Showing posts with label Crockpot. Show all posts

Pulled Pork in the Crockpot-Slow Cooker | Buttered Side Up
I didn't invest in a crockpot until I got pregnant. Everyone raved about how easy it is to cook delicious meat in one, but it seemed like a superfluous appliance to me. But the list that my midwife gave me for my birthing kit suggested that I have a crockpot on hand. So I purchased a generic one at Walmart. I didn't actually use it during labor, but it's been very useful since then!

My mom was the one who got me into pulled pork. She made it for after-church-dinner a few times, and Reuben got hooked. When she sent me the recipe, I was shocked by how easy it was. Her pork was always so tasty - how could so few ingredients produce so much flavor? But they do.

Here's the super easy steps to get delicious pulled pork:


Pulled Pork in the Crockpot-Slow Cooker | Buttered Side Up
Slice up an onion and place it in the bottom of your crockpot. I didn't have quite a full onion, but that's okay.


Pulled Pork in the Crockpot-Slow Cooker | Buttered Side Up
Put a pork shoulder (AKA butt) roast on top of the onion and season well with salt and freshly ground pepper.


Pulled Pork in the Crockpot-Slow Cooker | Buttered Side Up
Pour in about 1 -1 1/2 cups of broth (you could also use water or another liquid, but it probably won't be as flavorful).

Cook on low for about 8 hours or overnight. If you want your pork ready at 6:00 PM, start it at 10:00. Once the pork is done cooking, pull it apart with two forks.

Serve with lots of BBQ sauce. This goes really well with crispy baked potatoes (I'll share the recipe someday!) or homemade buns. Mmhmm.


Pulled Pork in the Crockpot-Slow Cooker | Buttered Side Up




Easiest Pulled Pork in the Crockpot/Slow Cooker
recipe from my mom. | PRINT
A super easy and flavorful way to cook pulled pork! Serve with BBQ sauce.

Serves 6-8

Ingredients:
1 onion, sliced,
1 pork shoulder/butt roast,
salt and pepper to taste,
1 - 1.5 cups broth,

Instructions:

Place the onion in the bottom of a slow cooker. Put the roast on top and season well with salt and pepper. Pour in the broth.

Cook on low for 8 hours. Pull the pork apart with two forks.



Easiest Pulled Pork in the Crockpot/Slow Cooker




Homemade chicken broth can be so easy when you use a crockpot/slow cooker!

How to Make Chicken Broth in the Crock Pot - Buttered Side Up
One of my scariest kitchen mishaps actually involved homemade bone broth.

I had a pot bubbling away on the stove. Suddenly, we had to leave the house for an hour or so. You guessed it: I left the stove on by mistake. While we were headed back home, I remembered that I had left the broth simmering. I wondered if we would return to a house of cinders.



How to Make Chicken Broth in the Crock Pot - Buttered Side Up

"Well, at least the house didn't burn down," I said as we pulled in the driveway. But when we opened the front door, we were met with an acrid smoke. The broth had boiled completely away, leaving a charred chicken carcass. I felt so stupid. Our house stank for days. My poor pot still bears the marks.

Needless to say, I was a bit paranoid about making broth after that incident. 



How to Make Chicken Broth in the Crock Pot - Buttered Side Up

Then, I saw Mommypotamus making broth in her crockpot. Brilliant, I thought! I tried it for myself, and I fell in love. 

You see, broth is super easy to make, but it takes a LONG time to cook. It can be difficult to find a good block of time to simmer it to perfection. With the slow cooker, I can throw everything together in the evening, set it to low and simmer it all through the night and the next day.



How to Make Chicken Broth in the Crock Pot - Buttered Side Up


Here are a few tips and tricks for making your own broth:

* Make sure you buy organic veggies that are on the "Dirty Dozen" list. Onions are on the "Clean 15," so I buy those conventional or local.

* You can use a whole, uncooked chicken as well as the carcass of a roasted chicken. The meat will fall off the bones.

* Don't boil your broth too hard - it can result in broth that doesn't gel.

* If you get enough fat in your broth, you can actually store it in the refrigerator for up to 6 months, as demonstrated by Diana of My Humble Kitchen.

* You can always add extra gelatin to your broth if you so wish. I use this brand.

* Don't be afraid to use whatever vegetables you have on hand in your broth. Some ideas: mushrooms, garlic, potatoes, various herbs, and even kombu, AKA kelp (idea from Joy the Baker).

* If your chicken comes with the giblet and liver, throw those into the pot as well!

* Don't salt your broth too heavily before it's done simmering. Taste and adjust AFTER it has reduced.


How to Make Chicken Broth in the Crock Pot - Buttered Side Up

I would love to talk more about bone broth, but this post is long enough as it is. Maybe I'll have to do a follow-up post about the benefits of bone broth, how to store, and ideas for how to use it.

What was your biggest kitchen disaster? 





How to Make Chicken Broth in a Crockpot/Slow Cooker 
recipe adapted from Weston A. Price and Mommypotamus | makes about 6-8 cups of broth
Printable Page

Ingredients:
  • 1 chicken carcass
  • cold water
  • 1 large onion, chopped
  • 3-4 carrots, chopped
  • 3 celery stalks, chopped
  • 1/4 cup vinegar or lemon juice
  • a bunch of parsley, optional (for added minerals)

Directions:
Place the chicken carcass in your slow cooker and add enough cold water to cover. Add the onions, carrots, celery and vinegar and stir. Let sit for 30 minutes.

Add the salt and turn the crockpot to LOW. Simmer the broth for at least 6 and up to 48 hours. 10 minutes before the cooking time is up, add a bunch of parsley. Taste and adjust salt if necessary.

Allow the broth to cool until warm. Strain into storage containers. Refrigerate or freeze.





How to Make Chicken Broth in the Crock Pot - Buttered Side Up


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How to Make Chicken Broth in a Crockpot/Slow Cooker