Presto 6 quart Electric Pressure Cooker – Stainless and Black, Silver
Make healthy, flavorful meals in the Presto electric pressure cooker plus-aa pressure cooker and slow cooker in one. Cook meat, fish, chicken, vegetables, beans, rice, grains, even desserts. It’s fast and easy, just set and the rest is automatic. Select function settings for high pressure, low pressure, slow cook, Brown, sauté, and keep warm. High-speed pressure cooking preserves flavors and nutrients, even tenderizes less expensive cuts of meat. It cooks up to 70% faster than ordinary cooking methods, saving time, energy, and money. The electric pressure cooker plus features 19 programmed settings including 12 pressure cooking presets. The proper pressure is maintained automatically. A special rack is included for cooking several foods at once with no intermingling of flavors. Digital controls with an LED display count down the remaining cooking time. When the timer signals that cooking is complete, the cooker switches to keep warm to let the pressure release on its own, or you can activate the valve lever for quick pressure release. The removable pot with nonstick surface is dishwasher safe for easy cleaning. Provides eight built-in safety features including a cover locking system that allows pressure to build only when the cover is securely closed and prevents the cover from being opened until pressure is safely reduced.
Product Features
- Pressure cooker and slow cooker in one
- Cook meat, fish, chicken, vegetables, beans, rice, grains, even desserts
- Fast and easy, just set and the rest is automatic
- Function settings for high pressure, low pressure, slow cook, brown, sauté, and keep Warm
- High-speed pressure cooking preserves flavors and nutrients, tenderizes less expensive cuts of meat
You Are In Control of Your Cooking…
I absolutely love pressure cooking. I bought my first pressure cooker shortly after we were married in 1970. It was an aluminum manual model, either Mirro or Presto. My mother had used a pressure cooker, not carefully, and I remember seeing the pressure regulator fly off the top, and the cooker spewing food onto the ceiling. The boiling food left heat bubbles in the paint. I’m pretty sure she was cooking the (then) forbidden foods – beans and applesauce. Fast forward to the late 1980s…