Leftover picadillo and brown rice makes a super easy second meal, all in the crock pot. Top it with melted cheddar or Monterey Jack cheese and you'll have a delicious dinner without much fuss. Each pepper is a complete meal-in-one.
As I mentioned in my last post, we use leftover picadillo many ways in my home. Stuffed peppers are a great way to use leftovers and nothing goes to waste here – the tops of the peppers get diced and are added to the filling.
The slow cooker is the perfect appliance for making stuffed peppers, I've also included oven directions below.
When buying bell peppers for the slow cooker, I look for peppers that have flat bottoms that can stand upright on their own.
You can double the recipe to make 6, which would fit perfectly in a 6 qt slow cooker.
BTW, we love stuffed peppers in my home and I've posted other variations:
Turkey Stuffed Peppers
Santa Fe Turkey Stuffed Peppers
Chicken and White Bean Stuffed Peppers
and there's even a stuffed pepper soup. Enjoy!
Slow Cooker Picadillo Stuffed Peppers
Skinnytaste.com
Servings: 3 • Size: 1 pepper • Old Points: 8 pts • Weight Watchers Points+: 10 pts*
Calories: 375.5 • Fat: 13 g • Protein: 37 g • Carb: 29.4 g • Fiber: 4.6 g • Sugar: 2 g
* without the cheese: 8 Points+ each
Ingredients:
- 3 red bell peppers (with flat bottoms)
- 1 cup left-over cooked brown rice
- 2 cups leftover crock pot picadillo
- 1/3 cup water
- 1/3 cup reduced fat shredded cheddar cheese
Directions:
Cut 1/2 inch of the tops of the bell peppers and dice fine.
In a medium bowl combine cooked brown rice, picadillo and diced pepper tops. Stuff the peppers with the picadillo and rice filling and place upright in the crock pot. Pour the water into the bottom of the crock pot, cover and and cook 3 hours on HIGH -or- 4 to 6 hours on LOW.
Just before serving, top each pepper with 2 tbsp shredded cheese, cover and leave until it melts, 2-3 minutes.
Oven directions: Preheat oven to 350°. Place peppers in an oven-proof dish, pour about 1/3 cup water in the bottom of the dish, cover and bake 50 minutes, or until the peppers become soft.
Remove foil, top each cheese and bake uncovered 5 minutes.























What a great way to use up the leftovers!
ReplyDeleteSuch a fun way to use the leftovers! My husband loves stuffed peppers - these sounds great!
ReplyDeleteI would have never thought of this! Sounds so good, and I love the idea of using the crockpot to make stuffed peppers.
ReplyDeleteI love that this recipe uses leftovers! My husband doesn't always love leftovers so this is a great way to "disguise" them. :) We love your crock pot pork adobo but often have lots leftover (if we're watching our portions) ;). Do you have any suggestions for those leftovers?
ReplyDeleteThank you, Gina. Your website is amazing!!
My husband doesn't either, so it's great to re-purpose leftovers and for stuffed peppers!
Deletewow looks totally perfect! I really love the peppers so i have to try this asap :)♥
ReplyDeletexo
http://franchemeetsfashion.blogspot.cz/
Love that you posted a crock pot and oven version! Yay!
ReplyDeleteI feel like this is probably a stupid question, but would it be okay to make the picadillo fresh for this recipe - any easy time adjustments I could make to the crockpot or anything?
Thanks!
-Lauren
Absolutely, you can use the stove top version if you want to make it all in one day.
DeleteThis look delicious and a great way to use leftovers! I have never made stuffed peppers before, but it definitely happening this weekend!
ReplyDeleteYum! Your stuffed pepper soup is one of my favorite from your site. I'm sure this is wonderful too :)
ReplyDeleteI love using my crock pot to make stuffed peppers too! So easy! This would be a wonderful meal to make for a friend in need. Love your recipes!
ReplyDeleteIt's a done deal... We've got to try this :)
ReplyDeleteIf you subed quinoa for rice would that change the points?
ReplyDeleteNot sure off the top of my head, my guess is they would be the same. Im sure it would be great and extra protein.
Deletei was Literally about to make basically the exact recipe using a combination of skinnytaste recipes ive done!! great minds think alike :) jk
ReplyDeleteI want to make these soon. Do you think they will freeze well uncooked for planning ahead?
ReplyDeleteGood question, I know the filling would freeze ok, not sure about the pepper but I don't see why it wouldn't.
DeleteI made stuffed peppers last night too, but they were vegetarian. My only mistake was buying peppers that weren't so flat on the bottom! Oops! Definitely have to think about that one next time
ReplyDeleteLove it!!! Great use for leftovers!
ReplyDeleteThese look great, but I don't think I'll ever be able to make them! I made the picadillo last night for 5 people. There were no leftovers because it was SO GOOD! My teenage girls LOVED it! Thank you!
ReplyDeleteLOL, double it next time!
DeleteOMG! I started salivating at the first glance of that picture. I absolutely love stuffed peppers. I made the stovetop version of your picadillo the other day for my sweetie and my low-carb loving sister. Everyone raved about how good it is, so kudos for a great recipe. I wish I had the insight to use it for stuffed peppers because I ended up just eating the meat on a tortilla. But I'm definitely going to try this. Now you have my creativity going on what other ways I can use the picadillo for a mouthwatering meal.
