Quizzes & Puzzles1 min ago
Which Rice Cookers
17 Answers
Is there anyone on here who would be able to look up the Which results for a couple of rice cookers please?
Answers
Lakeland 2 Portion Mini Electric Rice Cooker Only available at Lakeland: £39.99. Cooking times: Approximatel y 33 minutes for 1 cup of basmati rice; 53 minutes for 1 cup of wholegrain rice Comes with plastic serving spoon, 135ml measuring cup and non-stick cooking pot, can be used to cook porridge, delay-start timer of up to 12 hours, not dishwasher- safe, ...
10:37 Sun 21st Aug 2022
If nobody can help with the Which? recommendations then the BBC Good Food site is a good starting point
https:/ /www.bb cgoodfo od.com/ review/ best-ri ce-cook ers
https:/
Lakeland 2 Portion Mini Electric Rice Cooker
Only available at Lakeland: £39.99.
Cooking times: Approximately 33 minutes for 1 cup of basmati rice; 53 minutes for 1 cup of wholegrain rice
Comes with plastic serving spoon, 135ml measuring cup and non-stick cooking pot, can be used to cook porridge, delay-start timer of up to 12 hours, not dishwasher-safe, fill lines are labelled, three-year guarantee
Pros: Delicious fresh rice, keeps wholegrain rice tasting freshly cooked on keep-warm setting, excellent build quality, easy to clean
Cons: Long cooking times, poor keep-warm setting for basmati rice, timer has limited usefulness
Our verdict: Takes its time, but cooks excellent small portions.
The freshly cooked white basmati and wholegrain rice was delicious, and had a lovely fluffy texture. The basmati rice became very dry and stuck together after being kept warm for an hour, though.
The timer is useful for its delay-start feature and for keeping tabs on how long your rice has been kept warm, but it only counts down the last six minutes of cooking so it's pretty useless for tracking cooking times.
Only available at Lakeland: £39.99.
Cooking times: Approximately 33 minutes for 1 cup of basmati rice; 53 minutes for 1 cup of wholegrain rice
Comes with plastic serving spoon, 135ml measuring cup and non-stick cooking pot, can be used to cook porridge, delay-start timer of up to 12 hours, not dishwasher-safe, fill lines are labelled, three-year guarantee
Pros: Delicious fresh rice, keeps wholegrain rice tasting freshly cooked on keep-warm setting, excellent build quality, easy to clean
Cons: Long cooking times, poor keep-warm setting for basmati rice, timer has limited usefulness
Our verdict: Takes its time, but cooks excellent small portions.
The freshly cooked white basmati and wholegrain rice was delicious, and had a lovely fluffy texture. The basmati rice became very dry and stuck together after being kept warm for an hour, though.
The timer is useful for its delay-start feature and for keeping tabs on how long your rice has been kept warm, but it only counts down the last six minutes of cooking so it's pretty useless for tracking cooking times.
I dislike 'Which?' as a source of reviews. They seem to assume that their readers all shop in John Lewis and often don't even bother to test products that are, say, only sold in Argos. (I suspect that a poll of their members would probably show that the vast majority of them do shop in John Lewis though. I doubt that many of them ever venture into Poundland, Wilko or B&M!)
35 years ago 'Which?' acquired a rival publication when 'Expert Reviews' hit the newsstands. It based its reputation upon its absolute independence when reviewing products and allowed people to buy only the issues that reviewed products that they were actually interested in. (If you subscribe to 'Which?', you end up paying for loads of reviews for types of products that you're never going to buy anyway).
'Expert Reviews' has now moved online but it's still recognised as an excellent source of independent reviews. So this is where I'd be looking if I was considering buying a rice cooker:
https:/ /www.ex pertrev iews.co .uk/kit chen/14 05022/b est-ric e-cooke r
Having said that though, I still reckon that rice cookers are a total waste of money anyway. I can cook great rice using just a saucepan!
35 years ago 'Which?' acquired a rival publication when 'Expert Reviews' hit the newsstands. It based its reputation upon its absolute independence when reviewing products and allowed people to buy only the issues that reviewed products that they were actually interested in. (If you subscribe to 'Which?', you end up paying for loads of reviews for types of products that you're never going to buy anyway).
'Expert Reviews' has now moved online but it's still recognised as an excellent source of independent reviews. So this is where I'd be looking if I was considering buying a rice cooker:
https:/
Having said that though, I still reckon that rice cookers are a total waste of money anyway. I can cook great rice using just a saucepan!
I'll answer Chris's rather dimissive post above (15.07).
I'm a Which? subscriber and, yes, do shop with John Lewis (online) and Waitrose...but am not averse to shopping at Wilko, B&M, Home Bargains, Aldi, Lidl etc when near them (rather a long drive away).
And...when Which? reviews food and drink, and household "stuff" (batteries, toiletries, detergents, printer inks etc) and domestic electricals, they do include own-brands from Aldi, lidl, Wilko, Argos etc. So not quite as elitist as painted above.
I'm a Which? subscriber and, yes, do shop with John Lewis (online) and Waitrose...but am not averse to shopping at Wilko, B&M, Home Bargains, Aldi, Lidl etc when near them (rather a long drive away).
And...when Which? reviews food and drink, and household "stuff" (batteries, toiletries, detergents, printer inks etc) and domestic electricals, they do include own-brands from Aldi, lidl, Wilko, Argos etc. So not quite as elitist as painted above.
Although a long-term subscriber to Which?, I very rarely shop in John Lewis.
But I often shop in Argos (where I've been known to buy Which?-recommended products), Wilco, AO, Poundland, B&M, Poundstretcher, etc.
I have a rice cooker (an unexpected Xmas present some years ago), but never use it, the saucepan method being easier, especially when it comes to washing up.
But I often shop in Argos (where I've been known to buy Which?-recommended products), Wilco, AO, Poundland, B&M, Poundstretcher, etc.
I have a rice cooker (an unexpected Xmas present some years ago), but never use it, the saucepan method being easier, especially when it comes to washing up.
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