Cookbooks
Instant-Pot Breakfast Cobbler
Waking up to the same breakfast day after day can be convenient and reliable, but it can get a bit boring. This breakfast cobbler is a great way to use pressure cooking in a less obvious way, and it simultaneously brings a delicious variation to your morning meal!
By Jennifer Robins
Pressure-Cooker Mini Meatballs With Radiatori
Radiatori are small, crunched pieces of pasta that look like old- fashioned steam radiators. They’ll stay firm in this quick meal, offering good texture against the soft meatballs.
By Bruce Weinstein and Mark Scarbrough
Pressure-Cooker Beer-and-Mustard Pulled Turkey
Served this quick dinner recipe on buns, like barbecue; or like soft tacos—on flour tortillas topped with sour cream and pico de gallo.
By Bruce Weinstein and Mark Scarbrough
Spicy Ancho Chile and Cilantro Short Ribs
Ancho chile powder adds a remarkable smokiness to this dish, while the cilantro beautifully brightens it up. Choose the best-quality short ribs you can find. It makes a nice difference in flavor and fat content.
By Bren Herrera
Ginger Dipping Sauce
Many people enjoy chicken pho with a side of this zippy sauce. They dip the flesh into the sauce as they eat the soup. The fresh ginger bite adds a last-minute layer of flavor that some find to be scintillating while others find to be distracting. Try it out and judge for yourself.
By Andrea Nguyen
Instant-Pot Vietnamese Chicken Soup
Get the richly flavored comforting broth of traditional pho in half the time when you use your Instant Pot.
By Laurel Randolph
Instant-Pot Kidney Bean Étouffée
You get great flavors in this Cajun dish from the spices. Be sure to smash some of the cooked beans to thicken up your stew. Serve over brown rice, quinoa or sorghum for a change of pace.
By Kathy Hester
Instant-Pot Vegan Cauliflower Queso
Cauliflower is a magical vegetable. It’s tasty on its own, but it can transform into oil-free creamy sauces and even replace meat. In this recipe, it’s the base for a creamy, cheesy take on queso dip. This is great on chips but even better on top of burritos and enchiladas. Best of all, you can get the pickiest of eaters to eat their veggies this way.
By Kathy Hester
Instant-Pot Cultured Coconut Milk Yogurt
This cultured coconut milk yogurt is lightly sweetened and perfectly topped with grain-free granola!
By Jennifer Robins
Pork or Lamb Vindaloo
The essential ingredients for this Portuguese-inspired Indian dish are wine, vinegar, and garlic. Additions of mustard seeds, cumin, turmeric, and chiles make it specifically colonial Goan.
By Madhur Jaffrey
Royal Chicken Cooked in Yogurt
An elegant dish that may be served to the family or at a grand party. Rice is the ideal accompaniment.
By Madhur Jaffrey
Butternut Squash and Green Beans in a Coconut-Milk Curry
This is a South Indian–inspired sweet, mild curry. Serve it with steamed white rice and a tangy fruit chutney like cranberry or mango for a perfect rainy day meal. The recipe calls for a rather small quantity of butternut squash, so you may want to reserve the rest for another recipe.
By Ruta Kahate
Tiger Shrimp With Lime, Ginger, and Mustard Seeds
Shrimp are quick to cook, but still manage to feel rather special. This recipe borrows spices from the southern shores of India; I tasted a dish similar to this when I was learning about the local cuisine. At first, you get pure heat from the chiles; when it subsides, you're left with delicate and delicious flavors. Here, I have toned down the chiles and added some background warmth by using fresh ginger instead. I’ve used tiger shrimp and removed most of the shell, apart from the tail. I prefer to leave the tail on, as it means that you have something to hold on to when biting into the shrimp, but you can take the entire shell off if you prefer. Just make sure the shrimp are raw and that they have been deveined.
By Anjali Pathak
Braided Almond-Cream Wreath
Make this traditional German Kranzkuchen for a festive sweet treat to serve on Christmas morning.
By Luisa Weiss
Mexican-Style Spicy Sweet Potato and Chicken Bowl
A one-pot evening meal with minimum fuss and maximum taste.
By Alice Liveing
Slow Cooker Veggie-Loaded Marinara
You’ve heard it said that the best spaghetti sauces are simmered all afternoon. If that’s true, why not let the slow cooker do the cooking for you? This sauce takes 5 minutes to make and is loaded with vitamins. Make a double batch and freeze half for another day.
By Marina Delio
Grape and Rosemary Flatbread
Roasting grapes is fun and unexpected, although very popular in the wine regions of Italy. I remember being surprised to find juicy grapes cooked into a dense olive oil cake in Tuscany years ago. Here the sweetness of the grapes balances the earthy truffle oil and rosemary, and the feta adds a salty kick. The flavors are just perfect, and this flatbread takes me right back to Tuscany every time.
By Marina Delio
Dulce de Leche Brownies
Dulce de leche literally translates to “candy of milk.” In layman’s terms, it’s a caramel-like concoction made from boiling sweetened condensed milk until it becomes . . . well, pretty much an eighth deadly sin. What I love most about dulce de leche is that it has the beautiful color and deep flavor of caramel, but not the chewiness . . . so you don’t have to expend needless energy flexing your jaw muscles.
By Ree Drummond
Roasted Quinoa and Tomato Soup
Quinoa—either red, black, or white—adds body and heartiness to this warming bowl of tomato-basil soup.
By Donna Hay
Double Chocolate Espresso Cookies
Two warnings about these cookies: Don’t give them to young children before bedtime and don’t leave them lying around, if you want any left for yourself. These cookies are crisp on the edges and have a chewy middle strewn with pockets of soft chocolate. The espresso powder, as Kelsey (The Naptime Chef) noted, amplifies the chocolate, but not the sweetness, making it a grown-up cookie. When making any cookies, make sure to cream the butter really well—this aerates the cookies and integrates the sugar—but be conservative with your mixing once the dry ingredients are added.
By Kelsey Banfield