Latest posts: Tagged ‘Slow Cooker Recipe’

Rosie would be the first to admit she’s not a natural whizz in the kitchen, but she’s been cooking up a storm with our Flavour Savour slow cooker and has even tried out one of the recipes from our slow cooker cook book.

You can check out the recipe she tried out, and her thoughts on the product, below (or click here to read the post on her own blog)

Slow cooker Greek-style butter bean and potato casserole

Butter bean and potato casserole

I’m not known for my cooking skills, but even I have managed to successfully produce this Greek-style butter bean and potato casserole from the new Morphy Richards slow cooker cookbook. It takes just 15 minutes to prepare the ingredients, and then you just leave it to cook for four hours. It’s a great recipe for a cold winter evening and great with a chunky bread roll. (Serves 6).

Ingredients

4 tbsp olive oil
1 mild Spanish onion
4 garlic cloves, crushed
200 ml red wine
400 g white potatoes, diced
2 x 410 g cans butter beans, drained and rinsed
2 x 400 g cans chopped tomatoes
Pinch of paprika
1 bay leaf
2 tbsp chopped flat-leaf parsley

Method

1. Heat half the oil in a large saucepan over a high heat and cook the onions for about 5 minutes. Stir in the garlic and add the red wine. Let it bubble for a few minutes to deglaze the pan. Season and transfer to the slow cooker. Add the potatoes, turnip and butter beans.

2. Add all the remaining ingredients and mix. Season and cook for 4 hours on the high setting and 8 hours on the low.

The recipe is so simple that your children will be able to help, which is an added bonus. We cooked the dish in the Flavour Savour Digital Slow Cooker that we were sent as part of the Morphy Richards Innovators Scheme.

Morphy-Richards-48787-Slow-CookerIt is incredibly easy to use and with a capacity of 4.5 litres it is large enough to cook a meal for the whole family. It has three cooking settings – browning, fast stew and slow cook, which are all accessible via its digital interface. I particularly liked its digital countdown timer plus the fact that it is easy to store, especially as we do not have a large kitchen. I was also impressed with its keep-warm function which keeps food hot in the pan  for up to 2 hours. The pan is also hob-proof so can also be used on gas or electric cookers. It comes with a clear lid with cool-touch handle so you can peer inside and check on your cooking with the minimum of fuss.

I absolutely love the product and simply can’t fault it. It retails at £89.99.

Are you a dab hand in the kitchen? Do your friends compliment you on your home-cooking skills? Can you prepare wholesome, nutritious food on a budget? Then why not enter the Home Made Cook of the Year 2011? Morphy Richards are looking for some ‘Home Made Heroes’ and there are some great prizes on offer. Visit Home Made Cook of the Year 2011 for further details.

Here at Morphy Richards, we’re passionate about all things slow cooking, so much so that we’ve brought out our own cook book – The Ultimate Slow Cooker Cook Book. The book, published by Ebury Press and written by Cara Hobday features over 100 delicious fuss-free recipes from family favourites to dishes for a dinner party.

The book also features hands tips and advice about using your slow cooker. Throughout the winter months, we’re going to bring you extracts from the book as well as several tasty recipes. If you like what you read and you want a copy for yourself; the book can be purchased from the Morphy Richards website (£5.99).

Today we’re going to bring you a series of top tips for cooking in your slow cooker:

  • Spray the pot with an oil spray or coat the bottom with oil before you put anything inside it as this prevents the contents sticking
  • If your recipe calls for a high amount of dairy products, such as milk, cream or yoghurt, there is a possibility they will curdle if left to cook for a long time. To avoid this, stir in the dairy products during the final 15 minutes of cooking, or substitute with evaporated or dried skimmed milk
  • One complaint against slow cookers is that meals can taste very similar. For this reason it is important to brown the meat and the vegetables first, to draw the maximum flavour out of each ingredient. This also seals the meat, which prevents it drying out. When time is short, you can bypass the browning stage, but the taste of the finished dish might not be as flavoursome. Always brown minced meat over a high heat to kill any bacteria before adding to the pot.
  • Be careful not to use too much water as the sauce may not be thick enough in the final dish. Remember that no water is lost from the pot during cooking, and a lot of moisture comes out of the vegetables, which means that it won’t boil dry.
  • For added liquid I use hot stock so that the slow cooker heats up more quickly. However, over a cook time of 8 hours, this is not essential and will not noticeably change the finished dish.
  • As well as using the recipes in this book, a wide variety of others can be adapted for use in a slow cooker. When adapting a recipe the main thing to remember is to use up to 50 per cent less liquid than you would when cooking a dish in the oven or on the hob. This is because a slow cooker is sealed and does not lose any liquid during cooking, unlike oven or hob cooking. As a general rule of thumb, use around 600ml of liquid in a dish for six servings, although this does vary between recipes. If there are a lot of vegetables, for example, less liquid is needed, as the vegetables release their own water into the sauce. All the recipes in the book have been created for use in a 3.5 litre slow cooker with a ceramic cooking pot so if you are using a larger capacity machine or Flavour Savour, remember to tweak the recipes and cooking guidelines accordingly.
  • Although pies, with their crusty pastry, cannot be made in the slow cooker, pie fillings are very successful. All you need to do is fill a pie dish with the slow-cooked filling, top it with pastry and finish it off in the oven.
  • You can even use your slow cooker for dishes you might never think of trying. For example, you could cook your porridge in the slow cooker over night for a ready-made hot breakfast in the morning.

