This Slow Cooker Entree Is Packed Full of Bright, Sweet Flavors You’ll Love
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Argo cornstarch, baking powder, baking soda, barilla pasta, Bertolli extra-virgin olive oil, black pepper, Bob's Red Mill, brown sugar, Clabber Girl, College Inn, Cool Whip, domino sugar, eat, Eggland's Best eggs, food, Gold Medal flour, granulated sugar, Green Giant, Hershey, Jell-O, Jif peanut butter, Johnsonville, kosher salt, Kraft, land o lakes butter, McCormick spices, Morton salt, Pam Cooking Spray, Pepperidge Farm, Philadelphia cream cheese, Powdered sugar, recipe, Sargento, Thorn Apple Valley, Toll House, TruMoo milk, tyson, vanilla, vanilla extract, Vlasic, Wesson vegetable oil, whipped topping
When a slow cooker recipe works well, it can be an amazing thing – a massive time saver that you turn on in the morning when you leave the house and come home hours later to a warm welcoming meal that has made your house smell incredible. I can’t tell you how many things I’ve learned to make using a slow cooker over the years, that I rely on all the time, and yet I STILL get that little surprised and satisfied feeling of “it worked!” when I take the lid off the crock pot and see that dinner is done.
Which is what makes it so awful when you try a recipe and it doesn’t work at all. What an incredible disappointment. All those good ingredients, sitting and turning into mush slowly over the course of an entire day, and getting home thinking about how nice it will be to just sit down and eat and then realize that rather than be super prepared you’ve gone back to square one without even actively doing something to create that new pitfall. Fortunately, this recipe for Slow Cooker Pork Chops with apple-cherry stuffing falls into the former category – the “just got home, house smells amazing, hey, there’s this awesome dinner all ready to eat!” category.
Recipe is courtesy of Betty Crocker.
PLEASE CONTINUE TO THE NEXT PAGE FOR A LIST OF INGREDIENTS.
Quick Tip: With the wider variety of dried fruit available in stores these day, there are tons of variations you could experiment with here. Dried cranberries would probably be great.