Meat Recipes: Roasting, Skillet Tips & Slow Cooker Cuts

Meat recipes for every occasion include slow-cooked elk, low-sodium pork tenderloin, and perfectly seared filet mignon. Master oven-roasting in bags and electric smoker techniques for the best pulled pork.

How to Cook a Hamburger on a Griddle

A griddle was an important feature on a large, old cookstove. As new types of cookware and smaller kitchen cooking areas became popular, griddles became accessories. A cast-iron griddle works on any stove top, but for consistently brown burgers, try an electric version with thermostatically controlled heat.

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How to Cook a Hamburger in the Broiler

Hamburgers cooked outdoors on the grill are as American as apple pie, but cooking out is a fair-weather activity. When a summer storm blows up or cold weather settles in, you don’t have to settle for pan-fried burgers.

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How to Cook Tender, Moist, Boneless Pork Chops

For a quick and nutritious meal with stick-to-your-ribs appeal, prepare boneless pork chops and side dishes in the same skillet. Instead of browning the pork first, prepare vegetable and apple chunks in the skillet and then cook the pork chops.

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roasted meat

Baking Directions for Rolled Pork Roast

Pork loin is a tender, succulent cut of meat, whether it is bone-in or boneless. Boneless pork loins can be roasted individually or stacked and tied to make a rolled roast. Your meat market may refer to these as single or double rolled roasts.

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Multi functional cook ware set

How to Cook Eye of Round Roast in a Pressure Cooker

Besides saving cooking time, a pressure cooker can help you prepare a mouth-watering roast, with or without vegetables. An eye of round roast has little marbling, making it prone to drying out with conventional oven methods. Because a pressure cooker cooks with steam, the meat remains moist.

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roast leg of rabbit with apples and tomatoes top view

How to Cook a Cottontail Rabbit

Cottontail rabbits live wild throughout most of the U.S. and are a favorite prey of small game hunters. Cottontail rabbit meat is nutritious, containing less fat than chicken, turkey, beef, pork or lamb. Use moist-cooking methods for tender, flavorful meat because rabbit meat has naturally low moisture content.

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