Now that the clocks have gone back by an hour, we’re well and truly into slow cooker season. Last month, several of our ‘House Proud Innovators’ were sent a Morphy Richards Flavour Savour to review. The first ‘Innovator’ to review this slow cooker was Marie who blogs at ‘The English Kitchen‘, you can visit her original blog post here.

A Slow Cooker with a wonderful Difference and some tasty Meals!

In October as a part of the Morphy Richards House Proud Innovator scheme I was sent a lovely 4.5 litre Flavour Savour Digital Slow Cooker. As a House Proud Innovator I am encouraged to put the appliances I am sent through their paces and to really give them a good work out, something which I am always happy to do.

I am no stranger to slow cooking. I often use my slow cooker and in fact have two sizes already, both Morphy Richard’s as well. I use them most often on Sundays and will cook a meat dish in the larger one and then a side dish in the smaller one.

The new Flavour Savour Digital Slow Cooker though is a machine with a big difference. You can use it in three different ways, which makes it very versatile and useful for more than just slow cooking. The Flavour Savour has 3 in 1 cooking functions, meaning you can seal, fast stew and slow cook all by using the one machine. The pan heats to around 200 degrees giving you an excellent sealing functionality, which means that you are able to brown any meat you are cooking without having to use a separate pot for that purpose. You can now brown and slow cook in the same pan. That is one function that I really loved with this machine.

It has a beautiful glass lid, which means that you are able to look inside and see what’s going on without lifting the lid, with cool touch handles which makes it very easy to transport from one location to another. With the older models that have a ceramic insert, this just isn’t easy to do. The cooking pot is also dish washer safe, which is a real bonus!

I found the instructions very easy to follow, which is also a bonus. I find that as I am getting older I often have a difficult time understanding instructions . . . blame my menopausal mind! I had no problem with this. The instructions were clear and concise.

Here it is plugged in and warming up to brown some meat in the cookpot. That function worked really well. I was well pleased.

The first dish I cooked in it was a proper slow cooking recipe, using pieces of chicken and a sauce, called Crock Pot Barbeque Chicken. As you can see it turned out quite deliciously scrummy! This I served with rice and a vegetable on the side.

*Crock Pot Barbeque Chicken*
Serves 4
Printable Recipe

Tender, sticky delicious chicken. You can use only breasts or a combination of breasts and thighs. Delicious.

4 to 6 pieces of boneless, skinless chicken
1 bottle barbeque sauce (I used the Jack Daniels one)
1 ounces white vinegar (1/4 cup)
1 tsp red pepper flakes
2 ounces soft light brown sugar (about 1/4 cup)
1/2 tp 1 tsp garlic powder

Place your chicken pieces into the slow cooker. Stir together the barbeque sauce, vinegar, pepper flakes, brown sugar and garlic powder. Pour this over top of the chicken and give it a stir. Cover and cook on low for 4 to 6 hours.

The next recipe I tested on it was for a Crock Pot Beef Dip Sandwich. I love Beef Dip Sandwiches. It was always one of my favourite things to order when I lived in Canada and we would go out for supper. I remember having a particularly delicious one in Winnipeg Manitoba back in 1977 whilst we were waiting to board a train for Calgary. (You know something is good when 30+ years later you are still thinking about it!)

This recipe is one I found online (forgive me as I can’t remember where right now). The meat turned out deliciously tender and we both enjoyed this very much. I will make again. It was almost as good as that one back in 1977, and I loved that I could brown the roast a bit first by using that function in the Flavour Savour.

*French Dip Sandwiches in the Slow Cooker*
Serves 6 to 8
Printable Recipe

Easy to make and oh so delicious with meltingly tender beef tucked into a soft roll, topped with cheese and then served with a beef broth for dipping.

1 medium brown skinned onion, peeled and thinly sliced
6 fluid ounces beef broth/stock (3/4 cup)
2 fluid ounces dark soy sauce (1/4 cup)
4 fluid ounces water (1/2 cup)
1 TBS Worcestershire sauce
1 TBS grainy mustard
2 cloves garlic, roughly chopped
3 pounds beef roast for braising (I used a rolled brisket)
Salt and pepper to taste

To serve:
6 to 8 soft sandwich rolls
6 to 8 slices of provolone cheese, or an equivalent
amount of grated emmenthal cheese
one pint of beef broth (about 2 1/4 cups)

Rub the beef all over with some salt and pepper. Place the onion slices in the bottom of the crock pot. Stir together the beef broth, soy sauce, Worcestershire Sauce, mustard, garlic and water. Put the beef into the crock pot on top of the onions. Pour the broth mixture over top. Cook on low for 6 to 8 hours until meltingly tender.

To serve, warm the rolls and cut open. Shred the cooked beef and pile onto the warmed rolls, top with some of the onion and a bit of the juice from the pan, along with a slice of cheese. Close over, cut in half diagonally and serve along with a small bowl of beef broth for each person to dip their sandwich in.

I then decided to test out it’s normal cookery function and did a tasty stew in it. I was able to brown my meat and vegetables perfectly and then proceed as per the recipe. At the end we were rewarded with a deliciously tasty Irish Lamb and Barley Stew.

