You Get Home at 6. Dinner’s at 7. Here’s How Real Cooks Pull It Off.

It’s 6 PM. You just walked in. The kids are hungry now, not in an hour. You scan the fridge: chicken thighs, an onion, some broth. A proper braise would take two hours. A stir-fry would work, but you’re tired of stir-fries. So you reach for the takeout menu — again. If only there were a fastest way to cook dinner on a weeknight that didn’t mean sacrificing real, home-cooked food.
There is. And it doesn’t involve meal kits, microwave shortcuts, or eating cereal for dinner.
Why Weeknight Cooking Feels Impossible (And What Actually Fixes It)
💡 Here’s the knack:
The reason weeknight cooking feels like a losing battle is that most real recipes assume you have time you don’t have. A Dutch oven braise takes 2–3 hours. A slow cooker needs 6–8 hours — meaning you’d have to start it before work. Oven roasting a whole chicken is 90 minutes minimum. None of these fit the 6 PM to 7 PM window.
Pressure cooking changes the math. A sealed pressure cooker raises the boiling point of water from 212°F to roughly 250°F. That means faster heat transfer, faster collagen breakdown, faster flavor development. A beef stew that simmers for 3 hours in a Dutch oven? Done in 35 minutes under pressure. Bone-in chicken thighs? 12 minutes. Dried beans from scratch? 25 minutes — no soaking.
The fastest way to cook dinner on a weeknight isn’t a shortcut recipe. It’s a fundamentally different cooking method — one that compresses hours into minutes without losing depth of flavor. That’s the difference between a slow cooker and a pressure cooker: one saves you effort, the other saves you time.
The Fix: Compress Hours Into Minutes.
Professional kitchens rely on speed and accuracy. For home cooks, the Instant Pot is widely considered the best multi-use cooker for the price and performance.

- ⭐ Knack Approved
★★★★★ 5/5 - 🔄 9-in-1 functionality: pressure cooker, slow cooker, rice cooker, steamer, sauté, yogurt maker, sous vide, cake maker, and warmer
- 🤫WhisperQuiet™ steam release — no more startling hiss
- 📺 Angled control panel with clear message display, cooking progress bar, and 25 recipe presets with step-by-step instructions
- ⚡Cooks up to 70% faster than slow cooking and uses 60% less energy than a conventional oven
- 🍲6-quart capacity — up to 6 servings, perfect for families and meal prep
- 🛡️ 10+ built-in safety mechanisms including overheat protection and auto-seal lid lock
- 🧽 Dishwasher-safe lid and inner pot — cleanup in minutes
Instant Pot® Duo™ Plus 6QT 9-in-1 Multi-Use Pressure Cooker
How to use it correctly: Start with pressure cooking — it’s the function that changes everything. Add your ingredients, select a preset (there are 25 to choose from), and walk away. The Duo Plus seals automatically, builds pressure, cooks, and switches to “Keep Warm” when it’s done. For your first cook, try a simple rice or soup recipe to build confidence. Then branch out: slow cook a roast on Sunday, make yogurt on Monday, steam vegetables on Tuesday — all in the same pot. And because carryover cooking applies to pressure-cooked proteins too, use a thermometer to check large cuts after natural release.

Quick answers
Can the Instant Pot actually replace a dedicated slow cooker?
Yes. The Duo Plus has a full slow cook program with low, medium, and high settings. It won’t heat the ceramic the exact same way, but the results are comparable — and it frees up an entire appliance worth of cabinet space. This is why the best multi cooker to replace kitchen appliances wins on versatility, not just one function.
Is the Instant Pot Duo Plus safe to leave unattended?
The Duo Plus has over 10 built-in safety mechanisms including overheat protection, a lid lock, and automatic pressure control. It’s designed to be set-and-forget.
What size Instant Pot should I get for a family of four?
The 6-quart Duo Plus handles up to 6 servings comfortably — perfect for a family of four with leftovers for lunch the next day.


Related Knacks
Is it safe to leave the Instant Pot on while I leave the room? Yes. The Duo Plus monitors temperature and pressure continuously, adjusts automatically, and shuts off if anything goes wrong. It’s specifically designed for set-and-forget cooking.
