How To: Cook with a Pressure Cooker

When I was 21 I packed my bags and spent 18 months living in Southern Brazil.  It was one of the greatest adventures of my life, and the culture definitely influenced my culinary loves (hello lime, coconut, and black beans.)  One thing I quickly learned was how to use a pressure cooker.  Everyone in Brazil has a pressure cooker; it’s pretty much standard kitchen equipment.  I lived in some extremely poverty-stricken areas, and even when families could fit everything they owned into a single box, there was a pressure cooker in that box.  It’s the standard way of cooking the unofficial national food, beans, among other things.  I ate black beans for lunch every single day for 18 months (and actually never tired of them!) and they cooked up in mere minutes because of those handy pressure pots.  Upon returning home and preparing to head back for my final year of college, my Mom bought me this little Kuhn Rikon Pressure Cooker, so I could make all of the foods I had fallen in love with down there.

Kuhn Rikon Small Pressure Cooker

I’ve never written about pressure cooking, or shared any pressure cooker specific recipes, because I never saw a huge market for it, until recently!  In recent months, pressure cooking has gained steam (see what I did there?)  and it seems it’s be all the rage all of the sudden!  We are getting so many questions and emails and requests, so we thought it was about time we tackled this topic.

What is Pressure Cooking

A pressure cooker is a pot with a sealed lid.  Normally when you cook in a regular pot, heat causes moisture to produce steam and it evaporates out the top.  With a pressure cooker, as liquids start cooking, they produce steam.  The steam is trapped inside, creating an environment of extremely high pressure and temperature.

Lots of reasons, but some of the most popular:

Time: Because a pressure cooker increases the temperature and pressure, things cook in the fraction of the time they would cook in a normal cooking environment, such as on the stove or in the oven.  For example, a tough roast and potatoes that would normally take hours in the slow cooker or braising in the oven can be fork-tender and on the table in an hour.  Brown rice and dried black beans take about 15 minutes.  Rice, 3 minutes.  And quinoa? One minute.  One.

Results:  The high pressure environment forces liquid into foods quickly, tenderizing at an impressive rate.  Tough cuts of meat turn out tender and moist, and things like potatoes (one of my favorites to do in the pressure cooker) and vegetables are perfectly cooked.

Flavor:  Less liquid is required, and everything is trapped in the cooking environment, so foods turn out more flavorful and concentrated than other cooking methods.

Energy and Savings: Foods don’t take as long to cook, so it’s less time burners are on and appliances are running.  It’s also a great option for the summer when you want that slow braised roast without having your oven, or even the steaming crock pot on for hours.  It also allows you to buy less-expensive cuts of meat (the tough stuff) and tenderize it quickly.

What can you cook

Just about anything!  I use mine a lot for meats, potatoes, and stews.  You can also cook desserts and sweets, like sweetened condensed milk, flan, and cheesecake.  Kate and I both have new electric pressure cookers, so be on the lookout for upcoming recipes!

Potroast

Types of Pressure Cookers

In the pressure cooking game there are 2 main players: Traditional Stove Top and Electric.  A traditional pressure cooker sits on the stove top like a normal pot.  You control the heat just like you would with any other pot.  You can sear meats and vegetables, then add liquid and seal on the top to cook.  You control the pressure inside the pot by adjusting the heat on the stove and watching the gauge on the top display the intensity of the pressure (high or low).

pressure cookers

An electric pressure cooker has its own heat source, it works similar to a slow-cooker (many electric pressure cookers function as slow cookers as well) and often has a variety of pre-set settings you can choose for different foods.  You can push a button and the whole thing runs, and regulates pressure, by itself.

There are pros and cons for each option.  The stovetop varieties heat up quicker for less overall cooking time, but I also feel like I have to babysit the pot carefully and keep adjusting heat.  Although the electric styles take a little longer to heat up, I love the ease of just being able to push a button and walk away.   You also have more control over the heat on the stove top if you want to brown vegetables, sear meat, etc.  before pressure cooking.  That being said, I’m impressed at the high heat my Electric Instant Pot provides for sauteing.  It’s plenty hot. Stove top models vary in size and generally are available in larger capacity than electric models, which are usually 6 quarts.  However, I have yet to have my 6 quart pot feel too small to cook anything.

What do you recommend

There are a lot of options, and I can certainly tell you what I have experience with, and what I’ve heard from other friends with pressure cookers.

Kuhn Rikon:  I feel like these are the BMW’s of traditional pressure cookers.  Mine has lasted a good 16 years now.  They are expensive, but have incredibly  high ratings and are exceptionally well made from a very reputable brand.  They tend to be available in larger sizes than the electric versions, and their stainless steel construction makes them ideal for heavy duty use, assuring excellent browning and heat conduction.