As you can see the lamb was beautifully browned. Stews gain a lot of their flavour from the browning step. All those rich caramelized meat juices really add a lot of taste and colour to the gravy.

*Irish Lamb and Barley Stew*
Serves 4
Printable Recipe

A delicious stew that cooks either on top of the stove or in the slow cooker.

2 TBS olive oil
1 kg (2 pounds) diced lamb shoulder
1 large onion, peeled and chopped
2 medium carrots, peeled and chopped coarsely
2 sticks of celery, trimmed and chopped coarsely
1 large parsnip, peeled and chopped coarsely
1/2 small swede, peeled and chopped coarsely
2 cloves of garlic, peeled and crushed
1 litre of chicken stock (4 cups)
1/2 litre of boiling water (2 cups)
200g of pearl barley (1 cup)
4 sprigs of fresh thyme
3 medium potatoes, peeled and chopped coarsely
1/2 of a small savoy cabbage, finely shredded
a handful of flat leaf parsely, coarsely chopped

Heat half of the oil in a large saucepan; cook the lamb, in batches until browned. Remove from the pan. Add the remaining oil and heat. Add the vegetables and cook, stirring occasionally until they begin to soften. Return the lamb to the pan, along with the stock, water, barley and thyme. Bring to the boil, then reduce to a simmer and cook, for 1 hour, covered. Add the potato and simmer for 20 minutes, uncovered, until tender. Add the cabbage and simmer for about 10 minutes longer, uncovered, or just until the cabbage is tender. Discard the thyme. Serve the stew ladled out into heated bowls and sprinkled with the parsley.

Note: if using the slow cooker, brown the meat and vegetables and then put them into the cooker along with the barley, hot stock and water and the herbs. Cover and cook on low for 4 to 5 hours. Add the potatoes and recover. Cook on high for 35 to 40 minutes. Add the cabbage and cook, uncovered on high for 10 to 15 minutes.

Finally I decided to try making some buttery toasted nuts in it. This is the time of year when these are really handy to have around. People will be dropping by off and on during the holidays which are coming up all too quickly and savoury nuts are a delicious little bite to serve along with a drink. (Next time I am going to try a sweet variety) As you can see they turned out fabulous in the Flavour Savour!

*Crock Pot Butter Roasted Pecans*
Makes 6 cups
Printable Recipe

Moreishly buttery and scrummy.

4 ounces butter, cut into pieces
1 1/2 pounds pecan halves
1 tsp sea salt
1/2 tsp freshly ground black pepper
Optional ingredients:
garlic powder
onion powder
dried herbs (savoury, basil, oregano)

Place the butter into a 4.5 litre slowcooker. Heat on high for about half an hour to melt the butter. Add the pecans and toss to coat with the butter. Cover and cook on high for 1/2 hour. Uncover and cook on high for another 2 1/2 hours, giving them a stir every 1/2 hour. (You want to keep an eye on them and stir them often so that they don’t catch as you are cooking them on a high temperature.) At the end of that time they should be nicely roasted. Spread out onto a baking sheet and sprinkle with the sale and pepper, and any optional ingredients you wish to use. Give them a good stir together and allow to cool. Store in an airtight container.

All in all I am very pleased with this machine. It has a lovely round shape which fits well into my kitchen. The cord is of a nice length and also stores very easily in the base when you want to put it away. I love that the cooking pot and lid wash up beautifully in the dish washer. I love that I can brown and stew with it, as well as slow cookin on a low, medium or high temperature . . . and I just adored the keep warm function, which means that it will hold your food for a further 2 hours at a warm temperature without over cooking it.

I would give the Morphy Richards Flavour Savour Digital Slow Cooker a full 10 out of 10 points for ease, looks and functionality.

Many thanks to Chris and the Morphy Richards people for having afforded me the opportunity to put it through it’s paces. I would highly recommend this machine to anyone, absolutely.

Summer is a long distant memory, prompting in many of us a dietry shift from light salads to warm, hearty fare. Slow cooking is perfect for this time of year, and is actually one of the healthiest, most cost effective ways of cooking, allowing you to use cheaper cuts of meat and less energy.

This month Delia Online are giving lucky readers the chance to win a fantastic 4.5L Flavour Savour digital slow cooker (worth £89.99). Just upload your most creative recipe to the Your Recipes section of their website to be in with a shot. Winning recipes will be drawn at random on 2 October, so get posting and make sure to pass on the word to all your foodie friends.

Our Flavour Savour is a digital slow cooker with three in one cooking functions, meaning you can seal, fast stew and slow cook all in one product. Seal some chicken, beef or pork, add vegetables and stock and in just 90 minutes you’ll have a tasty stew that’ll taste like it’s been on the stove all day.

Of course, you can slow cook too. Just set the digital display for anything from four to ten hours for a delicious casserole, chilli, curry or a multitude of other family favourites.

Last week we launched our ‘Home Made Cook of the Year’ competition on ‘Home of the House Proud’. Along with our partners at the WI, Delia Online and Diabetes UK, we’re looking for the nation’s best homemade cook to walk away with this prestigious tittle and a heap of prizes from Morphy and our prize partners (Stoves, Roberts Radio and the WI’s Denman College).

