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Let's settle this once and for all. Which is the best rice cooker for a single male living alone?
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induction zoji is the best rice cooker for literally every scenario
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>>21606796
I decided to check the most popular rice cookers in Japan and I am thinking of going with the Yinleader 3000W 120V-100V Voltage Converter listed here
https://hotfoodoven.com/best-selling-rice-cooker-in-japan/
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Has anyone had good results with this rice cooker?
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I just get Aromas and use them for 15 years and then replace them
I have purchased two Aromas
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>your rice maker doesn't dry your hair
>your rice maker doesn't let you DJ
>your rice maker doesn't make bread
>your rice maker isn't oven/heater/freezer/etc.
Do you feel ripped off?
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Any cooker that has fuzzy logic is fine. You're probably going to spend at least $100.

>Fuzzy-logic rice cookers have computer chips that direct their ability to make proper adjustments to cooking time and temperature. Unlike basic rice cookers, which complete tasks in a single-minded, mechanical manner, the process behind the fuzzy-logic rice cookers needs a bit more explanation. The fuzzy sets theory, first proposed by UC Berkeley professor Lotfi Zadeh in 1965, laid the groundwork for fuzzy logic, which he also put forward in 1973. Fuzzy sets theory has to do with mathematical sets, or groups of items known as elements. In most mathematical sets, an element either belongs to the set or it doesn't. For example, a sparrow would belong to a set of birds, but a bat wouldn't. In fuzzy logic, though, elements can belong to sets in varying degrees. So since a bat has wings, it might belong to a set of birds -- but only to a certain extent. Fuzzy logic is basically a way to program machines so they look at the world in a more human way, with degrees of truth. Instead of cold, hard parameters and strict data sets, fuzzy logic assumes a more practical approach. Using numbers, it incorporates non-definitive words like "slightly" or "almost" into its decision-making processes. As a result, the use of fuzzy logic in rice cookers helps to ensure properly cooked rice because it gives the appliances the ability to make judgment calls similar to those a person might make, albeit typically better than those a hungry, impatient person might make.
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As long as you wash your rice before cooking it, fuzzy logic seems unnecessary.

A normal rice cooker boils water (100 degrees C) and it has a thermometer in it.
As soon as the thermometer detects the temperature over 100 degrees, it shuts off, because this means there is no more water in the pot.

Fuzzy cookers, on the other hand, adjust the internal temperature for you. So instead of cooking at 100% power for 25 minutes, they will sit there and cook at 50% power for an hour.

Seems like a huge waste of time and electricity.
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The best, cheapest option is the Tiger Micom
https://www.costco.com/tiger-55-cup-micom-rice-cooker-and-warmer.product.100410800.html

You will not find any better for any cheaper. Believe me, I have looked. This rice cooker is the best, there are more expensive ones but they don't significantly improve any actual function. There are cheaper ones but they are significantly less functional.

Can even wait and get it on sale. Costco just had it on sale a couple weeks ago iirc.
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>>21606948
thanks chatgpt
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>>21607001
No. It's an article from howstuffworks.
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>>21606989
I always, always wash it first. The only time I know of where you don't wash is for sticky rice because the extra starch is used.
>Fuzzy cookers, on the other hand, adjust the internal temperature for you. So instead of cooking at 100% power for 25 minutes, they will sit there and cook at 50% power for an hour.
Screw that.
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>>21607081
Fuzzies make perfect rice every time. Non-fuzzies do not.



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