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The Instant Pot Cookbook: 90 Healthy and Quick Recipes For Your Electric Pressure Cooker
The Instant Pot Cookbook: 90 Healthy and Quick Recipes For Your Electric Pressure Cooker
The Instant Pot Cookbook: 90 Healthy and Quick Recipes For Your Electric Pressure Cooker
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The Instant Pot Cookbook: 90 Healthy and Quick Recipes For Your Electric Pressure Cooker

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You are about to enjoy fresh, customizable pressure cooker recipes, with over 100,000 copies sold - you cannot choose to let go of this unavoidable cookbook in your kitchen.
You can cook everything imaginable, most especially a variety of healthy recipes you and your loved ones cannot afford to miss. From savory beans and legumes to tasty desserts and more.
The Instant Pot Cookbook contains 90 meals that include pressure levels and cooking times - Faro and Beans in Collard Green Wraps, Turkey Chili and Red Bean, Tasty & Bright Lentils, Bacon with Beer Braised Peas, Surly Kitchen's Refried Beans, Re-fried Beans, Natural Warm Cannellini & Mint Bean Salad, Barbeque Pork Ribs & Spinach-Bean Salad.
These recipes are also kid friendly, perfect for long term enthusiasts and beginners.
Grab yours today!
LanguageEnglish
PublisherRaymond James
Release dateJul 27, 2019
ISBN9788834161043
The Instant Pot Cookbook: 90 Healthy and Quick Recipes For Your Electric Pressure Cooker

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    The Instant Pot Cookbook - David Albert

    David Albert

    The Instant Pot Cookbook

    90 Healthy and Quick Recipes For Your Electric Pressure Cooker

    First published by Henry Walters in 2016

    Copyright © David Albert, 2018

    All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, scanning, or otherwise without written permission from the publisher. It is illegal to copy this book, post it to a website, or distribute it by any other means without permission.

    David Albert has no responsibility for the persistence or accuracy of URLs for external or third-party Internet Websites referred to in this publication and does not guarantee that any content on such Websites is, or will remain, accurate or appropriate.

    First edition

    This book was professionally typeset on Reedsy

    Find out more at reedsy.com

    To all the good friends, loved ones, and busy families who are willing to have direct access to a variety of nutritious and delicious meals.

    The Instant Pot Cookbook is a book to have. Very comprehensive to follow and user friendly. Most of the recipes are my family’s favorites.

    - Stacy Fowler

    Contents

    INTRODUCTION

    The Pressure Cooker

    The Pressure Cooker History

    Benefits of the Pressure Cooker

    Brief Tips On How to Maintain your Pressure Cooker.

    13 PRESSURE COOKER BEANS AND LEGUMES RECIPES

    Faro and Beans in Collard Green Wraps

    Turkey Chili and Red Bean

    Tasty & Bright Lentils

    Bacon with Beer Braised Peas.

    Surly Kitchen's Refried Beans

    Re-fried Beans

    Natural Warm Cannellini & Mint Bean Salad

    Barbeque Pork Ribs & Spinach-Bean Salad

    Natural Soy Milk

    Roman Whole Fresh Fava Bean Sauté

    Natural Easy Black Beans

    Sweet Potato and Black-eyed Peas

    Chickpea Hummus Spread

    10 PRESSURE COOKER DESSERT RECIPES

    Blackberry Italian Soda

    Lemon Marmalade

    Natural Chocó flan Mexican Cake

    Indian Delicious Bengali Arugula Puffed Cheese Spheres.

    Christmas pudding

    Chestnut Truffles with Crunchy Hazelnut

    Almond Chocolate Barletta Bean Cake

    Easy and Chic Crème Caramel

    Arborio Rice Pudding with Mandarin Coins, Thyme, and Amaretto Cookie Crumbs

    Wine Poached Figs on Yogurt Crème

    4 PRESSURE COOKER EGGS RECIPES

    French Baked Eggs

    Poached Egg in bell pepper cup

    Natural Marbled Chinese Tea Eggs

    Soft, Medium, and Hard Boiled Eggs

    8 PRESSURE COOKER FISH & SEAFOOD RECIPES

    Coconut Fish Curry

    Calamari Tomato Sauce

    Perfectly Steamed Mussels (Cozze Serenissime)

    Pasta with Tuna and Capers

    New England clam chowder

    Sushi Rice

    Fish in a Packet

    Potato & Octopus Salad

    9 PRESSURE COOKER FRUITS RECIPES

    Blackberry Italian Soda

    Easy & Quick Barbeque Sauce

    Chestnut Spread

    Cranberry Sauce from Dried Berries

    Pumpkin Cutie Pies

    Honey-sweetened Pectin-Free Strawberry Jam

    Candied Lemon Peels

    Super-Fast Lemon Marmalade

    Quick & Spicy Mango Chutney

    13 PRESSURE COOKER GRAINS & RICE RECIPES

    Risotto ale Lenticchie

    Turkey Chili and Red Bean

    Tasty & Bright Lentils

    Chicken, Rice Burrito & Bowl Black Beans

    Sage & Nutmeg Butternut Squash Autumn Risotto

    Hot Tamales

    Maple Steel-cut Oats

    Natural Cumin Spiced Millet Pilaf

    Perfect Chicken and Rice

    Peruvian Black Quinoa Salad

    Chickpea Curry with Brown Rice (one pot meal)