From all of the entries that we receive, we’ll be whittling them down to three and our three shortlisted entrants will be invited to cook their dish for celebrity chef Brian Turner, who will select his favourite dish.

We’re delighted to report that we’ve received our first entry from Karen Booth, who’s submitted a delicious recipe for Slow Cooked Brisket of Beef with a Medley of Root Vegetables. In keeping with the rules, the dish cost less than £7.50 (£7.28) and feeds a family of four.

Ingredients

1.5kg/3lb 5oz beef brisket joint

1x Teaspoon English mustard powder

4x Onions, peeled and sliced into thick rings

6x Carrots, peeled and cut into thick discs

1x Small swede, peeled and diced into cubes

2x Large parsnips, peeled and cut into large discs

1/2 Turnip, peeled and diced into cubes

150ml (1/4 pint) wine or ale, or water mixed with half a stock cube

1x Teaspoon anchovy essence/sauce

1x Tablespoon mushroom ketchup

Salt and freshly ground black pepper

Method

  • Season the beef brisket generously with salt, black pepper and the mustard powder, rubbing it in well and all over the joint
  • Place all of the root vegetables in the bottom of the slow cooker
  • Place the seasoned brisket of beef on top of the root vegetables; add the anchovy essence/sauce and mushroom ketchup to the wine/ ale or stock and pour it over the vegetables, being careful not to pour it over the seasoned beef brisket
  • Turn the slow cooker on to the “low” setting and cook for between 8 and 11 hours
  • Serve piping hot with the gravy juices and steamed greens and/or potatoes on the side

My meal cost me £7.28. I took advantage of a special offer on Brisket at Morrisons and also cooked this in my Morphy Richards Slow Cooker. My vegetables were home-grown and some were swapped with local allotment friends.


This month, Delia Online are giving four lucky foodies the chance to win a fantastic stainless steel Morphy Richards Slow cooker as part of their monthly Morphy giveaway.

Just upload an imaginative recipe idea to the Your Recipes section of their website, and you’ll be in with a chance. They’ll be picking four winning recipes at random on 31st July, so spread the word and get posting!

Perfect for cooks on the go, the Morphy Richards Oval Slow Cooker can be left safely cooking while you go about your daily routine, allowing you to enjoy freshly prepared meals without being tied to the kitchen.

A 3.5 litre capacity means organising a family feast is just as simple as rustling up a meal for one and its oval shape is ideal for cooking joints of meat as well as casseroles, curries and other family favourites. There are three settings to cater for different cooking times and recipes, a toughened glass lid to make sure you don’t lose that precious heat and a removable ceramic pot so you can serve up your meals in style.

It also has lots of handy features to make your cooking experience that little bit easier. It’s fully dishwasher proof,  has Cooltouch handles so you won’t burn yourself and non slip feet so it sits  safe and secure on any surface.

This morning we brought you a delicious steamed fish recipe to try out this Good Friday, this afternoon we’ve got an alternative fish recipe for you to try out in your slow cooker thanks to the lovely Sarah who looks after the (Mostly) Yummy Mummy blog. Sarah has cooked up a delicious Thai Green Curry and has sent us the recipe to share with visitors to ‘Home of the House Proud’. In addition, Sarah is currently running a competition to giveaway one of our slow cookers.

Check out the original post and enter the competition here.

If you’ve got a delicious recipe that you’d like us to feature on Home of the House Proud, we’d love to hear from you, please submit it here!

A big thanks to Jan Bennett who is responsible for the ‘Glug of Oil’ blog, Jan recently sent ‘Home of the House Proud’ a recipe for a Sausage and Pepper Casserole – we’ve tried this recipe here at Morphy HQ and it’s scrumptious, you really should give it a go…

Sausage and Pepper Casserole

To serve: Up to 4 adults and 2 Children

Ingredients

2x Large onions – peeled and sliced

2x Fat cloves of garlic – peeled and finely chopped

2x Celery stalks – washed and sliced

2x Red bell peppers – stalk and seeds removed and cut into chunks

1x Green bell pepper – stalk and seeds removed and cut into chunks

12x Good quality thick Cumberland sausages

1x Tablespoon of tomato puree

2x 400g tins of good quality tomatoes

1x tablespoon of smoked paprika

300ml Chicken stock made from a Knorr stock cube

Salt and black pepper to season

A little olive oil

Method

  • Get yourself a nice big frying pan and heat up the oil
  • Add the onions, garlic and celery and cook over a low/medium heat for about 10 minutes
  • Now add in the peppers and cook until the onions are nice and soft but not coloured
  • Stir in the tomato puree and cook for a minute over a low heat
  • Give it all a good stir and throw in the paprika, both tins of tomatoes including the juice and just 200ml of the stock
  • Stir it again and bring to the boil.  Now tip everything into your slow cooker. 
  • Wipe the frying pan out and brown the sausages.  Remember they’ll have plenty of time to cook once in the slow cooker – all you’re doing is browning them nicely.
  • Once they’re nicely browned, pop them into the slow cooker
  • Cook on a low heat for seven hours.  Before serving, have a taste and adjust the seasoning with a little salt if need and some black pepper. (Add the other 100ml of stock if you need to)
  • Serve with mashed potato.  You can of course freeze in portions once it’s gone cold

If you’ve got a delicious recipe that you’d like us to feature on Home of the House Proud, we’d love to hear from you, please submit it here!