ReplyDeleteSo glad you all enjoyed it! I love making a second meal out of it!
DeleteI just discovered your website and I am soooo happy! This is now my favorite online cookbook. I'm on Weight Watchers and I love beautiful pictures of food! I want to make a ton of recipes right now!
ReplyDeleteGreat recipe! Thanks for including stove/oven directions. I used to use my crockpot all the time. But now that I am only working part time I don't use it as often. Its nice when a recipe can be used both ways. Great idea for leftovers. I used my last leftovers like pizza pockets on my blog. I will try this one next time! So nice in our still not quite easy going economy to transform leftovers whenever possible. Red peppers are pretty to look at and have great nutrition! http://noreservations4lunchdinner.blogspot.com/2012/11/empanada-like-pizza-pockets.html
ReplyDeleteCan this picadillo recipe be used to make pastelon?
ReplyDeleteIf so, is there a way to make "Skinny Pastelon?"
DeleteOMG! It would be awesome if there was a "skinny" version of that.
DeleteGina, made the beef picdillo in my slow cooker yesterday. It was delicious. We loved it with brown rice.We had leftovers tonight. Wish I had seen the picdillo stuffed peppers earlier. I have peppers in the fridge. I will be making another batch this weekend. Thanks for another great meal. Vivian
ReplyDeleteHi. What is pastelon? Vivian
ReplyDeleteHi, Vivian! "Pastelon de plantano" is a ripe plantain casserole that is made with a ground beef mixture that is very similar, if not the same as the Picadillo mixture. I think that its origin is from the Dominican Republic.
DeleteHi Gina,
ReplyDeleteCan't eat peppers - would this work for stuffed tomatoes? Would the times need to vary?
Hi- I absolutely LOVE all your recipes. My boyfriend eats pretty healthy and loves peppers so I wanted to try and make one of your recipes. He eats any kind of ground meat, which is your FAVORITE of all your stuffed peppers recipes that I should try for tonight??
ReplyDeleteThanks so much!
My daughters don't especially like peppers so I stuff zucchini instead. Delicious!! Am going to try this filling and I bet it will be amazing! Thanks Gina!!
ReplyDeleteOH YES! Now I know what pastelon is. I had it once. It was layers of ripe plantains,eggs to bind it meat mixture and then baked. A little brown sugar and cinamon sprinkled on top. It was awesome. The secret is in the meat flavor I' going to make a WW version of this! Thanks VIVIAN
ReplyDeleteAnything that involves bell peppers is a win for me! I will definitely have to add this to a menu plan next week! http://twotimestoomany.blogspot.com/
ReplyDeleteI've got the picadillo in the slow cooker for dinner tonight, then will be making this with the leftovers. I LOVE recipes that make multiple servings that can be repurposed. Less weeknight cooking for me means I'm more likely to stay on track with my weight loss goals. :)
ReplyDeleteI just wanted to say that I did make this over the weekend. Everybody is always quick to state that they will make it and it sounds yummy but they usually never reply back. This was my first time ever making both dishes and they both turned out great. I stuffed yellow peppers and cooked them in the oven but put sauce around it instead of water and my husband loved it. This is something that I will make again.
ReplyDeleteCould you also stuff cabbage with this?
ReplyDeleteHow is this 10 points? Am I missing something?
ReplyDeleteAlso, will one pepper fill you up? Or do you think you need a side item to eat along with this for dinner?
Looks delicious!
It's the way the WW recipe builder calculated it. It takes the peppers's nutritional value into account for the recipe and calculates the points from that.
DeleteThose look so good and I love that you can put them in the crockpot and not have to worry about them. These will definitely be made this weekend!
ReplyDeletexoxo
Nice
ReplyDeleteWow... That should taste great. I like stuffed peppers and especially in soups. I must try this out. Amazing are God's works... so many wonderful flavors, tastes, colors in food
ReplyDeleteCould you stuff the peppers ahead of time and keep them in the fridge?
ReplyDeleteHi Gina! I made these yesterday with the leftovers from the picadillo! GREAT use for them. They looked so pretty and made the house smell WONDERFUL.
ReplyDeleteI think if I did it again though, I need to adjust the slow cooker time. I actually did 6 hours at low so they'd be ready when I got home from work but that was a bit too long as the peppers fell apart once I tried to take them out of the crockpot. :( Do you have any tips on how to keep them falling apart? Or do you have any thoughts that cooking on "high" works better for this recipe? This is definitely something I would make again but next time I'll try 3-4 hours on low. Or I'd just make sure I can keep an eye on it.
I took a picture of them just before they went into the crockpot: https://twitter.com/dcgirl98/status/291886614920167425/photo/1
I used my leftovers from Tuesday to make this yesterday! It was perfect! I agree on the cooking time, I put mine in for 5 hours on low and it was a little bit longer than I would prefer. Next time I will try 4. :)
ReplyDeleteHey Gina,
ReplyDeleteHost the Toast just featured this recipe in today's Link Love post.
You can view it here: http://blog.hostthetoast.com/link-love-10-crock-pot-recipes-you-will-love/
As always, this recipe has me drooling. Can't wait to try it out. You're such an inspiration!
-Morgan from Host the Toast
My husband and I make your recipes every week, many times multiple times a week. You've given us some great staples and this just became one!
ReplyDeleteThis was really yummy. My husband loved it too! The peppers were a little soggy, is this normal?
ReplyDelete