Can I Make Stock in a Pressure Cooker or Slow Cooker? | Ask The Food Lab (2024)

"Can I make stock in a pressure cooker or a slow cooker?"

Traditional stocks are made by slowly simmering bones, meat, and aromatics on the stovetop for many hours. I've heard that using a pressure cooker can help speed this process up. Is this true? Likewise, if I'm going to be out of the house all day, can I throw my bones and aromatics in a slow cooker and expect the end results to be as tasty?

Most of the time, I'm the kind of cook who enjoys doing things the long way—provided the long way is still easy. Simmering a big stock pot full of chicken bones and vegetables that I've saved up in my freezer for a few months is really easy. I cover it with water, set it on a burner, bring it to a simmer, then let it cook all day, occasionally stopping by to breathe in the aroma wafting out my kitchen door. I'm convinced that cooks who insist that a stock must be skimmed of excess fat and scum religiously are really only saying that so they have an excuse to stand by the pot and inhale*.

*I have other friends who make excuses to stand by the pot and inhale in completely different contexts.

That said, there are also times when I'm in a hurry and I want that great chicken stock NOW. Likewise, there are days when I need to step out for a while and I don't want to leave an unattended pot simmering on the stovetop. This is when I think about pulling out the pressure cooker or the slow cooker. But how do the results compare?

Setting Up the Chicken Stock Experiment

To answer this question, I made three batches of chicken stock using identical starting ingredients (chicken carcasses, onions, carrots, celery, bay leaves, and peppercorns) cooked using three different methods:

  1. The traditional method: on the stovetop, slowly simmered and skimmed for 5 hours.
  2. The pressure cooker method: cooked under high pressure in a pressure cooker for 1 hour.
  3. The slow cooker method: cooked in a slow cooker on the low temperature setting for 8 hours.

After each batch was cooked, I reduced the resulting stock down to the same volume in order to account for any moisture that was lost (the stovetop method lost nearly 30% more volume than the other two methods due to evaporation). I refrigerated each broth overnight so that I could get a good gauge of how much gelatin was extracted through each method (the firmer a stock sets up in the refrigerator, the more gelatin it contains), then took back-lit photos of each broth under identical lighting conditions to judge clarity and overall color, and finally had a group of tasters taste each broth, judging them on flavor, body, and overall preference.

The Results

Can I Make Stock in a Pressure Cooker or Slow Cooker? | Ask The Food Lab (1)

"The slow cooker broth fared considerably worse than either, with a paler color, thinner texture, and less flavor."

Both the standard stock and the pressure cooker stock received high marks across the board, with the pressure cooked version taking a very slight lead over the standard version in the body department (flavor scores were within 1% of each other). The slow cooker broth fared considerably worse than either, with a paler color, thinner texture, and less flavor.

The Explanation

So how does broth in a pressure cooker achieve excellent results in a fraction of the time that it takes using the traditional method?

When simmering meat and bones for a stock, there are two end goals: flavor and body. Flavor mostly comes from meaty bits (either whole pieces of meat used in the stock, or from bits of meat stuck to the bones) and aromatics. The flavorful compounds found in, say, a little bit of chicken meat or an onion can be extracted relatively quickly and are largely temperature-related: they get squeezed out as soon as muscle proteins are heated and contract, or plant cells rupture and spill their contents. Once those compounds are extracted, extended cooking doesn't change things much.

Body, on the other hand, comes from the conversion of connective tissue (mainly collagen) into gelatin through the application of heat in the presence of moisture. This gelatin gives the broth a rich, mouth-coating texture. The process is dependent on both temperature and time, and the two factors are inversely related: the hotter you cook your broth, the faster you'll convert collagen into gelatin.

Using a standard stovetop method, this temperature is limited by the boiling temperature of water—212°F (100°C) at standard atmospheric pressure,** and if you care about the clarity of your broth, you'll have to cook at even lower temperatures—in the 180 to 190°F range)—in order to prevent fat, minerals, and other gunk from emulsifying into your stock and clouding it up.

**You mountain-dwelling folk where water boils at lower temperatures might find that your stock takes even longer to gain body than us sea-levelers.

A pressure cooker solves both of these problems. Not only does the higher pressure achieved inside a pressure cooker allow you to heat water to a higher temperature (up to around 250°F, or 120°C), but it also prevents the water from boiling, leading to less agitation. The end result? Rapid body and flavor and great clarity.

On the other end of the spectrum, the batch of broth made in the slow cooker had a less body and flavor than that made on the stovetop because its temperature is a little too low to convert collagen or extract flavorful compounds effectively. Perhaps given a much longer cook time, it would have eventually acquired the right level of body, but most likely, that flavor would never improve.

Conclusion

The standard method and the pressure cooker will both deliver good results. Want your broth finished in just about an hour? Grab the pressure cooker. If you, like me, enjoy having an apartment that smells awesome and an excuse to spend your Sunday morning in your pajamas walking in and out of the kitchen, stick with the traditional method. Just leave the slow cooker for the slow cookin'.

Got a question for The Food Lab?

Email your questions to AskTheFoodLab@seriouseats.com, and please include your Serious Eats user name in your email. All questions will be read, though unfortunately not all can be answered.

