What a difference a different can of Campbell's made....

First version, with 'chicken broth', was great thin soup.
Second version, with 'cream of chicken', is er, well....

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After me a few days away from the kitchens, the pot was full of vegetables for veg stock, which had all got problematic. Any texture or taste left? Likely to spoil? If I gave the veg to the chickens, what to do with the liquid? I don't want to think about sorting this out! I just want the pot empty so I can start over with this big hunk of failed expensive roast right now!

No-brains needed: dump the whole veg/stock thing into a gallon plastic bag, label, and freeze in the "Veg Need Work" drawer.

I probably wouldn't offer this batch to anyone else, but I'm really liking it. Surprising tastes in it!
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Note to self: Here's what I'm dreaming of.

Crock-Pot® 4.7 L Sauté Traditional Slow Cooker
Model #SC7500
4.7 Litre capacity - ideal for up to 5 people
2 heat settings
Convenient keep warm function
Removable pot can be used:- - On the hob - In the microwave - In the oven - In the freezer - In the refrigerator
http://www.crockpot.co.uk/Product.aspx?cid=1469&pid=7753

Now, how to get one in the US? Or, can I afford it? Better check exchange rate.
I'm being cautious, and there are warnings about not letting the contents spend a lot of time warming or cooling, which would put it in temperatures where bacteria could grow.

On the ranch in the 1950s, we kept a pot on the back burner and heated it up once a day to just boiling, which killed any bacteria. At night sometimes we put it in the fridge, but it wasn't a crock, which takes longer to heat and cool.

So to emulate those fast heatings and coolings, maybe I'll try heating the stew in the microwave to bring it up to slow cook temperature before putting it in the slow cooker heating device. To fast cool it before putting it in the fridge, I've frozen about a cupful of water in a dishwasher-safe jar, to insert in the stew (jar and all) as a removable 'ice cube'. (After unplugging the cooker of course!) So as not to get the jar messy, I might put it in a disposable plastic bag before each use.

BTW, my slow cooker lives on the porch, and weather lately has been mostly around freezing or mid-30's. (We're west of Seattle, so temperatures are pretty mild overall.)

ETA: This worked okay, though it took longer to cool down the pot and contents than I'd expected. I froze a 1-pint container of water and put it in a small crockpot (after taking the crock out onto counter). Forgot to time it, but I think it was about half an hour to an hour: didn't have to stay up late for it to get to lukewarm. Then I took out the ice and put the pot in the fridge.

Dunno if I could later put the pot in the freezer, as I could find only one crockpot advertised as freezer-safe.
Both these add the cream or cream cheese after the vegs have had a long slow cooking.

For the tomato soup, you stir in the cream just before serving.

For the cream cheese chicken, after slow cooking you put in the cream cheese then cook half an hour on high.

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Here's one where all the ingredients go in together, but it's short and the cheese -- feta -- is sprinkled on top.
http://crockpot365.blogspot.com/2008/04/crockpot-eggplant-parmesan-with-feta.html

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Here's cream cheese and shredded parmesan going in at the same time as the other ingredients.
http://crockpot365.blogspot.com/2009/06/crockpot-turkey-tetrazzini-recipe.html

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Here's a fondue where everything goes in at once (mostly cheese and beer). Then "Cover and cook on low for 2to 4 hours, stirring every 30 minutes."
http://crockpot365.blogspot.com/2010/10/slow-cooker-cheese-fondue-recipes.html

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http://crockpot365.blogspot.com/2008/04/crockpot-pound-cake-recipe.html


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Got a crock pot and a place to put it where it can simmer perpetually. Never used one before.

Saw something about 'perpetual soup' where you keep something simmering constantly and add whatever you have from one day to the next. Add scraps, dip out soup. Or maybe it's dip out tonight's bowl of soup, then add some scraps. Whatever stays in the pot too long, dissolves into stock.

Or maybe sometimes, when you come home with a fresh fish fillet, heat the pot a little hotter(?) then drop the fillet in just long enough to cook it, then pull the fillet out to eat. So it's a flavored fillet in sauce, and no fish bowl to clean; the fish juice has gone into the soup?

Has anyone tried this? Any cautions?
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