Ah, that confirms my suspicions that fast release would suck juices out of meats. Thanks for that info!
For the 3-qt. using PIP (pot in pot) I just happened to have in the house part of a camping mess kit I'd bought some time ago. It's not the little usual size mess kit, but they make a larger one that's otherwise the same fold-up design. I don't know where the rest of it is or if I kept it but the piece I have (would be a lid to the whole setup probably) would fit in the 3-qt. Just sayin, not too many pots without sideways handles would likely fit in the 3-qt. so if a mess kit that size can be had - may not be very tall but one wouldn't want anything too tall. One of its pieces might be handy. I'd want it to be stainless though just because.
Bethers, what you wrote might be a solution to an issue I'm having. Last night I made a single serving of beef stew again - trying to get everything cooked the same. This time instead of baby carrots, I used whole carrots cut in half to fit the length and did use a smaller potato but didn't cut it in half, left it whole, and also didn't cut the onion in half, left it whole. At 12 minutes under Pressure Cook (same as Manual on some models) the veggies done that way came out really nice. But the meat this time was not as tender as the first time which was marginally so. Everything else, great. (Can't figure out why the meat would be any different though - came out of the same package).
So I thought one of 3 possible solutions - either precook the meat by itself in the planned stew liquid for 5 minutes or whatever, let it do natural release, add the veggies and set again for the same 12 minutes I used last night, and maybe the meat would be more tender. (Note, on my stovetop PC, everything comes out right, all together, at 9 minutes AND with a delayed quick release and sometimes not even delayed). The electric ones are lower pressure (max 13 but mostly 10-11.6 psi) hence my compromise at 12 minutes plus natural release.
That's one way. Next possibility was to brown the meat, then add the sauce and let it hang out on Saute to start cooking the meat some first.
Is the latter what you were referring to?? If so, do you keep Saute on high or normal or low (whichever choices Saute gives you)?? And for how long? The stew recipes I've found all seem to call for 35 minutes. OMG, the veggies would be disintegrated in 35 minutes of pressure cooking.
Very curious about your answer re that since it looks like you do that.