    Strawberries & Cream Rolled Oats

    Spanish Arroz–rice

    9 PRESSURE COOKER MEAT & POULTRY RECIPES

    Tandoori Barbecue Pork Ribs

    Pork Sausage & Lentils

    Pork Chops and Cabbage

    Barbecue Pork Ribs & Spinach-Bean Salad

    Natural Pot Roast with Cauliflower and Potato Mash

    Spicy Chicken Wings

    Cottage Pie

    Rosemary Veal Stew

    Babotie - South African Mince Meat Pie

    10 PRESSURE COOKER PASTA & SAUCE RECIPES

    Meatballs in Tomato Sauce

    Ragu Meat Sauce

    Zucchini Pesto

    Spicy Pasta Butterflies

    Pasta with Spinach Pesto

    Chickpea Minestrone

    Spicy Eggplant Sauce

    Tasty Italian Mac & Cheese

    Bolognese Ragu Pasta Sauce

    Pasta Casserole

    14 PRESSURE COOKER VEGETABLE RECIPES

    Cream of Butternut Squash and Ginger Soup

    Whole Fresh Fava Bean Sauté

    Roasted Garlic

    Brussels sprouts with Pomegranate and Pine Nuts

    Green Bean Warm Salad

    Spicy Mashed Potatoes

    White Beet and Garlic Sauté

    Steamed and Fried Artichoke Blooms

    Mushroom & Gorgonzola Polenta Lasagna

    Natural Mini crustless pumpkin pies

    Hip Stuffed Zucchini on a Tomato Bed

    Peperonata Sauce or Side Dish

    Cauliflower and Fennel Velouté with Gorgonzola Garnish

    Baked Potatoes

    INTRODUCTION

    Cooking will be excellent with great equipment used in the kitchen. It has been a form of challenge preparing meals traditionally on an oven, or kitchen stove. Moreover, cooking at home goes far beyond this ancient strategy. The only solution to this situation is simply pressure cooking. When you use water and the cooking liquid to prepare your meals in the pressure cooker, then you make the cooking process very simple. Most of the meals you encounter long stretch hours to cook with the stove will get ready in few minutes with your pressure cooker. This will make your cooking lively; you will always find it very interesting to prepare meals for your entire family. Sometimes, in all meals that are essential, you might not know the great value of your pressure cooker until you use it for cooking with a collection of ingredients that normally take long hours, in essence, it is very fast and time-saving.

    Besides, there is nothing you cannot cook with your pressure cooker. For instance, rice, in some few minutes, you are done. Even if you intend to prepare chickpeas and beans which take long to prepare traditionally, in less than sixty minutes, you are done. In essence, you cannot afford not to have the pressure cooking machine in your kitchen, except if you are not the busy person, more so, time is very important and essential to our daily administrative tasks. Eggs that are hard-boiled, vegetables, stews, soups, and pulses are suitable for preparation, as used in all parts of the world, with the pressure cooker. I will personally recommend pre-heating your pressure cooker over a medium heat or as instructed in the recipe directions in this book, before adding the food ingredients, while you cover it with the lid, and then at a specific level of pressure, allow the meals to cook for a period of time as instructed in this cookbook, or if yours came with a pressure cooking chart, you can make use of it.

    Pressure cooking relies solely on water and the cooking liquid, forced into the food while steam increases, this makes the food moistened and gets done speedily. Enough liquid is required, depending on the size of the pressure cooker, and once the food is prepared completely, please release the pressure, fast or slow depending on the food recipe you are cooking. Another amazing fact is when you pressure cook your chicken parts, they become soft and moistened with a delicious liquid, bone-in chicken and tougher cuts of beef are superb when pressure cooked. Please carefully read and follow the safety tips and precautions, maintenance, recipe directions contained in this book, you will never experience any unforeseen situation such as accidents or explosions.

    The Pressure Cooker

    A pressure cooker is a sealed pot or cooking machine that contains a lot of steam inside, as a result of the heat, with the capacity to build up low or high pressure and helps to cook food faster. You can never create pressure in the cooker without any liquid inside, while it is covered. When the steam is disallowed from escaping, the internal pressure will increase, and the more it increases, the temperature will also increase. Immediately after the recommended time, when the cooker has reached pressure, you gently release the pressure for the safety of opening the lid.

    The steam in the pressure cooker, either at high or low pressure helps to raise the boiling point of the water or anything liquid such as steamed vegetables or soup, when

    the heat is restricted to 212 degrees Fahrenheit, and the food gets done quickly when an additional 38 degrees Fahrenheit is added, so as to make the overall boiling point as high as 250 degrees Fahrenheit.

    The Pressure Cooker History

    Denis Papin of France, George Gutbrod of Germany, José Alix Martinez of Spain, and Alfred Vischer of America were forced to reckon with as far as the history of the pressure cooker is concerned. Denis Papin, the French Mathematician, and Physicist was known for his brilliant invention of the steam digester in the seventeenth century, precisely 1679. His motive was to decrease the actual cooking time of food. His pressure cooker was airtight, which was able to raise the boiling point of water, it cooked food much faster. Later in 1864, in Stuttgart, Germany, George Gutbrod started building some pressure cookers, made of tinned cast iron.

    José Alix Martinez of Spain was granted the right for the invention of a pressure cooker in the city of Zaragoza in the year 1918, and he personally named it olla exprés, meaning the express cooking pot. Among all the Scientists listed above, the first to write and publish a recipe book related to pressure cooking was josé, which he did in 1924, titled 360 recipes for cooking with a pressure cooker. Lastly, another pressure cooker type -Flex-Seal Speed Cooker was invented by Alfred Vischer in 1938 in New York City, the United States of America. This type gave room for a high competition among world inventors because it was the first ever, designed for use in the home.

    Benefits of the Pressure Cooker

    The pressure cooker remains a vital kitchen tool in the home. You can derive many benefits from it whenever it is being used. It Saves time

    You can never compare the pressure cooking with other traditional cooking techniques. It cooks foods much faster, saving over 70% percent of other cooking gadgets. You need less energy than that of steaming, oven cooking or boiling, and apart from that,

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