Here at ‘Home of the House Proud’, we’ve been contacted by Anna Aird from Caterbury in Kent. Anna’s got a delicious slow cooker recipe that she’d like to share with visitors to the blog. What’s more, the recipe costs less than £4 making it ideal for our ‘£4 Slow Cooker Challenge’. Check out the recipe below – a scrumptious Spicy Sausage Stew!

We all love this recipe in our family (probably something to do with our passion for spicy food!). We sometimes vary the vegetables, but courgettes are one of my favourites, so that’s what I have used this time!

Spicy Sausage Stew

Ingredients

8x Butchers’ Choice Pork Sausages (Tesco)    £0.98

3x Kent Jacket Potatoes (Pack of 4)                  £0.79

1x Market Value Onion (Tesco)                         £0.27

2 xCourgettes (loose from Tesco)                     £1.13

1 or 2 tsps chilli powder (according to taste)

½ pint vegetable stock

Total cost of recipe = £3.17

Method

  • Peel and slice the potatoes and place in the bottom of the slow cooker
  • Chop each sausage into 3 pieces and mix with the chilli powder
  • Chop the courgettes and onion
  • Put courgettes, onion and sausages on top of the potatoes and add the vegetable stock
  • Cook on high for 5 hours

If you regularly use a slow cooker or think slow cooking sounds right up your street, we’ve got a tasty treat for you with our ‘£4 Slow Cooker Challenge’. You could win £200 worth of Morphy Richards items in our monthly draw. To find out more information about the challenge, click here.

A number of weeks ago, Cheryl who is responsible for the ‘Madhouse Family Reviews’ blog reviewed our Flavour Savour. Ever since receiving the product, she’s been cooking her family wholesome, hearty food. Cheryl has even had a couple of goes at our ‘£4 Slow Cooker Challenge’. We’re delighted to bring you one of her £4 recipes today, a tasty Beef Carbonnade.

If you regularly use a slow cooker or think slow cooking sounds right up your street, we’ve got a tasty treat for you with our ‘£4 Slow Cooker Challenge’. You could win £200 worth of Morphy Richards items in our monthly draw. To find out more information about the challenge, click here.

Whilst talking to our Twitter followers this afternoon, we struck up a conversation with the lovely Dawn (@The_Moiderer). Dawn is also responsible for the blog: The Moiderer and is a big fan of slow cooking, in fact, she’s so much of a fan that she has a whole section of her blog dedicated to it (and what’s more, she uses a Morphy Richards Slow Cooker!).

Dawn has very kindly allowed us to share her most popular slow cooker recipe with ‘Home of the House Proud’ visitors. The recipe is for a delicious Chilli Con Carne – it’s Dawn’s second most viewed blog post since she started blogging, it must be good!

Chilli Con Carne - For Illustration Purposes only, not actual recipe

Ingredients

Minced beef (amount to suit family size!)

1x Tin of chopped tomatoes

1x Large onion

1x Pepper (any colour but green works best)

1x Large tin of kidney beans

1x Sachet of Schwartz chilli mix

Balsamic vinegar

Ketchup

Worceseter Sauce

Salt

Method

1. Chop the onion and pepper. Fry off in a small amount of olive oil until onions have browned. Throw into the slow cooker

2. Brown off the mince and drain the fat.

3. Add the following to the browned mince in the pan and stir:

  • 1/3 of the sachet of chilli mix. This gives it the flavour but very little heat. If you like it hot add more.
  • 2 generous splashes of balsamic
  • 1 generous splash of worcester sauce
  • 3 very generous squirts of ketchup
  • salt to your taste

4. Throw the stirred in mixture into the slow cooker.

5. Add the tin of kidney beans to the slow cooker.

6. Add the tin of tomatoes to the slow cooker.

7. Stir it all in together.

8. Cook it on the highest setting for 2 hours. 

9. Turn it down to medium and cook for as long as you want. Stir every hour or so for best results

If you’ve got a delicious recipe that you’d like us to feature on ‘Home of the House Proud’, we’d love to hear from you, please submit it here!

A big thanks to Sarah Allcoat from Kinross for sending us her favourite slow cooker recipe for Pea and Ham Soup, what’s more, all of the ingredients cost less than £4!

This is one of my much used recipes, filling, warming  and easy for any day especially if you’re getting in late from work or been out all day walking in the hills. Served with a big chunk of seeded wholemeal it makes a perfect meal that takes possibly minutes to prepare in the morning and is ready to eat when you get home. It also is almost better re-heated the next day so no waste at all!

Pea and Ham Soup

Ingredients

1x Ham Hock, soaked overnight in cold water (£1.99)

2x Potatoes peeled & cubed (30p)

1x Onion chopped finely(23p)

3x Carrots peeled & cubed (30p)

1x tbsp cumin seeds ( 20p)

3x Pints of water

1x tbsp of finely chopped parsley

2x Bay leaves

350g Yellow split peas, soaked overnight and rinsed (60p)

Pepper to season

Total cost of recipe = £3.62

Method

All you need to do is chop the onion, carrots, parsley & potatoes and pop in the slow cooker with the other ingredients and cook on low for between 8-10 hours ( or 4-6  on high if you’re up late or about all day!!). Just before serving, remove the ham hock and bay leaves and take the meat off the bone and return to the soup. I often finish with a sprinkle of fresh parsley to serve and to add fresh colour and serve with chunky artisan bread (or GF bread since the recipe is totally suitable for a gluten free/ wheat free diet).

