A rice cooker making rice in a saucepan will yield different results almost every time, a $20-50 rice cooker is just a set it and forget it kitchen tool that yields the same results every time. Very nice and easy
and I will warn you, Get a rice cooker thats one step bigger than what you think you need, cause once you get used to having it, you’ll end up making more rice and rice dishes cause its become so damn easy to make rice, and the last thing you want is to be limited by the tiny 2 cup rice cooker that you bought.
Totally not personal experience. (it is, its totally personal experience)
I did the same but went with an instapot since it can do rice too and I hate one trick appliances. Started off with the tiny one and then realized I cooked dang near everything in there after a while.
I’m sure it’s possible to cook other things depending on the model. A lot of the one’s I ran across where more on/off/time basic ones though. Having a bunch of settings and other options is kind of a pre-req for something that I’m likely to have out as a permanent counter resident, so individual needs vary. Had an old oster kitchen center for a while that was great for that reason until the motor burned out.
If we’re giving out Rice Cooker tips: wash your rice before you put it in there. I use a sieve and a potato masher under the tap to squeeze the starch out. My rice has never been sticky since I started doing this, and now my “dish” that I bring to cook outs is my rice.
“A rice cooker. Making rice in a saucepan will yield different results almost every time, but a $20-50 rice cooker is just a set it and forget it kitchen tool that yields the same results every time. Very nice and easy.”
It’s more than when I’m cooking rice I’m also cooking other things and communicating with and helping my kids all at the same time. It has been invaluable just to not have to worry about the rice
My contrarian opinion is that rice cookers are worthless to any decent home cook, it just clutters your kitchen with yet another specialized tool that you don’t need. I much rather have an air fryer occupying that space.
If your rice yields different results every time it’s a skill issue not a tool issue.
A rice cooker making rice in a saucepan will yield different results almost every time, a $20-50 rice cooker is just a set it and forget it kitchen tool that yields the same results every time. Very nice and easy
I second this.
and I will warn you, Get a rice cooker thats one step bigger than what you think you need, cause once you get used to having it, you’ll end up making more rice and rice dishes cause its become so damn easy to make rice, and the last thing you want is to be limited by the tiny 2 cup rice cooker that you bought.
Totally not personal experience. (it is, its totally personal experience)
I did the same but went with an instapot since it can do rice too and I hate one trick appliances. Started off with the tiny one and then realized I cooked dang near everything in there after a while.
While I normally agree, I make rice so much with other things, it would be a hindrance to have to use my multi use stuff just for rice all the time.
ricecookers arent a single task appliance. You can make a lot of other things in them.
I’m sure it’s possible to cook other things depending on the model. A lot of the one’s I ran across where more on/off/time basic ones though. Having a bunch of settings and other options is kind of a pre-req for something that I’m likely to have out as a permanent counter resident, so individual needs vary. Had an old oster kitchen center for a while that was great for that reason until the motor burned out.
If we’re giving out Rice Cooker tips: wash your rice before you put it in there. I use a sieve and a potato masher under the tap to squeeze the starch out. My rice has never been sticky since I started doing this, and now my “dish” that I bring to cook outs is my rice.
How does a rice cooker make rice in a saucepan? I would think that it doesn’t need a saucepan, nor could it really use one without hands.
“A rice cooker. Making rice in a saucepan will yield different results almost every time, but a $20-50 rice cooker is just a set it and forget it kitchen tool that yields the same results every time. Very nice and easy.”
A little bit of grammar goes a long way.
What are you doing to your rice that the saucepan yields different results every time?
Browsing Lemmy on my phone.
It’s more than when I’m cooking rice I’m also cooking other things and communicating with and helping my kids all at the same time. It has been invaluable just to not have to worry about the rice
Same with boiled egg maker. Super inexpensive (around $20) and you can choose between soft, medium or hard options. Same result every time.
Yep! I have one of those too, the kids don’t really like fried eggs so being able to set and forget this whole making everything else is invaluable.
My contrarian opinion is that rice cookers are worthless to any decent home cook, it just clutters your kitchen with yet another specialized tool that you don’t need. I much rather have an air fryer occupying that space.
If your rice yields different results every time it’s a skill issue not a tool issue.
I got a Tefal microwave one, simple plastic pot that you put rice and water in. Then heat in the microwave and it changed rice for us forever.
Rice cooker with locking top or no go.
My rice cooker gives consistent results, but unfortunately that result is a crunchy placemat made entirely of rice. It’s terrible.