5 Reasons Why Pressure Cooking Is Awesome
Image via Flickr/ DidricksWith their funky handles and clamps, pressure cookers don’t exactly look welcoming, but don’t let their unfamiliar form keep you from exploring their many assets. Pressure cooking may seem foreboding at first, but it’s no exaggeration to claim that this speedy and useful device can significantly change the way you cook at home.
“The pressure cooker saves time, money and energy,” says chef-educator Jill Nussinow, whose site The Veggie Queen has become my go-to for all things pressure cooking. She’s authored numerous cookbooks on pressure cooking, the latest of which is The New Fast Food: The Veggie Queen Pressure Cooks Whole Food Meals in Less than 30 Minutes. “Pressure cooking produces food with amazing flavor, color and texture. It will become your favorite kitchen tool.”
I was once a skeptic, too. A background in professional kitchens instilled in me the importance of contact with food as it cooks—sniffing it, poking it. Chefs are hands-on, and it’s hard to be hands-on when the food you’re cooking is at 15 psi (pounds per square inch) and locked tightly under a lid that vaguely resembles something from a mad scientist’s lab.
What switched me? I worked at a store that sold the things, and when customers asked me questions about them, I was always stumped. So I borrowed the store’s demo model, got hooked, and quickly became their resident pressure cooker advocate. I’ve since found that pressure cooking can only enable your happy relationship with food. Here’s why.
It’s safe.
Those stories you hear from your grandmother about old-time pressure cookers blasting a crater in the ceiling are pretty hair-raising. But sleek and straightforward modern pressure cookers are a whole new ballgame, with multiple safeguards to make dramatic explosions all but impossible. You’d have to try very, very hard to blow the lid off of one. I read about such an incident occurring in David Chang’s Momofuku test kitchen in a Forbes article last year (“The top cracked in half—lima beans were going at 1,000 miles per hour. It looked like a grenade went off,” Chang confessed), which means to me that whoever was using the pressure cooker that day seriously neglected to keep tabs on the thing—maybe they went on a two-hour walk or something. Consider: in eight years of pressure cooking I haven’t incited any explosive incidents myself, and I can be quite scatterbrained.
A lot of older pressure cookers have an aluminum interior, which can discolor pale foods and create tinny flavors in acidic foods, so it’s best on all fronts—safety, performance, and ease of use—to buy a trusty new pressure cooker, one with a stainless steel interior.
It’s convenient.
“Food cooks at least 50 percent faster than with other conventional cooking methods,” says Nussinow. At least 50 percent; with some foods, it’s even faster. It takes only 15 minutes to steam a whole artichoke, as opposed to an hour or more of boiling. It can take only 30 minutes to cook a batch of pinto bean chili. “Soup, stew, braises, whole grains and legumes cook quickly and easily,” Nussinow continues.