If you regularly use a slow cooker or think slow cooking sounds right up your street, we’ve got a tasty treat for you with our ‘£4 Slow Cooker Challenge’. You could win £200 worth of Morphy Richards items in our monthly draw. To find out more information about the challenge, click here.

Today’s featured slow cooker recipe on ‘Home of the House Proud’ is for delicious Kashmiri Butter Chicken. This mild, delicately fragrant curry has a rich creamy sauce that is sure to please all your guests, no matter what their preferences. Serve it with plain boiled rice or warm naan bread. Check out the recipe below:

Kashmiri Butter Chicken

Serves: 4
Preparation time: 30 minutes
Cooking time: 5–7 hours
Cooking temperature: low
Slow cooker size: standard

Ingredients

2x Onions, quartered

3x Garlic cloves

4 cm (1½ inch) fresh root ginger, peeled

1x Large red chilli, halved, seeds discarded

8x Boneless, skinless chicken thighs

1x tablespoon sunflower oil

25 g (1 oz) butter

1x teaspoon cumin seeds, crushed

1x teaspoon fennel seeds, crushed

4x cardamom pods, crushed

1x teaspoon paprika

1x teaspoon ground turmeric

¼ teaspoon ground cinnamon

300 ml (1/2 pint) chicken stock

1x tablespoon light muscovado sugar

2x tablespoons tomato purée

5x tablespoons double cream

Salt

To garnish

2x tablespoons flaked almonds, toasted

Sprigs of coriander

Method

  • Blend the onions, garlic, ginger and chilli in a food processor or liquidizer or chop finely.
  • Cut each chicken thigh into 4 pieces. Heat the oil in a large frying pan and add the chicken, a few pieces at a time, until all the meat has been added. Cook over a high heat until evenly browned. Lift the chicken pieces out of the pan with a slotted spoon and transfer to a plate.
  • Add the butter to the frying pan and when it has melted add the onion paste. Cook over a more moderate heat until it is just beginning to colour. Stir in the crushed seeds, cardamom seeds and pods and ground spices. Cook for 1 minute, then mix in the stock, sugar, tomato purée and salt. Bring to the boil, stirring.
  • Transfer the chicken to the slow cooker pot, pour the onion mixture and sauce over the top and press the pieces of chicken below the surface of the liquid. Cover and cook on low for 5–7 hours.
  • Stir in the cream and serve garnished with toasted flaked almonds and sprigs of coriander.

If you’ve got a delicious recipe that you’d like us to feature on ‘Home of the House Proud’, we’d love to hear from you, please submit it here!

If you’re looking for a new slow cooker, why not check out the Morphy Richards Flavour Savour! Flavour Savour has 3 in 1 cooking functions, meaning you can seal, fast stew and slow cook in one product. The pan heats to around 200 degrees giving you the sealing functionality. After sealing, various foods including succulent chicken, tender beef and pork can be stew cooked taking approximately 11/2 hours. Alternatively you can slow cook your food allowing flavours to infuse for between 4 – 10 hours.

Flavour Savour Digital Slow Cooker

Our latest ‘£4 Slow Cooker Challenge’ recipe has been submitted by Angela who is responsible for the ‘My Frugal Journey’ blog. Angela’s recipe is for a delicious Chicken Curry, you can see her recipe below:

I am trying to use my slow cooker more on busy days, and when I saw the Morphy Richards £4 slow cooker challenge, I knew just the recipe to try.

We love curry in our house, and I have been playing around with curry in the slow cooker for a while. This version usually fills us all up and comes out tasting lovely.

Chicken Curry

Ingredients

4x chicken thigh fillets (£2)

1kg potatoes chopped really small (50p) based on 2.5kg at 99p in the basics range

1x tin chopped tomatoes (33p)

5x mushrooms (20p) based on 4p each

1tsp curry powder / 1tsp cumin / 1tsp coriander (from store cupboard)

Rice to serve (30p) based on basics range at 60p for 1kg white rice

Total cost = £3.33

One tip I can give you is to chop the potatoes up really small as they take a long time to cook. I usually find this curry is perfect on high for about 5 hours or low for 8 hours. You just have to cook the rice before you’re ready to serve.

Overall taste is lovely. I would probably add some green beans or other vegetable to taste for overall appearance.

If you regularly use a slow cooker or think slow cooking sounds right up your street, we’ve got a tasty treat for you with our ‘£4 Slow Cooker Challenge’. You could win £200 worth of Morphy Richards items in our monthly draw. To find out more information about the challenge, click here.

Our latest ‘£4 Slow Cooker Challenge’ entry comes from Alison Maclean and it’s for a tasty Pork Chop Supreme. We’re mightily impressed that the recipe only costs £3.84 to make – Well done Alison!

