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All-American 10-1/2-Quart Pressure Cooker/Canner

All-American 10-1/2-Quart Pressure Cooker/Canner
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All-American 10-1/2-Quart Pressure Cooker/Canner

SKU: 

120318

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Availability: Usually ships in 1 business days
List Price: $313.00
Our Price: $169.99
You Save: $143.01 (46%)
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Description:

Heavy Cast Aluminum Pressure Cooker/Canner

Features:
  • 10-1/2-quart pressure cooker/canner holds 7 pint jars or 4 quart jars

  • Made of durable, hand-cast aluminum with attractive satin finish

  • Exclusive "metal-to-metal" sealing system for a steam-tight seal; no gaskets

  • Geared steam gauge, automatic overpressure release; settings of 5 psi, 10 psi, and 15 psi

  • 11-3/4 inches high with 10-1/4-inch inside diameter; made in USA

Product Details:
Product Length: 14.0 inches
Product Width: 13.0 inches
Product Height: 14.0 inches
Product Weight: 15.0 pounds
Package Length: 13.2 inches
Package Width: 12.8 inches
Package Height: 12.2 inches
Package Weight: 14.8 pounds
Average Customer Rating: based on 25 reviews
Customer Reviews:
Average Customer Review:4.5 ( 25 customer reviews )
Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers.

Most Helpful Customer Reviews

18 of 18 found the following review helpful:

5Excellent for canning smaller batches  Jul 06, 2010
By Wendy Tobler
Every serious gardener needs two canners; a huge one that can handle days of large harvests, and a small one for when you come into the house with just a handful of veggies that you don't want to consume that day, but that you don't want to feed to the livestock or otherwise waste. This sturdy little canner is wonderful for those mini harvest days. Many times I've used it to process just one or two pints.

It holds 7 pints or 9 half pints (the ninth doesn't quite make it to the bottom if it's the tapered style, but you can rest its lowest thread, just below the metal band, on two neighboring jars).

I like the fact that it doesn't require a rubber gasket (which eventually deteriorates) and its single wiggle-weight does your choice of 5, 10, or 15 pounds of pressure. Its smaller size allows it to both heat up and cool down more quickly than its jumbo cousins, which can give you a firmer product by reducing the time that it's cooking before and after reaching pressure.

I've had mine for several years and nothing on this little workhorse has needed replacing. I recommend it highly.

31 of 34 found the following review helpful:

3Great, but get a bigger one  Jul 13, 2010
By Consumer 1011100100
I really like the all american cooker/canners but this one is labeled as accepting 4 quart jars. 4 quart jars do indeed fit, but any method that requires total submersion of the jars wont work as the cooker is not tall enough. If you do a lot of canning with quart jars you need the 21.5 quart model or larger. Generally total submersion is only required for hot water bath methods used for high acid foods like pickles. You don't need a pressure cooker for these but just a large pot. However, I like to think of my pressure cooker as my go to device for all canning needs as well as a pressure cooker. I don't want to have to also purchase a large pot. I would like to see this firmly stated somewhere (other than in the middle of page 18 of the manual) as I would not have bought this small model had I known. For bad advertising, and my ruined pickles, it gets 3 stars.

23 of 25 found the following review helpful:

5#910 is PERFECT for smaller batches!  Sep 15, 2009
By C. Hudnall "HammockGal"
This is the second All-American I have (I have #921 - 21 1/2-Qt also), and I love it!

The smaller size means that it sits on top of the stove at all times, ready to be used. While making dinner on the front burners, I often have this canner working on the back burner. After we finally get up from the table (noone ever seems to want to!), depending on what I canned, but usually something that goes for 90 minutes at 10 psi, it is time to take jars out of the canner. There are some steps to do in between, but our table is in the kitchen, so I get up to check on/turn off burner, etc., while still being able to enjoy the wonderful conversation and shananigans going on at the table. Once the canner is cool, it gets a vinegar & soap bath (I have hard water), dried and put on back burner for next load, jars are on a towel ready to cool and seal overnight, and then be put away in the morning while the coffee is perking.

The smaller size means I don't feel guilty if I don't have two levels of jars to can (one on top of the other). If I only have 4 pints of picadillo to can, then I only can 4 pints, and no guilt about all that space being wasted. :-)

Don't get me wrong, I love my 921 also - I would not know what to do without it, but this 910 has just as much place in my kitchen.



10 of 10 found the following review helpful:

5Just the thing I needed.  Jul 24, 2010
By CooknNuStuff
I own a very large canner, but when we moved to our present
home, I have a counter-top Jenn Aire range. There is no
way my canner would fit on this stove.

This 10-1/2 quart All American Canner fits exactly on my eyes.
And besides this, there are only two of us at home now, so
I don't need to can as much.

This canner has worked perfectly for my needs. I would
recommend it to everyone. One of the best benefits is
that you do not need a gasket with this canner. All you
do is oil between the top and canner. I also had a question,
so I called Customer Service with All American, and got right
through (to an English speaking representative). They were
very helpful and answered all my questions.



13 of 14 found the following review helpful:

5We should have bought this years ago!  Feb 06, 2010
By Dean Brassfield
We had been considering the purchase of a pressure cooker for years and after seeing one used on a recent television cooking show, we decided not to put it off any longer. Our only criteria was that we wanted to buy one made in America, if at all possible. The All-American Pressure Cooker/Canner fit the bill perfectly. When it arrived we read and reread the instructions and still felt a little nervous the first time we used it, but the meal we prepared, beef short ribs, turned out better than we could have ever imagined! The meat almost melted in our mouths. There used to be a barbecue restaurant here in town whose slogan was, "you need no teeth to eat my beef." That slogan describes the All-American Pressure Cooker/Canner prepared meals to a "T."

Here's a couple of hints for meat recipes: After you brown the meat, line the bottom of the pan with sliced yellow onions before placing the meat back in the pan. And use a medium heat setting on your stove. We often make a dipping sauce, and our favorite recipe uses a 50-50 liquid mixture of 1 cup of water and 1 cup of our favorite barbecue sauce, whisked, and poured over the top of large, browned, beef short ribs, just before sealing the pressure cooker. 40 minutes later, you will not believe how fabulous it tastes!

Do we recommend to anyone who reads this review that you should purchase an All-American Pressure Cooker? All we can say is, after you have prepared a few meals with this cooking style, we believe you'll wish you had gotten one years ago. We don't know anyone at All-American. We don't own any company stock (I think it's privately owned, anyway). But it's a tremendous addition to our kitchen that we wish we would have bought decades ago! And the best thing about the All-American Pressure Cooker/Canner is that it is made by Americans, in AMERICA.

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