So one thing about being lazy ass is that I have wonderful intentions of trying to do better and cook more and start a new website, but then I get lazy and slack. So I haven't been cooking anything more complicated than a frozen dinner lately, so instead, I'll feature a website that has a lot of great ideas for me.
I found this website, A Year of Slow Cooking while searching for easy slow cooker recipes. The author, Stephanie, has some great ideas for things to make and easy ways to do it. Not all of her recipes are quite lazy enough for me, but many of them are, or can be lazied up a bit to suit me.
She's well past the original year of her experiment to cook in the crock pot every day, but she still posts quite a bit and even came out with a book, Make It Fast, Cook It Slow, which I may have to take a look at.
I think the original recipe that took me to her site was this Lazy Chicken Crock Pot Recipe she posted. I'm a sucker for anything with Lazy in the title, and it truly is pretty dang lazy. Just tossing in some canned and frozen stuff and turning it on. That's the way I like to cook! This one might be the laziest one she's got, and they go up in complicatedness (a word? Not according to spellcheck. [Spellcheck isn't a word either? I guess it must be two words, but I flout convention!]) from there.
I also learned quite a few techniques from reading her site. For me, one of the best things about slow cooker cooking is putting everything in one pot and not having to dirty any other dishes. I learned from her that you can often throw in rice or some other grain with the rest of the stuff in the crock pot and it cooks right along with it. Purists might not like it and prefer making the rice separately and then mixing it in at the end, but my lazy self is much more interested in the easiest technique rather than 'the best' technique.
I'm going to be trying out a few more of her recipes once I go grocery shopping and get back up off my lazy ass. She has a daughter with celiac/gluten allergies so a lot of her recipes focus on that, but she offers alternatives for those of us who can eat that stuff and crock pot cooking often doesn't use a lot of wheaty type stuff anyway, so I don't find it lacking.
Lazy Ass Approved!