Pork Chop Supreme

Ingredients

4x Pork Chops – £3.27
1x Beaten Egg – 98p for half a dozen (one = 16p)
3/4 – 1 Cup Tomato Juice – 87p for a bottle (used less than a fifth = 17p)
1/2 Cup Brown Sugar – 73p for a bag (about 1/10 used = 7p)
Salt and Pepper
1 tbsp Vinegar – 13p for a bottle (tablespoon used = 2p)
Crushed cornflakes or breadcrumbs – 47p for a cheap loaf (four slices used = 15p)

Total Cost of Meal = £3.84

Method

  • Season the pork chops with salt and peppers and then brush them with the beaten egg.
  • Roll the brushed pork shops in the crushed cornflakes or breadcrumbs.
  • Brown the pork chops on the hob and then place into the slow cooker.
  • Combine all other ingredients and boil for 3 minutes, stirring all the time. Pour over pork chops and cook on medium for 6 hours.
  • Serve with mashed potatoes and green vegetables.

If you regularly use a slow cooker or think slow cooking sounds right up your street, we’ve got a tasty treat for you with our ‘£4 Slow Cooker Challenge’. You could win £200 worth of Morphy Richards items in our monthly draw. To find out more information about the challenge, click here.

Our latest ‘£4 Slow Cooker Challenge’ entry comes from Beth Fenn who’s sent us a recipe for a delicious three vegetable soup. It only cost Beth £3.41 to cook and serves up to four people – that’s what we call good value here at ‘Home of the House Proud’.

Three Vegetable Soup

Ingredients

3x Potatoes, chopped (50p for a pack of 4)

400g Chopped carrots (64p)

250g Chopped leeks (£1)

1.2L Chicken stock (store cupboard)

1/2 tsp sugar (store cupboard)

1/2 tsp grated nutmeg (store cupboard)

Salt and pepper (store cupboard)

3x bsp double cream (60p for a tub)

4x Crusty rolls (67p)

TOTAL £3.41 including crusty rolls (used Asda prices). This recipe serves 4.

Method

  • After preparing the ingredients (as per the list above), add the potatoes, carrots, leeks, stock, salt and pepper into the slow cooker.
  • Turn on the slow cooker and allow to cook for eight hours in total (or until veg is tender).
  • Pour the mixture from the slow cooker into a blender.  Add the nutmeg and sugar and blend to the required consistency.  Season to taste.
  • Pour into pre-warmed bowls and garnish with a swirl of double cream.
  • Serve with the crusty rolls.

If you regularly use a slow cooker or think slow cooking sounds right up your street, we’ve got a tasty treat for you with our ‘£4 Slow Cooker Challenge’. You could win £200 worth of Morphy Richards items in our monthly draw. To find out more information about the challenge, click here.

Everyone at Morphy Richards and ‘Home of the House Proud’ would like to thank Barbara Scott for sending us her favourite slow cooker recipe through our ‘Recipe Upload’ function and providing everyone with a  great recipe to try this weekend – a delicious dish of Slow-roasted Duck with Sage, Ginger & Rhubarb Homemade Sauce. Here’s Barbara’s recipe:

Slow Roasted Duck - For illustration purposes only, not image of actual recipe

Ingredients

1 x 1.5kg/31/2lb duck

Salt & freshly ground black pepper

115g/4oz fresh ginger

1x long stick of baby rhubarb

1x handful of fresh sage, roughly chopped

1/2 bulb of garlic, cloves removed & chopped in half

1x red onion, finely sliced

1x wine glass Marsala or Vin Santo

142ml/1/4 pint vegetable, chicken or duck stock Olive oil

Method

  • Season your duck generously inside & out. Coarsely grate half your ginger & rhubarb. Mix this in a bowl with half of your sage & all the garlic & onion, & stuff inside the cavity of your duck.
  • Place it on a rack (some slow cookers come with a rack, if not, use a small wire baking rack).
  • Cook on high for three to four hours, until the skin goes really crispy & tender, & the leg bones can be easily loosened. During this cooking time, you’ll need to check the fat level and if the fat is above the bottom of the duck, ladle it off into a bowl. You can keep it for roasting.
  • Once cooked, allow the ducks to rest on a warmed plate while you make the sauce. Drain off any remaining fat. Pull out all the stuffing & any juices from the inside of the duck into a non-stick frying pan. Heat the pan on a low heat, add your Marsala (this may flame so mind your eyebrows!) Add your stock & reduce to a good taste & consistency. Pass through a coarse sieve.
  • With a knife you can easily remove the breast from the duck &, using your hands, remove the thighs. Divide on to plates.
  • To finish off, finely slice the remaining ginger & fry off in a little hot oil in the pan. As it begins to colour, add the rest of your rhubarb, finely sliced, & finish with the rest of the sage until crisp. Sprinkle this over the duck & drizzle with your tasty sauce.

If you’ve got a delicious recipe that you’d like us to feature on ‘Home of the House Proud’, we’d love to hear from you, please submit it here!

A big thanks goes to Carla Morris from Lichfield for entering ‘Home of the House Proud’s’ ‘£4 Slow Cooker Challenge’. Carla’s £4 dish is a sumptuous beef stew:

Beef Stew

 

Ingredients

Diced stewing beef £1.98

1x onion – chopped £0.20p

3x Carrots – chopped £0.25

1x Swede - chopped £0.25p

2x Parsnips – chopped £0.50p

Potatoes (small bag) £0.78p

Water

Stock

Seasoning

Method

  • Season the beef and prepare all of the vegetables (apart from the potatoes) and stock.
  • All ingredients should be placed into the slow cooker and cooked for five hours.

