Java, here:
Sorry there are no measurements on the spices - I've been making this for almost 15 years, so everything is eyeballed.
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
Java, here:
Sorry there are no measurements on the spices - I've been making this for almost 15 years, so everything is eyeballed.
Jess, thanks! And a bonus picture of the Flag baby, too!
We make, in our slow cooker, the following: pot roast, chicken and veggies with gravy, roaster chickens, chili, and soups.
I use mine mostly for making stock - I can get turkey "parts" (mostly necks and wings) for cheap at the farmer's market, let them simmer all day in the slow cooker with an onion and a little salt, and have turkey stock in the freezer all the time instead of buying the canned stuff. I LURVE IT.
I'm thinking I'll be able to do the same for veggie stock? Or am I outta my mind?
Yeah, I was just wondering about their definition of "modest"...
I will say that, even with my 6-quart cooker, given the amount of veggies I use when I make pot roast and the like, a 3 1/2 to 4 lb roast barely fits (especially given that the ideal amount to start is something like 2/3 full).
ETA(gree with Jessica): Homemade stock has been the true revelation.
I'm thinking I'll be able to do the same for veggie stock? Or am I outta my mind?
Not at all -- veg stock doesn't need the amount of time that meat stocks do (no bones -> no collagen to be broken down over time), so a lot of people don't bother to slow cook them, but there's no reason why you shouldn't.
The tricky thing with veggie stock is that some veggies will turn bitter if you simmer them too long, so it may take a few tries to get the balance right.
So I could leave my roaster chicken carcass in the crockpot, add some onion and celery, cover it with water and make stock?
Yup.