Crockpot Recipe - index
Our Online Cookbook has Hundreds of Crockpot Recipes
for You to Try - from Easy to Gourmet!

If you like collecting crockpot recipes or just
trying out new recipes, you'll love our Online Cookbook of Crockpot Recipes!

Online Cookbook - Easy and Delicious Crockpot Recipes!


Back To
Crockpot Recipes

Crockpot Recipes Cookbook


Refrigerator Parts

Articles
Easy Crockpot Recipes are the Best Crockpot Recipes
Crockpot Recipes for a New Generation
Crockpot-Recipes -Full-List
A Crockpot -The Ideal Kitchen Appliance
What Exactly Is a Crockpot
Top Ten Reasons to Buy a Crockpot
Crockpot Cooking Safety Tips
Converting a Recipe
Crockpot Safety
Preparing Ingredients
Crockpot Cooking Safety Tips
Preparing Food Safely
Slow Cooker Meals
High Altitude Cooking
What's for Dinner?
Tips for Buying a Crockpot
Health Benefits
Cleaning Your Crockpot
Measurements and Conversion


Online Cookbook-Over 900
Easy Crockpot Recipes!
Recipes A thru B
Recipes C
Recipes C thru D
Recipes E thru I
Recipes J thru M
Recipes N thru R
Recipes S thru Z

* Beef Recipes *
* Chicken Recipes *
* Pork Recipes *
* Soup Recipes *
* Stew Recipes *
* Casseroles *
* Chili Recipes *
* Potato Recipes*
* Cheese Recipes *
* Bean Recipes *
* Broccoli Recipes *
* Bread Recipes *
* Cake Recipes *
* Chocolate Recipes *
* Pudding Recipes *



Diet Plans
The Zone Diet
The Atkins Diet
South Beach Diet




ARTICLE - High Altitude Cooking



If you have ever cooked at a higher altitude, you will have noticed that something was strangely different.

The food you were working so hard to prepare didn't quite turn out as expected, did it? It also took longer to finish cooking than you had anticipated.

You have just learned that the cooking strategy you had perfected over time will need some 'adjustment'.

Here's why it happened. At higher altitudes, the air pressure in the atmosphere is lower than it is at lower altitudes. This difference in air pressure is quite evident when you are trying to catch your breath. It is this same difference in air pressure which affected how your food turned out.

You see, at sea level water boils at 212 degrees F. But at an altitude of 7500 feet however, it boils at about 198 degrees F. - Big difference when it comes to cooking!

This difference in the water boiling temperature has a great effect on food and food cooking processes. It will affect the flavor and taste of food.

Food will be underdone because the moisture in the food itself and the water in which it is being cooked boils off more quickly. Because of this, your food can easily cook dry.

Also, unless you make special adjustments to the temperature of cooking oil, deep fried foods will be over-brown on the outside and undercooked on the inside.

Another side-effect of high altitude cooking is that sugar syrups used in making candies, frostings and jellies will concentrate much more rapidly than at lower elevations.

One final important fact to be aware of: Canned fruits, tomatoes and pickled vegetables do not become thoroughly processed because of the lowered boiling point of water. And low-acid foods (vegetables, meat and poultry) can nurture heat-resistant bacteria unless processed longer and at higher poundage in a steam-pressure canner.

When it comes to the individual ingredients themselves, it opens up a whole new can of worms. Here's a statement which is complicated to understand at first, but here goes:

There is a complex inter-play between ingredients which bears a definite relationship to the others. And the quality of the finished product depends on a delicate balance of ingredients which can only be achieved through the proper adjusted quantity of each ingredient.

If you didn't understand that (as I also didn't), there is a book that you should know about which is loaded with information and strategies to offset the unique problems and complexities of high altitude baking and cooking. The book was first published in 1980 by Random House and is called 'The New High Altitude Cookbook' by Beverly M. Anderson and Donna M. Hamilton.

Now when it comes to your crockpot, be sure to allow for considerably more cooking and baking time at the higher elevations.

A quick tip: Aluminum foil on top of the foods being cooked or between the rim of the cooker and the cover will reflect the heat downward into the food. This will be especially helpful at higher elevations.

I hope you found this information useful and be sure to visit my website for more information and recipes!








Food Recipe - High Altitude Cooking

General Cooking Tip:

Certain ingredients tend to break down during extended cooking. When possible add these ingredients toward the end of the cooking time. These include: Milk, cream and sour cream - add during the last 15 minutes of cooking time. Seafood - add in the last hour of cooking time, unless the recipe specifies otherwise.


All Rights Reserved Easy Crockpot Recipes | Contact Us | Sitemap | Best Crockpot Recipes