Your best bet is to Google whatever it is you want to cook.
I don't think it would work for potatoes, you may as well just boil them and I can't help with the meat as I'm vegan... But, 8 minutes works an absolute treat for carrots, broccoli and cauli!
I think the benefits are more supposed to be in nutrient retention than anything else.
It's going to be the same time as boiling presumably - after all the steam (in this scenario) can't be hotter that boiling water.
(steam in general certainly can be much hotter, but not in this kind of set up I imagine)
You're quite right, might give that a go this evening!
http://www.deliaonline.com/how-to-cook/fruit-and-vegetables/how-to-steam-potatoes.html
About half as long as you thinkI`ve been given one of those electric steamers and am wanting to try it out but having never used one before how long does food take to cook?
I`m thinking mainly veg/potatoes, possibly chicken or fish.
I have no idea, anybody else use one?
Grateful for any tips!
It's going to be the same time as boiling presumably - after all the steam (in this scenario) can't be hotter that boiling water.
(steam in general certainly can be much hotter, but not in this kind of set up I imagine)
The water and the steam will be at the same temp (unless you salt the water which raises it's boiling point) at 100C at atmospheric pressure.Hrmm, I generally find steaming spuds takes a little longer - maybe 25mins steaming vs 20mins boiling. Ofc it depends how big they are, if you chop em up, etc. I'm guessing tho steam may be hotter, the heat transfer is perhaps faster with boiling. I dont know, I do find it harder to overcook veg steaming as well.
The water and the steam will be at the same temp (unless you salt the water which raises it's boiling point) at 100C at atmospheric pressure.
The difference in cooking rate is due to the different rates of surface heat transfer between steam and boiling water.
Steam when it condenses onto food transfers heat very rapidly to the surface of the food, many orders of magnitude greater than boiling water. This is why very short contact with steam say from a kettle produces such a rapid and nasty scald compared to boiling water. So, in that case, steam then should cook faster than boiling water then?
Well, yes and no. You see steam will only condense rapidly onto a surface whilst it is much colder than the steam. But as the potato surface warms up the amount of steam condensing reduces significantly ... this is exacerbated by the fact that the potato surface also becomes wet and so steam is now condensing onto the water layer which is less effective surface heat transfer than the turbulent boiling water.
So, in the initial cooking phase, steam is much quicker but at a point it becomes less effective a heat transfer mechanism than boiling water and thus steamed spuds take longer than boiled.
We find the electric steamer is a little slower than the steamer pots we have on our gas cooker. We use it loads for veg and potatoes. They taste much better.