Kuhn Rikon Large Pressure Cooker

Instant Pot:  I don’t know how these guys revved up their marketing campaign, but whatever they did, it worked.  With over 5,000 reviews and a 5 1/2 star rating, they are Amazon’s #1 Seller.  I bought one last fall, and from what I hear- lot’s of you did, too!  It’s pretty affordable compared to some of the other big name brands out there (even moreso during their sale last fall where it was about $80.)  Here is one of their models that is on sale right now for about $90, and this bluetooth version for a good deal as well. After several months of use, I really love my Instant Pot.  It has a lot of settings you can default too, and once you get the hang of things, it’s really easy to just set it manually as well.  I really love how it sautes at a high heat as well, so you can do one-pot cooking.  For example, start a soup by sauteing the onions and garlic, and then adding the rest of the ingredients to pressure cook, or cooking a roast and then bringing the sauce up to a boil to cook some gravy.

Instant Pot

Other pressure cookers that I do not own, but have heard good reviews about (all of these are top-rated from America’s Test Kitchen) are:

Emeril 1000-Watt 6-Quart Electric by T-Fal
Cuisinart 1000-Watt 6-Quart Electric

Fissler Vitaquick 8.5-Quart
Fagor Duo 8-Quart Stainless Steel

Presto 8-Quart Stainless Steel
Tramontina 8-Quart Heavy Duty

I also recently bought the America’s Test Kitchen Pressure Cooker Perfection Cookbook and I’m loving it so far!

Click Here to see all of our Pressure Cooker Recipes!

 

 

Sara Wells
Meet The Author

Sara Wells

Sara Wells co-founded Our Best Bites in 2008. She is the author of three Bestselling Cook Books, Best Bites: 150 Family Favorite RecipesSavoring the Seasons with Our Best Bites, and 400 Calories or Less from Our Best Bites. Sara’s work has been featured in many local and national news outlets and publications such as Parenting MagazineBetter Homes & GardensFine CookingThe Rachel Ray Show and the New York Times.

Read More

Join The Discussion

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Questions & Reviews

  1. Do you recommend the 6 qt or 8 qt size electric pressure cooker? There are just two of us at home, but I often cook big family dinners and I like to cook a couple large meals a week and then heat up leftovers.

    1. honestly, the 6qt has never been too small for me- I bet it’s just great for almost everyone!

  2. Thank you! I have had a hard time finding tested Instant Pot recipes and I’m SO HAPPY that my favorite cooking blog start posting some! I just got my Instant Pot for Christmas (along with half of America). ?

  3. Yes, please post recipes for the Instant Pot! The pot came with a booklet, but the recipes are dishes that don’t appeal to me and ingredients I never use. I love and appreciate every recipe of yours I have tried, and they have become family favorites! I would love more recipe options using the Instant Pot. Thank you!

    1. The pot is removable, so you just clean everything with soap and water like you would any dirty pot 🙂

  4. I am so excited to see electric pressure cooker recipes! A good friend recommended one so I bought one and love it! Can’t wait!

  5. I am a GA girl, now living in the Rocky Mountains. The high altitude cooking is a challenge (understatement). Baking is especially frustrating. I have heard that a pressure cooker can level the playing field out here when it comes to things like rice, beans, and meats. I cannot even get rice to cook correctly here. I am excited to learn more about pressure cooking and appreciate you sharing your knowledge with us.

  6. I’m so glad you posted this. My mom has been using a pressure cooker for the last few years and I would love to start using one regularly. I just don’t know how to begin. I use so many of your recipes and I would love to know how to make your dishes in a pressure cooker.

  7. I would love to see some simple beginner recipes for pressure cookers. I bought an electric one years ago, and really haven’t used it much. I would love to feel more comfortable with it, especially in the hurry up and get dinner on the table hour.

  8. I have a Tupperware microwave pressure cooker. It is amazing. Honestly… set it and forget it! (bad infomercial humor). Basically anything that you’d cook in your crockpot can be cooked in mere minutes in your microwave in the pressure cooker.

  9. I too am anxious to see your pressure cooker recipes. I have a Fagor stove top model that I love (high pressure/15 psi only). And you are right, potatoes are the best when pressure cooked. I totally get the love of the electric ones, but they do not reach a full 15psi. I hope you give cooking times based on both stove top/electric.

  10. I have only ever used my pressure cooker for canning. I know you can cook food in them but I am scared to try and do not have any recipes. Mine is a stove top version that used to be my Grandma’s. Would love to use it more!

  11. I’m interested in making fried chicken in a pressure cooker. I don’t have one yet…but it’s on my list!