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Braised Pork with Vegetables in a Slow Cooker
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Dishes in a Multicooker

Braised Pork with Vegetables in a Slow Cooker

Braised Pork with Vegetables in a Slow Cooker = HOMELY easy-to-prepare dish. SLOW-COOKER advantages: CLEAN cooking + MINIMAL burning-risk + TENDER MEAT + JUICY VEGETABLES + multitasking-friendly (prepare dessert simultaneously). The 60-minute total preparation produces 3 servings.
Time 60 min
Yield 3 servings
Calories 208 kcal
Difficulty Medium
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Instructions

  1. WASH pork with COLD water several times; PAT DRY with paper-towels. Cut into LARGE/MEDIUM PIECES. SEASON generously with SPICES + SALT; mix well. Leave 15-20 MIN to absorb.

    Step 1
  2. PREPARE VEGETABLES: ONIONS + CARROTS + SWEET PEPPERS. PEEL carrots + onions; cut into LARGE pieces. WASH pepper; remove seeds; cut LARGE/MEDIUM (not small = avoid burning).

    Step 2
  3. In SLOW-COOKER bowl (5L capacity): pour SUNFLOWER OIL; set FRYING MODE. Place MEAT; FRY with LID OPEN ~7-8 MIN. STIR occasionally. Important: brown well.

    Step 3
  4. Add VEGETABLES (carrots + peppers + onions) to bowl.

    Step 4
  5. MIX meat + vegetables; pour BOILING WATER or BROTH; add SPICES + DRIED HERBS to taste. CLOSE LID; set "STEWING" MODE.

    Step 5
  6. WAIT for slow-cooker SIGNAL (35-45 MIN, depends on appliance). Serve alone or with cereals/spaghetti/rustic-potatoes. Bon appétit!

    Step 6

Tips

  • 1

    THE FRY-THEN-STEW SLOW-COOKER PROTOCOL. Steps 3-5's "frying mode then stewing mode" is texture + flavor essential. STEW-ONLY (no fry-first): meat pale + bland + no Maillard-flavor + watery-result. FRY-FIRST (Maillard browning): creates GOLDEN-CRUST + RICH FLAVOR-BASE + THEN STEW slowly = TENDER + flavorful + perfect-texture. The TWO-STAGE same-bowl approach: signature-slow-cooker-technique that mimics traditional braising. Same fry-then-braise principle: French boeuf bourguignon, Italian osso buco, all classic-braising traditions. Pro-tip: LID OPEN during fry-mode (allows browning vs steaming); LID CLOSED during stew-mode (traps moisture).

  • 2

    THE LARGE-PIECE-VEGETABLE NO-BURN RULE. Step 2's "large/medium pieces, not small to avoid burning" is texture-essential. SMALL VEGETABLE pieces in 45-min stew: BURN to bottom + disintegrate + bitter-burnt-flavor. LARGE pieces: maintain integrity + cook through evenly + perfect-texture-when-served + visual-appeal. The CUT-SIZE matters more than thinking. Same large-piece-for-long-cook principle: ALL braising + stewing traditions worldwide. Pro-tip: 2-3 CM CUBES = ideal for 45-min stew; smaller = burn-risk; larger = undercooked-center. The BOTTOM-OF-POT scrutiny matters most. For another classic slow-cooker preparation worth trying, try Pork Stew in a Multicooker at Home.

  • 3

    THE 15-20-MIN PRE-MARINATE FLAVOR-PENETRATION. Step 1's "leave meat 15-20 min after seasoning" is flavor-essential. STANDARD season-and-immediately-cook: surface-flavor only + interior bland. PRE-MARINATE 15-20 MIN: spices + salt PENETRATE meat-fibers + flavor INTEGRATES with protein + final result UNIFORM throughout. The TIME-INVESTMENT (negligible) for flavor-improvement (significant). Same pre-marinate principle: ALL professional-meat-cooking. Pro-tip: SHORT-MARINATE (15 min) = enough for surface-flavor; LONGER (1+ hour) = deeper-penetration but optional. Use the 15 min to PREP VEGETABLES = parallel-cooking efficiency.

