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One minute, you're just some lady heading out for a bottle of soy sauce and an evening stroll with your baby in the days before Christmas and the next you're suddenly the proud and somewhat puzzled owner of a pistachio-green Cuckoo rice cooker. True story!

The strangest thing about this is that I am, shall we say, conservative when it comes to electronic appliance purchases. I've been thinking about buying a standmixer for the past decade, but can't bring myself to pull the trigger, both for the cost and the precious counterspace it would take up. I had a food processor when I lived in New York, but that was a gift (I had to leave it behind when I moved to the land of 220 volts). Besides a toaster, which we use every day, and an immersion blender, which is easily stashed out of sight, I just don't want to be encumbered with stuff.

(Though that's probably a discussion for another time, my allergy of stuff. Ooh, how I hate stuff.)

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And yet, in less than twenty minutes the other day, there I was, handing over cold, hard cash for this not-so-little green machine (its casing is sort of hideously 1970s, but I'm trying to ignore it). I hadn't discussed it with anyone, I hadn't spent months poring over online reviews, I hadn't searched for the lowest possible price point. Nothing. I just went into the little Korean store, was handed my bottle of soy sauce, got distracted by the lineup of rice cookers and then, bam, there it was in my hands and the next thing I knew I was heading out the door with it.

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Since the purchase, I've used it almost every day. I am all aglow for it, keep stealing glances at it sitting quietly on the countertop, running my fingers along it when I pass it on the way to the fruit basket. I've used it for sushi rice, basmati rice and brown rice so far, all with wonderful results (the brown rice needed a touch more water, but I'm blaming that on my shoddy math skills more than anything else). It's been such a delight to use and the joy of perfect rice every time I turn it on has already more than made up for the price of the machine.

Do any of you have a rice cooker? Are you as taken with yours as I am? Do you use it to cook anything else besides rice?

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To serve along with the gorgeously sticky sushi rice I made the first day I used the cooker, I cooked up a pan of teriyaki turkey (adapted from this perfect recipe) and lo, it was as good as in any Japanese restaurant. Ooh, was I proud!

Now that I have a 5-pound bag of sushi rice to use up, tell me your favorite uses for it, would you? Thank you! And do you have any must-have appliances that you couldn't live without? Mine are the toaster, the immersion blender, the mini food-processor (which I use for Hugo's meals) and now the mighty, mighty rice cooker.

Happy New Year!

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114 responses to “Cuckoo for My Rice Cooker”

  1. Luisa Avatar

    That sounds sort of fascinating. Steamed eggs! Are they like poached?

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  2. Luisa Avatar

    No, it’s not quicker in the rice cooker, but I find it far more foolproof and the texture is what I can never achieve in a pot on the stop – nicely separated, dry but well-cooked grains of rice. No matter what rice you use! The quinoa I made tonight, too, was textural perfection. On the stovetop, it always turned out a little too mushy. Plus there’s no chance of what’s in the cooker ever burning. It’s not everyone’s must-have, but it’s definitely not a gimmick: in Asian households which consume rice (almost) daily it’s as common as a frying pan.

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  3. KylieAnne Avatar
    KylieAnne

    You can make macaroni and cheese in a rice cooker! I stumbled across this recipe on Pinterest, and my fiancee and I love it! 🙂 http://www.lynnskitchenadventures.com/2009/02/rice-cooker-macaroni-and-cheese.html

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  4. Morris Etrid Avatar
    Morris Etrid

    I live in the UK and 1 year ago I bought a Zojirushi TSQ10 rice cooker from an internet store that works on the electrical system here. It’s an absolute dream and produces the best rice I have ever tasted at the touch of a button. I was so fed up with using cheap rice cookers that broke after a few weeks use or had problems with the inner bowls. I haven’t used the steam function yet but I’m planning to do some broccoli beef and rice later today so will see how the broccoli turns out. It even counts down the time until it’s finished and then switches to keep warm so I don’t have to stand over the rice all the time checking that it doesn’t burn or dry out. Again, awesome machines and thoroughly recommended!

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  5. Mickie Avatar
    Mickie

    I love my cooker! Rice is something I have always struggled with–it seems easy enough, but nah–it isn’t easy at all! I saw my cooker on clearance for $10 and my family had a good laugh about needing an appliance to make rice–but they love have kept warm rice long after it is ready!
    We add broth and frozen veggies to our cooker to make a kind of fried rice that my kids can make on their own for after school snacks or light dinners and I cook all kinds of grains in my cooker for Tabbouli or a Quinoa side dish. I just love it!