Can I Make Stock in a Pressure Cooker or Slow Cooker? | Ask The Food Lab (2024)

FAQs

Can I Make Stock in a Pressure Cooker or Slow Cooker? | Ask The Food Lab? ›

Conclusion. The standard method and the pressure cooker will both deliver good results. Want your broth finished in just about an hour? Grab the pressure cooker.

Can stock be made in a pressure cooker? ›

There's no doubt a pressure cooker is the best tool for flavorful, gelatin-rich chicken stock that's ready in just about an hour.

Is a slow cooker good for making stock? ›

Making a Good Stock

The slow cooker is perfect for this kind of work — it will hold your stock at a steady, slow simmer much better and more easily than you can on the stovetop. Plus you don't have to babysit a stockpot!

Is it better to make stock in a pressure cooker or stove? ›

Not only will a pressure cooker help you make a big pot of stock in just about one hour, but it will also likely taste richer and more fully flavored than the slow-simmered version, too.

What is the use of pressure cooker in laboratory? ›

A pressure cooker, pressure steam steriliser or an autoclave is commonly used in the laboratory to effectively sterilise micro-organisms and agar. Pressure steam sterilisers and autoclaves reach the recommended temperature and pressure required to render most micro- organisms and agar sterile.

Is it better to slow cook or pressure cook broth? ›

Conclusion. The standard method and the pressure cooker will both deliver good results. Want your broth finished in just about an hour? Grab the pressure cooker.

Is it better to pressure cook or slow cook bone broth? ›

A pressure cooker makes bone broth in a fraction of the time the slow cooker does, but both are excellent options. We've shared methods for both below, it all depends on what works best for your timeframe.

What cooking method is best for stock? ›

Stocks are gently simmered, never boiled, to extract their flavors. They must be started in cold water to gently open and release impurities, caused by proteins in the meat and bones to rise to the top and be easily skimmed from the surface.

Why are slow cookers better than pressure cookers? ›

Slow cookers are much better for cooking root vegetables and tough cuts of meat because the long, low-temperature cooking process is great for adding moisture and breaking down fat. Pressure cookers can get hot enough for meats and vegetables to brown in them when cooking, but slow cookers can't.

How do you thicken stock in a slow cooker? ›

A slurry is a mixture of flour and water, whisked together until smooth and added towards the end of cooking; it's a super-simple way to thicken any soup. For slow cooker soups, add your slurry with at least 30 minutes of cook time left so that the raw flour can cook and thicken the soup. Need a gluten-free option?

What are the disadvantages of cooking in a pressure cooker? ›

However, starchy foods may form acrylamide, a harmful chemical, when pressure cooked. Consumption of this chemical on a regular basis may lead to health issues like cancer, infertility, and neurological disorders.

Can I leave stock in pressure cooker overnight? ›

Pressure Cooker Chicken Stock. If you are using an electric pressure cooker like an Instant Pot, all you have to do is throw everything in there and program it. You can even leave it on overnight because the “keep warm” setting will keep the temperature in the safe zone without cooking it any more.

What is better than a pressure cooker? ›

Instant Pot: The Modern Marvel

The Instant Pot, often hailed as the modern marvel of kitchen appliances, has revolutionized the way we cook. It's a multi-functional device that combines the features of a pressure cooker, slow cooker, rice cooker, steamer, and sauté pan.

Is a pressure cooker the same as a slow cooker? ›

Even though both can produce similar results, there is a main difference between a slow cooker and a pressure cooker. A slow cooker will cook food longer at a lower temperature, whereas a pressure cooker uses hot steam to cook food much quicker.

How safe are pressure cookers? ›

Pressure cookers are considered safe when used correctly. However, if they bypass property safety testing or are not tested for structural weaknesses, they can explode or cause a fire.

Do you need to soak broth mix if using a pressure cooker? ›

For best results, soak for 8 hours or overnight, then drain and add to your soup or stew, bring to the boil and simmer for an hour before serving. If cooking in a pressure cooker you can eliminate the soaking an reduce the cooking time to 20 minutes.

Can you overcook bone broth in a pressure cooker? ›

Bone broth of any kind is healthy -especially if you're using good quality bones and cooking the bones long enough – you'll be good! Can you overcook bone broth in a pressure cooker? It's best to not cook instant pot bone broth for more than 18 hours. Especially if you have vegetables in it they can get very bitter.

How long to pressure can stock? ›

Center hot lid on jar. Apply band and adjust until fit is fingertip tight. Process filled jars in a pressure canner at 10 pounds pressure 20 minutes for pints and 25 minutes for quarts, adjusting for altitude, according to your pressure canners directions.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Tyson Zemlak

Last Updated:

Views: 6192

Rating: 4.2 / 5 (63 voted)

Reviews: 94% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Tyson Zemlak

Birthday: 1992-03-17

Address: Apt. 662 96191 Quigley Dam, Kubview, MA 42013

Phone: +441678032891

Job: Community-Services Orchestrator

Hobby: Coffee roasting, Calligraphy, Metalworking, Fashion, Vehicle restoration, Shopping, Photography

Introduction: My name is Tyson Zemlak, I am a excited, light, sparkling, super, open, fair, magnificent person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.