Buy the best Slow and Pressure Cooker Appliances in Australia online or in store at The Good Guys. Score a good deal on great Slow Cookers, Pressure Cookers and Multi Cookers from leading brands including Breville, Russell Hobbs, Tefal, Crock Pot, Kambrook and more. Perfect for succulent stews, curries, soups, casseroles and more that are packed with rich, natural flavour. Multicookers feature a wide variety of settings for slow cooking, pressure cooking, browning, steaming, simmering, reheating and even more making them an extremely versatile kitchen appliance. Some modern multi-cookers are Wi-Fi enabled and can be updated with new recipes and programs over the air. Whether you are cooking for yourself or a large family, the right Benchtop Cooker appliances are ready and in stock at The Good Guys.
Offering different approaches to cooking the same delicious meals, Slow Cookers and Pressure Cookers are a meal time game changer. Read on to find the best Benchtop Cooker for you.
Slow Cookers are versatile and easy to use Kitchen Appliances that are great for cooking meals benefiting from retaining moisture like stews, curries, casseroles and soups. They do a great job of cooking root vegetables like potatoes and carrots along with leaving tough cuts of meat tender and moist. They’re designed to cook on a low, sustained heat throughout the day and because they cook slowly with a little bit of forward planning you'll be rewarded with rich and hearty meals packed with developed flavours. They're also very safe to leave on unsupervised once the ingredients are prepared and in the pot.
Great for last minute dinners, Pressure Cookers make regular slow cooked meals fast. A slow cooked seven hour meal might take just 45 minutes in a Pressure Cooker. The depth of flavour might not be quite the same and they require supervision, but they're great for when meals can't be started in the morning like lamb shanks. There’s also Slow and Pressure Cooker all in one combos like some Breville and Crock Pot models. Known as Multicookers, these appliances can give the best of both worlds.
Slow Cookers can be used to prepare a variety of meat based, vegetarian and vegan meals. There are tonnes of Slow Cooker recipes for delicious, set and forget meals to come home to. They’re also handy for batch preparing a week’s worth of lunches like pulled pork burgers or beef fajita wraps from beef brisket.
Slow Cookers are simple appliances with low and high cooking settings. Some cooks prefer to sear off meats first, however others swear by simply throwing all the ingredients in as they are and letting the Cooker go. For the most flavourful results, consider browning meats, onions, garlic and other veggies in a separate pan before adding them with a searing function on some models, like some of the Sunbeam or Russell Hobbs Slow Cookers for less washing up. All models should have a Keep Warm setting to keep food ready for the table.
If you're adapting a recipe that’s not written for a Slow Cooker, reduce the water and stock quantity by about half. If the meal looks a little too watery as it nears serving, use a colander or the lid to strain liquid into a wide pan and reduce it over a high heat to thicken up the sauce before pouring it back in.
When comparing to Ovens or Cooktops, Slow Cookers and Pressure Cookers are much more energy efficient cooking the same meal. Also, the kitchen won’t get noticeably hotter using a Slow or Pressure Cooker as their output is concentrated.
When comparing the energy use of the two, even the most energy efficient Slow Cookers use more than a Pressure Cooker. Pressure Cookers can produce the same meals significantly faster than a Slow Cooker, for example an 8 hour meal in a Slow Cooker can be ready to eat in 45 mins from a Pressure Cooker. If it's on less, it will consume less energy.
Pressure Cookers also generally have better insulation, which means less heat escapes and less energy is used maintaining cooking temperature.
Have a think about which cooking method you’re likely to use most: the speed of a Pressure Cooker, the hands off simplicity of a Slow Cooker, or the versatility of a Multicooker which allows either. Some Multi Cookers even allow baking meals like Philips, cooking from hundreds of recipes with Tefal, or even Air Fryer functions with selected Ninja models.
Slow Cooker settings are straightforward usually with a single control dial, and some with an Auto setting for starting on a high temperature to quickly heat then lower at the target temperature. Pressure Cookers and Multicookers usually have a cooking timer displaying the time left before the meal is ready and all should have an alert for when the cook is finished.
Consider how easy the appliance is to keep clean after meals. Is the cooking bowl easy to handle and will it fit in the sink or dishwasher? Many models have a dishwasher safe pot and lid, however you should always refer to the user manual before assuming. Also think about how much food needs to be cooked at once and see if the quoted litre capacity will be enough, then sense check everything by considering available bench or storage space in the kitchen.