The Instant Pot I brought to my mother-in-law's house saved Thanksgiving. This wasn't on purpose. I'd brought it up to her place to test it for this review, but when her oven died on Thanksgiving Eve, I got creative, whipping up Mark Bittman's make-ahead gravy in the Instant Pot using its sauté function. I also made Melissa Clark's pressure-steamed sour cream mashed potatoes, and pressure-cooked hard-boiled eggs that popped right out of their shells for deviled eggs. As for the turkey, a 3.5-pound boneless breast in the shape of a rugby ball, it went overnight in the Pot using the sous-vide function and came out as well as any I've ever made. It was an impromptu tour de force that put the multi in multicooker.
This was the Pro Plus, Instant Pot's newest and perhaps best pressure cooker yet. At $170, it's also the most expensive six-quart option. It does all the multicooker things: pressure cooks, slow cooks, sautés, steams, and sous vides, all with a pleasingly simple interface. Yet the Plus in its name—its raison de plus, if you will—is the “smart” or connected side of things, and for now, at least, that's a big Minus. By connecting the pot to a mobile app, you can unlock a “guided cooking” experience where you follow recipes on the screen as the app tees up the machine to execute each step. At least for now, that side of things should be ignored.
I'll start by telling you why and try to be brief, because there's good stuff to get to.
On the app, you can choose from an impressive stock of recipes—more than 1,000 and counting. The app allows you to choose how many servings you'd like and then scales the recipe up or down accordingly. Once you get cooking, however, problems crop up quickly.


