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Brian Hawthorne

@dansup I use the original slow cooker, a cast iron Dutch oven, but the theory is the same. You get so much more flavor development with long, slow cooking. Surprisingly, McGee’s classic On Food and Cooking: the Science and Lore of the Kitchen, has very little on slow cooking, although the section on browning reactions is helpful. I always brown (meat, onions, etc.) at a higher temperature to get those yummy flavors from the Maillard reaction, and then turn the temperature down for long slow cooking to develop the umami flavor.

2 comments
dansup

@bhawthorne Oh cool, my partner is obsessed with Le Cruset' and just got a new cast iron dutch oven today

Dutch ovens do it better, but it's harder to master

Brian Hawthorne

@dansup I am looking forward to getting an induction cooktop, which is supposed to be ideal for slow-cooking with cast iron. My spouse has a set of old inherited Le Creuset, and I have a set of new and old cast iron I’ve slowly collected, so we have an excess of cast iron, one might say.

By the way, if you or your partner bake bread in loaf pans, the Lodge cast iron bread pans are life-changing! And the large cast iron pizza pan too.

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