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I know the basic usage of slow cooker is for stews, soups, pot roasts and various other foods that have high water content - essentially, simmered in some kind of sauce, which then is part of the food. In essence, something that needs to be packed in a leak-proof box if I want to take it as my lunch to work and not have it leak all over my bag.

I'm curious if slow cooker can be employed for more "dry" food, something without sauces - possibly something like caressoles, meat pies` or such? If so, what kind of recipes could I look for, for that kind of foods?

3 Answers 3

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I've made "dry" dishes, such as meat loaf and shepherd's pie (and brownies, once) in my slow cooker. I've done it 2 ways.

  1. Straight into the ceramic insert
  2. Using a smaller ovensafe dish inside the ceramic insert to give it the right shape

I've never had an issue.

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Slow cookers have a heating element generally on the bottom of the unit which heats the ceramic insert, which in turn heats whatever is inside it. They are designed to heat liquids, and the foods cook because the heat is convected around by the liquid.

Slow cookers are not designed to cook without liquid, and I personally would not try cooking dry things in them for the following reasons:

  1. Uneven heating: the heat in a slow cooker typically is from the bottom, if you put a casserole in you'll get a very cooked bottom and a very underdone top. Not good in a pie, where the top needs heat to form a crust
  2. Damage of the heating element/safety concerns: liquid has a high capacity for heat and cushions the heating of the element in the slow cooker, without liquid in it the element may overheat and cause damage, or maybe even (in some older units) start a fire
  3. Damage to the ceramic insert: the ceramic insert in slow cookers is designed to carry liquid, if you try to cook dry foods it is liable to crack

If you want to cook a casserole or a pie use an oven as it will deliver even heat all around. Use a slow cooker as it is intended.

That doesn't mean you cannot use a slow cooker to make bag-friendly meals. Simply make dishes where you can discard the juice without losing the majority of the flavor, reduce the liquid on the stove afterwards until it is more of a gravy so it won't leak out, or add a thickener to the sauce to stabilize it at lower temperatures.

Some ideas for you:

  • beef brisket with vegetables - doesn't need the liquid, the flavor is in the food. Bring some nice crusty bread with it
  • stew: you can remove the solids and then gently cook down some of the liquid until it is a gravy, or add a thickening agent like corn starch (corn flour to some). Add enough so it will gel up when cold, but turn back to a liquid (albeit thick) when heated
  • lamb or chicken tagine: remove the liquid and use it to make some couscous. The couscous will absorb the flavors of the sauce and make a fabulous side. Reduce the rest to make it thicker and use it to add flavor to the solid ingredients and keep them moist
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  • +1 because your reasoning is sound. I would clarify that the foods need to be wet but they don't have to be soupy. Meat and veggies and especially stew are not dry enough to need to have the liquid separated. There are casserole, cake and cobbler recipes that work very well in crock pots. They are all very moist versions but not so moist that there is liquid to be separated. Commented May 8, 2013 at 14:22
  • Normally its heating elements that wrap around the outside of the unit, two of them total (above each other). One is used for keep warm, the other for low, and both for high.
    – derobert
    Commented May 8, 2013 at 17:30
  • All this depends on what model slow cooker you have, and how the elements are built and controlled
    – TFD
    Commented May 8, 2013 at 21:37
  • Nevertheless, the thermostat should keep the cooker from overheating; it will have more work than with the bowl filled with liquid but slow cooker doesn't overheat due to the thermostat keeping the temperature level, not due to latent heat of boiling water limiting it, as is in case of traditional simmering, so point 2. seems entirely invalid to me.
    – SF.
    Commented May 9, 2013 at 7:27
  • Doesn't all of this information depend on how hot your pot gets and how quickly the heat builds? I know that a few of the models have relatively different temperature outputs? I know it's not an answer but an additional thought evoked by the original question.
    – user42474
    Commented Jan 14, 2016 at 8:33
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My slow cooker is at least 30 years old, and I do roast gammon with nowt but a bit of brown sugar over in it. Also brisket/topside sat on a bed of onion and carrot and nothing else. You won't hurt it trying.

It's a Russel Hobbs 4435, 3l capacity.

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