened yesterday, when I tried a new sauce, this one from Italy; the result could be served as "tortellini in a lot of sauce," but I really wanted soup so I diluted it again before serving.

At first I made a note to add even more water to the pot the next time this brand of sauce is used, but then I thought about storage space and realized it's more practical to make it the same way next time, freeze it in my favorite Pyrex bricks, and then add water when reheating.

Here are two Pyrex 3-cup containers, destined for the freezer:


And here's what it looked like with even more water added:



One thing that has really surprised me is that no matter how much water I use, either during or after cooking, I haven't needed to add more seasoning. Isn't that strange? Sometimes I do add things to a bowl of tortellini soup - like cheese or olives or yogurt - but it's not really needed.
This pressure cooker "recipe" is my best soup discovery ever.
So far.

Do you have any pressure cooker tips to share? Please do!
~~~~~

18 comments:

  1. I've never had a pressure cooker. I think I was traumatized when my mother's early version blew off its cap and decorated the kitchen ceiling with beef stew. I think they've improved the design since then.

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    1. I don't know about safety improvements, but it must have been a red-letter day in marketing history when someone put their hand up at a product development meeting and said, "Let's sidestep the image issue and not even call it a pressure cooker. Let's call it... an "Instant Pot."

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  2. No pressure cooker here. My mother used one often. It looked like the same one she used when I was a kid. I think she carried it around on her many moves.
    Tortellinia soup I haven't had in years.

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    1. We never had one when I was growing up, but the horrifying image of a pressure cooker explosion is nevertheless very deeply ingrained. Liz (above) is the very first person I know who has actually seen it happen!

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  3. We cooked with a pressure cooker for decades, till we bought an induction stove which doesn't work with stainless steel pots and pans. Now we're dithering between an induction-compatible pressure cooker and an Insta-Pot or generic version thereof. Your soup looks perfect for these wintry days.

    Chris from Boise

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    1. Did you use it for canning, Chris? For years I thought about getting a pressure cooker/canner, primarily to put up food, with general healthy cooking as a side benefit. The timing/expense/footprint blend was never quite right. Then I resisted the instant pot wave until the sale price was so low it seemed worth an experiment.

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    2. No, I've only ever water-bath-canned (jams and tomatoes). Ours was too short to fit quart jars. Glad to have your report on your Instant Pot. I need to haunt thrift store appliance sections and see what's on offer.

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    3. On the other hand (referring to the reputed dangers of pressure cooking), I have just managed to blow up our microwave. Someone - neither of us claims responsibility, so we're blaming the dogs - put a whole egg among the eggshells we microwave before feeding back to the hens...

      Chris from Boise

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    4. Oh my gosh - the dreaded exploding egg in the microwave! Been there. Ugh. I can smell it just thinking about it. Took a lot of cleaning and airing to remove that residual aroma. One nice thing about having to heat the house is that for several months my clean eggshells dry quickly in an old foil pie pan near the heater.

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  4. I only use a pressure cooker for canning. Just never got in the habit of using one. Your soup sounds really good, though. I have many friends who swear by their instapots. And their air fryers. And their pod coffeemakers. So many cool kitchen things these days, yet I plod along in my mainly 1950-ish kitchen, lol.

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    1. Honestly, one of the reasons I resisted getting one for years was the look of the thing. It still looks like a time traveller in my kitchen, but it's definitely earned it's place :)

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    2. I had to laugh because that's exactly how it would look here!

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  5. We keep debating about getting a pressure cooker. That soup looks good!

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  6. No pressure cooker or instant pot for me - they scare me. #2 son and daughter-in-love have one and swear by it, but we're not in that much of a hurry to cook a meal and we don't have room to store one anyway.

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    1. Storage space is a major issue here, and if something turns out to be not VERY useful, I give it away. There's a nice toaster oven which I never would have bought but I won at a church raffle, now waiting for a trip to the hospice shop.

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    2. Now I would relieve you of that toaster oven because we use ours pretty much every day.

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    3. I wish I could give it to you! I used it a dozen times for making toast, and that was it. Cleaning it to give away took more time than actually using it.

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