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  6. Shari Avatar
    Shari

    Maybe you bought an Iranian rice cooker. Iranians consider the brown crust at the bottom the best part of a rice meal. Just add a little butter or oil to your rice while cooking. When finished overturn it into a plate like a pudding and you will have something looking like a cake. Eat before the crust cools down.

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  7. Mary Avatar

    Oh Luisa! I just loved this post. 🙂
    I resisted a rice cooker for so long, much like you are resisting the stand mixer. I have so much on my counter tops already, I just couldn’t imagine finding space for one. And can you believe this…when I was first married my M-I-L gave me one but when she saw I didn’t use it…I had stashed it under a counter…she asked if she could pass it on to her sister. I happily obliged.
    I am ashamed of my long delay in allowing a rice cooker to come in my into my life. My husband is of Asian ancestry and he grew up with a ricer cooker and ate rice every day. But I insisted in making it in a pot on the stove. Why? I have no valid explanation.
    Then one day it just hit me out of the blue how silly I was being. So I went out and bought a rice cooker. My husband rejoiced. Warm, perfectly cooked rice whenever he wanted it. And what can I say? I LOVE IT. Why was I so resistant. Go figure.
    I use it to cook all sorts of things…rice, of course – and all sort of grains. Small pastas too. It’s a dream. I am tempted to try making a cake in it. I saw Wolfgang Puck do it once!
    Much love to you and your family,
    Mary
    PS (It’s great being a mom, isn’t it?!? My baby is 14 now!)

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  8. winnie Avatar
    winnie

    A little late to this party but wanted to add that I grew up in a rice cooker home and have always had one as an adult, to me it is an essential part of a kitchen. Once you acquire the previously mentioned dashi I would highly recommend making oyaku donburi. There a ton of recipes online. It is great cold weather fare. Even if you don’t have dashi, I often use purchased chicken broth with good results and have even made it using leftover rotisserie chicken. Here is a link:
    http://japanesefood.about.com/od/ricebowl/r/oyakodon.htm

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  9. Belinda Oddy Avatar
    Belinda Oddy

    BEST use of sushi rice is stovetop rice pudding. Cook 2/3 cup dry sushi rice (makes approx 1 – 1.5 cups cooked)
    Add to cooked sushi rice 1/4 c. sugar and 1c. milk. Cook over low heat and stir until liquid mostly absorbed.
    Add 1 egg which has been beaten into 1/4 c. milk and stir quickly to avoid scrambled eggs (can temper the eggs first). Cook until incorporated. Stir in 1 knob of butter, cover and let sit for 2minutes . Serve.
    Add flavourings as desired earlier in the cooking(eg. nutmeg, cinamon, vanilla etc.)

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  10. mjb Avatar

    We steam vegetables so much in ours that my husband forgets it cooks rice, too!

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  11. Leslie Avatar

    Thank you for reply, Luisa, and for the rice cooker source. In the meantime I have noticed that the fantastically well-stocked pan-Asian grocery store near Alexanderplatz / Alexa shopping center has a whole wall of rice cookers. But if I don’t find a good fit there I will try your tip. If you’re ever near Alex, though, I recommend the store for ingredients!

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  12. oliverde Avatar
    oliverde

    I have a teensy one from Target, it makes enough rice for 3 servings, and we use it all the time. As far as gadgets go, I’d never give it up. Even my beloved Kitchen Aid, I’d give up, (most unwillingly, mind you!) but the teensy rice cooker? NEVER! But I come from a culture where rice is life.

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  13. Jane Avatar

    Our family loves this side dish. It is basically steamed eggs with some sort of fish flavor (depending on what you mix in with your eggs). A lovely, flavorful custard. Mmm…

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  14. Jane Avatar

    Luisa! I just found this post. I posted about my Cuckoo a couple of days ago too! I think I have a more deluxe version because I really can’t live without the timer/programming function. There have been many family meals when my mother and I were ready to serve dinner and went to serve the rice and discovered that neither of us started the GD thing. As another poster wrote, it is a new mother’s friend.
    Some easy things to add more value: add frozen peas or corn immediately after the rice is done cooking. You can also get pressed barley at the Korean grocery store. I usually mix in a generous cup when I am making white rice to add some nutritional value. You can also triple the amount of water and make rice porridge for adults and baby.
    Another Korean Hausfrau trick I’ve learned is to unplug the machine when it is done cooking if you do not want a crust to form and you don’t need to keep the rice warm. This is for a more basic rice cooker model.
    Here’s another important one, to preserve the non-stick surface of your rice cooker, wash your rice in a different pot. Be sure to use a gentle, non-scratch abrasive sponge when washing – they sell great ones at Japanese and Korean grocery stores.
    Regarding arsenic, I’ve read (and my mother says) to wash the rice at least ten times to remove the arsenic traces.

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