Consumer Reports has no financial relationship with advertisers on this site. The rice cookers Consumer Reports tests range from $20 to $40, with one glaring exception: a $270 Zojirushi induction rice ...
If you eat rice frequently, you might be thinking about investing in a nice rice cooker. If you’ve done any research at all, you’ve probably come across the Zojirushi Neuro Fuzzy Rice Cooker and ...
To the uninitiated, cooking rice seems like a fairly straightforward task, requiring only a pot, water and heat. It’s true that those are all the tools you need to cook rice effectively, but a ...
What's the best rice cooker for 2025? At first blush, rice might not be all that exciting, but it's one of the best, most nutritious foods in the world. There's a reason so many people enjoy it. No ...
Which Zojirushi rice cookers are best? Rice cookers seem like a single-use kitchen appliance, but that doesn’t necessarily make them an indulgence. They remove the guesswork that comes with making ...
Cooking perfect rice is dirt simple with artificial intelligence. But do you need a rice cooker? This review is part of a series on the domestic origins of technology. Before the business machines of ...
Cooking rice in a pot can get a little complicated sometimes (too much water? too little?), so to save you from wrestling burned bits off the bottom of your cookware with a spatula, there are rice ...
In 2009, I lived in a crowded Brooklyn apartment, and for Christmas I asked for a rice cooker to free up stovetop space I shared with my roommates. My mom, the most determinedly online Christmas ...
Cooking stovetop rice can be difficult. If you add the wrong amount of water, turn your burner up too high, or don’t execute the process with precise timing, the result will likely be undercooked ...