lgordon wrote:JenM wrote:Happily the bells and whistles are not literal-- it does NOT BEEP when it is done. I love that.
Cheers, Jen
I love my Zojirushi but I hate the tune it plays when it starts and finishes. I can't figure out how to make it stop.
G Wiv wrote:Bunch o stuff included, olive oil, chopped garlic/onion/tomato, salt/pepper, cayenne pepper and a link of smoked Hungaria from Lincoln Quality Meat Market. Added water...
gastro gnome wrote:The bunch o stuff also included cooked rice, correct?
Or is instant rice done in 10 minutes? (forgive me, I know nothing about instant rice)
RAB wrote:He said: "waited 10-minutes after the bell dinged to open," not "only took 10 minutes to cook."
How stuff works wrote:At sea level, the boiling temperature for water is 212 degrees F or 100 degrees C. As soon as all of the liquid water has evaporated (or, in the case of the rice cooker, as soon as all of the water is absorbed by the rice), the temperature inside the container immediately rises. The appliance has a thermostat that can detect when the temperature rises above 212 degrees F in the container, and it turns itself off.
Mhays wrote:I think the shortest recipe I found takes an hour in the oven. Best bet is cook a lot and freeze some...
Earlier today, his publisher sent him two copies of his newest book, the silver-jacketed Great Movies III, wrapped in plastic. Ebert turned them over in his hands, smiling with satisfaction — he wrote most of it in hospital beds — before he put them on a shelf in his office, by the desk he can no longer sit behind. They filled the last hole on the third shelf of his own published work; later this year, another book — The Pot and How to Use It, a collection of Ebert's rice-cooker recipes — will occupy the first space on a fourth shelf.
whiskeybent wrote:Saw this at the very tail end of the new Ebert profile from Esquire
chgoeditor wrote:A few questions, etc., for those of you who have far more experience than I do with smart rice makers:
1. What's the difference between "semi-brown" and brown rice? I cooked Lundberg short-grain brown rice on the "brown rice" setting and it seemed to work. The instruction manual had a tutorial on re. how much of the bran & germ were removed to be considered semi-brown, but I'm still confused. I can't recall ever seeing anything in the stores labeled semi-brown. Will I know it if I see it?
2. Similarly, will pre-washed rice always be marked as such when I buy it?
3. Mine has fuzzy logic but is not an induction heating unit. Can I still make non-rice/porridge things with a fuzzy logic machine?
chgoeditor wrote:(I got the NS-ZCC10, with is the 5.5 cup with neuro-fuzzy logic.) I just made my first batch of rice--brown--and it tastes great. Granted, it took about an hour longer than it would take on the stovetop...
excelsior wrote:Cathy2, probably too late since you said you recycled your rice cooker, but I repaired mine, it had a hole on the bottom, with some aluminum tape. Just put a square of tape on both sides of the pot and burnish it on well. It's been working fine for a few years since then (although I don't use the pot regularly). I read this happens sometimes with aluminum. It even happened to me another time with a soda can, it apparently had a hole but the pressure kept the soda from spilling out until I opened it.