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  2. These Affordable Crock-Pot Recipes Will Save You Time ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/20-money-saving-recipes-crock...

    Learn go-to recipes like making your own beef broth and yogurt from scratch. They are less expensive ways to start so many meals, but also end up being healthier slow cooker recipes , too, because ...

  3. 50 Old-Fashioned Recipes from the Midwest

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    Slow-Cooker Homemade Chicken and Rice Soup Using the slow cooker takes some of the effort out of making from-scratch meals. The long cook time helps develop great homemade flavor in this Crock-Pot ...

  4. Ultimate Slow-Cooked Pot Roast Recipe - AOL

    www.aol.com/food/recipes/ultimate-slow-cooked...

    Season the beef with the salt and black pepper. Heat the oil in a 12-inch skillet over medium-high heat. Add the beef and cook until well browned on all sides.

  5. Pot roast - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pot_roast

    Pot roast is an American beef dish [1] made by slow cooking a (usually tough) cut of beef in moist heat, on a kitchen stove top with a covered vessel or pressure cooker, in an oven or slow cooker. [2] Cuts such as chuck steak, bottom round, short ribs and 7-bone roast are preferred for this technique. (These are American terms for the cuts ...

  6. Scouse (food) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scouse_(food)

    Some recipes suggest including marrowbones to thicken the stew. [4] Proportions vary from equal amounts of meat and vegetables to a 1:5 proportion between meat and potato. [2] A meatless version, known as "blind scouse", is also recorded, for vegetarians, or when people were too poor to afford meat.

  7. Lancashire hotpot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lancashire_hotpot

    In the 17th century, the word "hotpot" referred not to a stew but to a hot drink—a mixture of ale and spirits, or sweetened spiced ale. [1] An early use of the term to mean a meat stew was in The Liverpool Telegraph in 1836: "hashes, and fricassees, and second-hand Irish hot-pots" [2] and the Oxford English Dictionary (OED) cites the dish as being served in Liverpool in 1842. [1]