Slow cooker sauce - forgot the thickening agent...
Discussion
Hoping that get an answer here, just making a cacciatore style sauce (we are away in the middle of nowhere and just going out walking for the day).
Thrown chopped tin toms, stock, garlic, onion, peppers mushroom and chicken into the pot but forgot to bring a bit of flour with me to thicken. It's going over pasta later which will likely make it too runny.
Would it be best to cook the pasta then add a bit of liquid to the mix to add a bit of starch or semi cook he pasta and finish the pasta in the mix?
Thrown chopped tin toms, stock, garlic, onion, peppers mushroom and chicken into the pot but forgot to bring a bit of flour with me to thicken. It's going over pasta later which will likely make it too runny.
Would it be best to cook the pasta then add a bit of liquid to the mix to add a bit of starch or semi cook he pasta and finish the pasta in the mix?
Chicken Chaser said:
Well it wasn't a classic! Plenty of flavour, but it just struggled to thicken. I reduced it back and finished the pasta off in the mix. There was some reduction but not enough. Fortunately there was garlic focaccia to soak some of it up!
As suggested above, flour / cornflour added at the end will thicken it virtually immediately - in case it happens again!
sgrimshaw said:
Again may not have had any .... but Weetabix will thicken without being obvious.
No, I didn't believe it either until I tried it.
I believe anything of weetabix. NASA should have used it on the tiles on the shuttle - coat, run through a dishwasher and no fecker would remove it, not even entry into the Sun's atmosphere let alone ours.No, I didn't believe it either until I tried it.
However, I won't be putting one in a sausage casserole any time soon!
Murph7355 said:
I believe anything of weetabix. NASA should have used it on the tiles on the shuttle - coat, run through a dishwasher and no fecker would remove it, not even entry into the Sun's atmosphere let alone ours.
However, I won't be putting one in a sausage casserole any time soon!
I had a bowl that went through 2 dishwasher cycles and still had concreetabix on it, I lost my sHowever, I won't be putting one in a sausage casserole any time soon!
t and flung it out the kitchen window into the garden. Mrs was not impressed. There can't be many harder substances known to man.
dazwalsh said:
Murph7355 said:
I believe anything of weetabix. NASA should have used it on the tiles on the shuttle - coat, run through a dishwasher and no fecker would remove it, not even entry into the Sun's atmosphere let alone ours.
However, I won't be putting one in a sausage casserole any time soon!
I had a bowl that went through 2 dishwasher cycles and still had concreetabix on it, I lost my sHowever, I won't be putting one in a sausage casserole any time soon!
t and flung it out the kitchen window into the garden. Mrs was not impressed. There can't be many harder substances known to man.
The more cycles you put it through, the harder it gets. The trick is never to let the stuff in the dishwasher in the first place. Use disposable bowls.
Scrambled egg is the cushioned equivalent.
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