Go off to work / shopping / housework / feet up… and that is the beauty of this dish, it such an easy meal to prepare in such a busy household, yet as my instructions show, you hardly need to do a thing.

You will come home to a house filled with such aroma – that hearty home smell that Mums house used to have. 

Prepare potatoes, peel and chop, pop into a saucepan for 45 minutes until ready to mash and serve on the side of your gorgeous beef stew. If you have any horseradish sauce left over in the cupboard then add a spoonful to the potatoes as you are mashing them to give them that extra zing – if not don’t worry as we are up to our £4.00!

If you regularly use a slow cooker or think slow cooking sounds right up your street, we’ve got a tasty treat for you with our ‘£4 Slow Cooker Challenge’. You could win £200 worth of Morphy Richards items in our monthly draw. To find out more information about the challenge, click here.

We’ve got a right treat for you this afternoon on ‘Home of the House Proud’, a slow cooker recipe for a delightful Baked Vanilla Cheesecake – we bet you didn’t know that you could use your slow cooker to make cheesecake?

We’ve detailed the recipe below; we’d love it if you’d try it out and let us know how it turns out. You can get in touch with us here.

Baked Vanilla Cheesecake

Serves: 6
Preparation time: 45 minutes, plus overnight chilling
Cooking time: 3 hours
Cooking temperature: high
Slow cooker size: large or extra large

Ingredients

Base

50 g (2 oz) butter, at room temperature

50 g (2 oz) caster sugar

50 g (2 oz) self-raising flour

1 egg

Cheesecake

300 g (10 oz) full-fat cream cheese

200 ml (7 fl oz) full-fat crème fraîche

50 g (2 oz) caster sugar

3 eggs, beaten

1 teaspoon vanilla essence

Icing sugar, to decorate

Mixed berry fruits, to serve

Method

  • Preheat the slow cooker if necessary – see manufacturer’s instructions. Line the base and sides of an 18 cm (7 inch) diameter, deep round cake tin with non-stick baking paper – do not use a loose-bottomed tin. Put all the ingredients for the base in a mixing bowl or food processor and beat together until smooth. Spoon into the prepared cake tin, smooth with a knife then cover the top of the tin loosely with foil.
  • Stand the cake tin on an upturned individual tart tin, saucer or biscuit cutter in the slow cooker pot. Pour boiling water into the pot to come halfway up the sides of the cake tin then add the lid and cook on high for 1 hour.
  • Meanwhile, make the cheesecake: put the cream cheese, crème fraîche and sugar in a bowl. Gradually mix in the eggs until smooth then stir in the vanilla essence.
  • Carefully lift the cake tin out of the slow cooker pot using oven gloves. Carefully remove the foil – the sponge layer should be dry and can be pressed with a fingertip. Pour the cheesecake mixture into the tin on top of the cooked sponge, cover again loosely with foil and return to the slow cooker pot. Replace the lid and cook on high for 2 hours until the cheesecake can be touched lightly with fingertips.
  • Switch off the slow cooker, remove the foil and leave the cheesecake to cool, still in the hot water. Don’t be alarmed to see that the cheesecake will sink on cooling – this is normal. When the water is barely warm, lift out the tin out, transfer to the refrigerator and chill overnight to achieve the characteristic baked cheesecake texture.
  • Carefully remove the cheesecake from the cake tin, peel off the lining paper and place on a serving plate. Dust liberally with icing sugar and serve with mixed berry fruits.

Cooks Tip

  1. Before you begin, check that the cake tin you intend to use fits comfortably into your slow cooker pot. Do not use a loose-bottomed cake tin or the water will seep into the cheesecake during cooking – if the seal on the cake tin is not watertight, stand it in a large dish or sandwich tin.

If you’ve got a delicious recipe that you’d like us to feature on ‘Home of the House Proud’, we’d love to hear from you, please submit it here!

We’re delighted to announce that we’ve received our first entry to the ‘£4 Slow Cooker Challenge’. The entry comes from Janice Channer from Abertillery and it’s for a tasty dish of Creamy Chunky Chicken. Here’s Janice’s Recipe:

Creamy Chunky Chicken

Ingredients

Small value roasted chicken – £3
Handful of peas – 20p
1x Large onion – 20p
1x Stock cube
Dash of olive oil
Sprinkle of herbs (I use chives)
1x Pot of single cream – 60p

Total cost is indeed £4.00

Method

  • Chop onion and fry lightly in olive oil (you can do this in Morphy Richard’s Flavour Savour if you have one).
  • Add pint of stock, peas, and the chicken (removed from bones).
  • Simmer gently on the stove for five minutes and then add the pot of cream.
  • Transfer all ingredients to the slow cooker and cook for approximately 3 hours.

My family loves this dish served with boiled rice, but you could have it with mash, new potatoes, veggies, jacket spuds whatever you prefer really!

If you regularly use a slow cooker or think slow cooking sounds right up your street, we’ve got a tasty treat for you with our ‘£4 Slow Cooker Challenge’. You could win £200 worth of Morphy Richards items in our monthly draw. To find out more information about the challenge, click here.