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bluekarin

Pressure cooker

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Another vote for the KUHN RIKON.

I have gone through many pressure cookers in my day but with this one have not had to replace the seal yet. Think I have had it for at least 3 years, could be more.

 

Same here. I must have had mine about 6 years and have never had to replace any part.

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Kuhn Rikon every time.

 

We wanted to be able to use our pressure cooker to "can" small numbers of jars (we have a propoer pressure canner for large quantities). I read on a US website that not all domestic pressure cookers can do this safely as they don't reach the correct pressure or stay at the correct pressure. I contacted all the suppliers I had been looking at (including Prestige) to find out if their make was suitable for canning.

 

Kuhn Rikon are the only ones who said yes.

 

I've had a number of makes before, and I would only ever have Kuhn Rikon now. Lakeland sell the most popular model, but KR actually come in different sizes so you can get something suitable for your requirements.

 

Lakeland, however, has its no quibble guarantee. So if you get it, try it, and don't like it, they will take it back and refund you.

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I've had a number of makes before, and I would only ever have Kuhn Rikon now. Lakeland sell the most popular model, but KR actually come in different sizes so you can get something suitable for your requirements.

 

Lakeland, however, has its no quibble guarantee. So if you get it, try it, and don't like it, they will take it back and refund you.

 

Thank you all, and thank you WH. I shall pop into Lakeland in the week and see what they have - I didn't knwo about their no quibble returns, so thats good to know. My parents have an old one which they said I could borrow and see if I get on with it. But it is a few years old and I'd rather get a new one, with all the safety features :lol:

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I'm reviving this thread, as I'm thinking of getting a pressure cooker, I'd already had a look at the Kuhn Rikon on Lakeland, and it's no surprise that lots of you above recommend it - Lakeland products are almost always the best ones, in my experience. Bluekarin, have you got one now, and how have you got on?

 

My question is a bit wider - I've never used a pressure cooker, and I've got bad memories of the one my mum had - noisy and rather scary. Are they really easy to use? And what do you mostly use yours for? I make a lot of soups and casseroles in the winter, but I tend to put them in the slow cooker - what else might I use this for, and does stuff taste different when it's been cooked in one of these?

 

You can guess that I've been prompted by Christmas, and the thought of steaming Christmas puddings for hours at a time, however this would be a big purchase and it will take up a lot of valuable cupboard space. I don't want to buy something that only gets used once a year!

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Just a bit of a twist to this thread :D

 

Anyone buying one of these from Lakeland should buy through Boots Treat Street :D if you have a Boots advantage card, register it with treat street, it then gives you points on your card for your Lakeland purchases :D there are loads of stores on the treat street page :D

 

I'm shopping this afternoon :D

 

Cathy

X

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I will bear that in mine CW!

 

I haven't bought the pressure cooker yet. It was quite a bit to spend and I was worried I wouldn't use it enough to justify it. But I think it would be one of those things once bought would be used a lot. Just got to get over the fear of them :lol:

 

I use my KR pressure cooker for "slow" cooking, and for stock. I also use it for canning, if I'm only canning a small amount (I have a proper pressure canner from the US as well). KR was the only European pressure cooker that is suitable for canning.

 

Don't forget that Lakeland has its no quibble guarantee, so you can return it if you don't get on with it.

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I hope no-one reminds me reviving this old thread to ask if you are still happy with your pressure cookers and how much you use them? We are veggie and apparently I should have been using one of these for dried beans for years (instead of struggling home with hundreds of tins of beans which is what I do now!) The investment is large (I was :shock: at the price, my Mum had a Prestige one many moons ago which I'm sure was about £20 then...so I suppose I shouldn't be). I guess the savings come with not buying expensive tinned beans and quicker cooking times. It seems everyone loves the KR one, so that was the one i was considering. I have to add that my husband made me get rid of the slow cooker because he said everything from it tasted the same, and I could sort of see what he meant.(not a criticism of my cooking that he usually makes I hasten to add!) ...Is this a problem with soups etc made in the pressure cooker? (I don't remember this being a problem with the stuff my mum cooked:D )

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Ahem, it has taken my 2 and a half years, but I have finally bought one :oops: I got the Kuhn Rikon one from Lakeland, 5L size. Can you just put dried pulses into, say, kidney beans in a chilli con carne, and they cook through safely and well from dried? Or do I need to cook them first in the pressure cooker and then do the chilli? I have looked a bit on Goggle, but not found any recipes yet. I've looked more at the beginners guide to owning one.

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:lol: well done on finall getting one! I think you'll grow to love it.

 

Personally I'd cook the pulses first separately because they'll need more water and a longer cooking time. I sometimes cook up a batch of pulses and then freeze them once cooked.

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So far, I have cooked in my slow cooker.....ribs (delicious), ham (delicious but cooked for a bit too long, I will also see what its like cooked in flat coke next time), potatoes (fab) and tonights piece of silverside of beef (not long enough, nor enough seasoning, but much more tender than roasting it, and not dry at all. It was a 2kg piece which I cooked for approx 50 mins)

 

For a piece of kit which loads of people rave about, it is quite hard finding recipes to use it for :roll:

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