Glorious One-Pot Meals: A Revolutionary New Quick and Healthy Approach to Dutch-Oven Cooking: A Cookbook

$9.50
by Elizabeth Yarnell

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A patented way to cook quick and easy one-pot meals, while keeping ingredients intact and full of flavor. Elizabeth Yarnell developed her revolutionary infusion-cooking method to avoid often mushy slow-cooker results and to make cooking and cleaning up after dinner a breeze. Now anyone with too many tasks and not enough time can use her technique to get dinner on the table in an hour or less, with no more than twenty minutes of hands-on prep work—and just one pot to clean. All it takes is a Dutch oven and a few basic fresh or even frozen ingredients layered--never stirred. Glorious One-Pot Meals provides the most convenient method yet of serving highly nutritious, satisfying suppers every night of the week. “When I hear ‘crisp vegetables, tender meats, incredible flavor, ONE pot, and ready in less than thirty minutes,’ I say COUNT ME IN! That’s my Quick Fix mantra! Who doesn’t cherish strategies that deliver wholesome, family-friendly meals in just minutes? All in one pot, which makes for easy cleanup. Glorious One-Pot Meals offers tons of variety, from the fabulously ordinary to the incredibly extraordinary. Fish dishes range from Very, Very Mild Fish to Honey-Chili Trout and Pistachio Halibut (with lavender!). Elizabeth tempts you with All-American Pot Roast and Corned Beef and Cabbage and then wows you with Amaranth Chili. Ready to move beyond Simply Chicken and Chicken Marsala? Then try the African Peanut Butter Stew. Or leap from Glorious Macaroni and Cheese to Aloo Gobi (a flavor-packed, Indian feast). If you’ve got a pot, you’ve got a meal. There’s truly something for everyone. —Robin Miller, host of Food Network’s “Quick Fix Meals with Robin Miller” ELIZABETH YARNELL is a certified nutritional consultant who holds the patent to the Glorious One-Pot Meal process. She lives with her family in Denver, Colorado. Introduction Strange to see how a good dinner and feasting reconciles everybody. ­—Samuel Papys Imagine coming home after a long day, reaching into your refrigerator, freezer, and pantry, and—in five to twenty minutes—tossing enough food for an entire meal into a single pot and walking away from the kitchen. A half hour to forty-five minutes later you serve up a scrumptious meal of chicken bathed in a peanut-satay sauce served on rice with a variety of crisp-tender vegetables. Or perhaps succulent scallops tinged with ginger on a bed of chunky sweet potatoes, with an array of mushrooms and broccoli to round out the meal. Sound like a dream? Our daily lives often seem to run on over-drive, and too frequently a home-cooked, healthy dinner is one of the sacrifices made. We’re too busy to cook properly, we complain. Or perhaps we just don’t know how to cook healthfully, or aren’t even sure we can identify healthy foods beyond lettuce. Surely we all want to feed ourselves and our families nutritious meals so we will live long and healthy lives, but until now there haven’t been many solutions for getting a good, nutritious meal on the table quickly. It seems that while most people would prefer to eat home-cooked meals, in reality they don’t more often than they do. In fact, 82 percent of Americans say they enjoy preparing food at home and more than half claim they would cook at home more often if it didn’t take so much time. Further, while 65 percent of us say we are trying to eat healthier foods, one-third report not having the time to prepare healthy meals. Part of the problem may be the lack of a good way to cook that meets all our needs for speed, convenience, ease, and nutrition. This was certainly the problem I faced as a newlywed and business owner diagnosed with a debilitating disease. I wanted to improve my diet and the course of my disease, but I lacked the time and stamina for long, complicated meal-preparation marathons. I wished there were an easier way to cook healthier foods. So I began experimenting and soon discovered a new and different way of cooking that met my needs: I call it infusion cooking. Infusion cooking refers to using a lidded cast-iron Dutch oven to hold layers of whole foods and flash-cooking them inside a superhot oven for a brief time. No added liquid means that these recipes are not stews but rather complete meals where each item retains its cellular integrity and emerges perfectly intact. The intense heat causes the vegetables to release their moisture, which presses up against the food and infuses it with clean flavors from herbs, spices, and other natural ingredients. Vegetables stay crisp. Meats are moist. Grains fluff nicely. It’s as if you used three or four pots and pans to create a complete and balanced dinner, only you didn’t have to juggle the timing of different dishes or hover over a hot stove or face a daunting clean-up task. Pretty cool. That’s why I call these recipes Glorious One-Pot Meals: They allow me to serve deliciously healthy dinners with very little effort—a glorious feeling! Make no mistake: These are not rec

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