  • 4

    THE BOILING-WATER-OR-BROTH FLAVOR-BUILDING. Step 5's "boiling water OR broth" specification offers flavor-customization. PLAIN BOILING WATER: clean + neutral + lets meat-and-vegetable-flavors shine. CHICKEN/BEEF BROTH: richer + more-complex-flavor + restaurant-quality result. VEGETABLE BROTH: enhances vegetable-character. The CHOICE depends on intended-richness. The 100 ML AMOUNT: just-enough liquid for stewing (slow-cooker creates additional moisture from vegetables). AVOID: excess water (becomes soup); cold water (slows cook + loses Maillard). Same liquid-choice principle: ALL braising + stewing traditions. Pro-tip: HOMEMADE BROTH = best quality; bouillon-cube + boiling water = acceptable shortcut. For another classic Russian-comfort meat preparation worth trying, try Pork with Onions and Carrots in a Skillet.

FAQ

What pork cut works best? +

RECIPE specifies "lean pork". RECOMMENDED cuts: PORK LOIN (lean + tender + classic-braising choice), PORK SHOULDER (more-marbled + heartier flavor + extends cook-time slightly), PORK TENDERLOIN (most-tender + premium variation + reduce cook-time to 25 min). The LEAN-LOIN version (recipe-default): perfect balance of healthiness + texture + accessibility. AVOID: bony cuts (don't fit slow-cooker design well), super-fatty cuts (defeats lean-recipe character), pre-marinated commercial pork. Pro-tip: 400-500 G (recipe-amount) = perfect for 5L slow-cooker; smaller-bowl = scale down proportionally. Cut-thickness affects cook-time: 2-3 cm cubes ideal.

Can I substitute the meat? +

Yes — recipe technique transfers to other proteins. PORK (recipe-canonical): traditional + accessible + perfect for slow-cook. BEEF CHUCK: heartier + needs longer cook (60+ min). CHICKEN THIGHS (boneless): faster cook (30 min) + lighter result. LAMB SHOULDER: bolder + traditional Mediterranean-style. RABBIT: lean game-meat + premium variation. The PORK version (recipe-canonical): family-friendly + budget + universal-appeal. AVOID: fish or seafood (don't suit long slow-cook), pre-cooked meat. Pro-tip: ANY tender-meat can be cubed + slow-cooked in same template; adjust time to meat-toughness.

How long does it keep? +

Refrigerated covered: 3-4 days at peak quality. Day 1: peak fresh-cooked + tender. Day 2-3: still excellent — flavors integrate beautifully + slight-thickening of sauce. Day 4: still good but slightly drier. Reheating: gentle stovetop 5 min covered with splash of water = revives moisture, OR microwave 2-3 min covered. FREEZER: works (2 months) — flat-portion bags + thaw refrigerator overnight. Pro-tip: prepare large batch + freeze portions for week-of-meals + emergency-dinners. Russian families: weekend-cook + week-of-meals strategy works perfectly. The SLOW-COOKER preparation = ideal for batch-cooking.

Without slow-cooker? +

Yes — adapt to standard cookware. STOVETOP: heavy-bottom Dutch-oven; same fry-then-stew sequence; SIMMER LOW-HEAT covered 45 min. OVEN BRAISE: brown meat in pan + transfer to dutch-oven + add vegetables + liquid + 160°C oven 1 HOUR. INSTANT POT (pressure-cooker): 20 minutes high-pressure + 10 min natural-release. The SLOW-COOKER advantages (recipe-canonical): hands-off + consistent temperature + multitasking-friendly. The STOVETOP version: requires more attention but same result. Pro-tip: SLOW-COOKER perfect for working-people (start morning + ready evening); stovetop needs hourly checks. The TEMPERATURE-control + MOISTURE-management = key whatever method.

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