Smart Pressure Cooker-Smart Chef

Forget whatever horror stories you heard about your grandmother’s pressure cooker. For time saving, flavor and nutrition no cooking method beats today’s safe and reliable pressure cookers. You can get home at 7:00 and have a complete, fresh, homecooked meal on the table by 7:30 or even earlier. Put those soggy, bland microwave meals behind you, and get ready to accept the adulation of your adoring family.

Here is how a pressure cooker works its magic. The cover or lid locks in place creating a closed system at a standard 15 pounds of pressure. At this pressure water boils at 257 degrees F instead of the usual 212 degrees F. The higher temperature cooks the food faster. About three times faster than regular stove top cooking methods. Small to medium-sized potatoes cook in five minutes, and a whole “roast” chicken dinner cooks in only twenty minutes. All foods, vegetables in particular, keep their color and their flavor. Nutrients stay trapped in the pot instead of dissipating in a cloud of steam.

For family use the Kuhn Rikon 7-Liter Stainless Steel Pressure Cooker is the gold standard. An aluminum disk in the base, sandwiched by stainless steel, cooks evenly on gas, electric, ceramic and induction stovetops. That old, dancing pressure valve that scared the beejezus out of your grandmother is replaced with modern safety features that quietly regulate pressure and keep the lid safely locked while the contents are pressurized.

Presto pressure cookers have been around for a long time and offer a variety of different sized stainless steel and aluminum pots. Professional chefs prefer a stainless pressure cooker because it is nonreactive and can be safely cleaned in a dishwasher, but aluminum is also a good choice if weight is a consideration. You want heat resistant double handles, one on each side of the pot, in every case. A 6 quart pressure cooker is minimum family size. Go larger if you will use it as a canner.

You are better off sticking with a name brand manufacturer even when price is your primary consideration. Quality control is likely to be better but more importantly you want to be able to get replacement parts when you need them five or ten years from now. Valves get lost. Gaskets wear out or get damaged. A loose fitting lid doesn’t affect your stock pot but it will put your pressure cooker out of business.

Many models come with useful accessories like racks, trivets or vegetable steamers which keep food from sticking to the bottom of the pot. Most chefs brown meats before attaching the lid so sticking does occur. You may still want to avoid nonstick interiors, however. The occasional inconvenience of a little extra cleaning far outweighs the risk of a pitted or peeling interior coating. Nonstick interiors are less of a potential problem with electric pressure cookers.

Cuisinart makes a programmable electric pressure cooker worth considering. Priced between the Presto and the Kuhn Rikon pressure cooker its push-button controls and digital display make an attractive package. The Cuisnart can be programmed for high or low pressure cooking, browning, simmering, sauteing or warming. And you got to admit that an electronic thermostat is more foolproof than setting a stovetop control to a precise position. You do give up some flexibility, however, because you can’t open the lid until the cooker says you can. With the stove top models you can instantly drop the pressure and open the lid by putting the unit under cold water.

Dozens of specialized pressure cooking recipe books are available to get you up to speed on entrees to desserts.



Under Pressure: Cooking Sous Vide
by Thomas Keller
Amazon Price: $47.25


Customer Review: Thomas Keller is one of the great American chefs. His restaurants French Laundry and per se are two of the finest restaurants in the United States. So when Thomas Keller comes out with a new cook book, chefs and foodies take note. Addressing the n…

Pressure Perfect: Two Hour Taste in Twenty Minutes Using Your Pressure Cooker
by Lorna J. Sass
Amazon Price: $16.47


Customer Review: Just when I think I’ve gotten hold of the sorts of things I can make in a pressure cooker, Lorna Sass comes out with another recipe book. There are so many exciting things in this book that I’ve been walking around hungry for days, just thinking abo…

Miss Vickie’s Big Book of Pressure Cooker Recipes
by Vickie Smith
Amazon Price: $15.61


Customer Review: Love this book!!

Finally, a pressure cooker book that has lots of choices!

Really good description of pressure cooking in general.

Turning into a “go to” cookbook for me. (and that is high praise!)

Just made the Mexican Chick…

What to Expect: Eating Well When You’re Expecting
by Heidi Murkoff
Amazon Price: $10.36


Customer Review: The recipes in the back half of the book are uniformly excellent and very appealing, especially if you’re suffering from morning sickness. I’ve only made one that we didn’t care for (mac and cheese). I’ve made some of the dishes for potlucks and fr…

Great Vegetarian Cooking Under Pressure
by Lorna J. Sass
Amazon Price: $21.09


Customer Review: This book contains the most used recipe in my household — pressure cooker risotto. A dish that normally takes 45 minutes to an hour, with much attention required becomes a dish taking about 8 minutes cooking time. Lorna Sass takes dishes that are …

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Pressure Cooker

Pressure cookers work by tightly sealing the pot. When the liquid inside boils it builds steam and pressure. This results in higher cooking temperatures and shorter cooking times. Many nutritionists believe that pressure cooking retains more vital nutrients than other cooking methods.

The pressure inside the pot is measured in pound of force per square inch or PSI. Pressure cooker recipes set the PSI and cooking time for that recipe, and should be followed as closely as possible. Consider first a stainless steel pressure cooker and then an aluminum pressure cooker. Stainless steel is less potentially reactive with acidic foods, more attractive, and generally wears better. Consider an electric pressure cooker which makes the process that much easier without heating up the kitchen.
A 6 quart model fits most families. Go larger if you’re looking for a pressure cooker canner for jams and jellies.



The Pressured Cook: Over 75 One-Pot Meals In Minutes, Made In Today’s 100% Sa…
by Lorna J. Sass
Amazon Price: $16.06


Customer Review: Lorna Sass applies her testing skills and patience to give us another fantastic pressure cooker book. I’m constantly amazed at the things she will try — pasta, meatloaf, most kinds of vegetables, so…

The Official Presto Pressure Cooker Cookbook
by National Presto Industries Staff
Amazon Price:


Customer Review: I’m quite pleased with the price and delivery time of this. Thaks very much. I would recommend it to others.

High Blood Pressure Cook Book/Low Salt Recipes
by Tarla Dalal
Amazon Price: $7.00

The Pressure Cooker Cookbook : 100 Contemporary Recipes for the Time-Pressure…
by Gina Steer
Amazon Price:


Political Pressure And the Archival Record
Amazon Price:


Pressure Cooking the Meatless Way: Over 125 Delicious and Nutritious Recipes …
by Daniella Chace, Maureen B. Keane
Amazon Price:


Customer Review: This book shows just how versatile a pressure cooker can be. Maintenance and safety tips are included along with recipes for everything from whole grains and dried beans to deliciously spiced vegetabl…

Peer Pressure, Pain & Death, Heroes (Domain.456)
by Linda Kondracki, Bev Gundersen, Debbie Rempfer
Amazon Price: $15.99

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