Give yourself a whole new way to create perfect rice. How? This handy rice cooker. In a contemporary design that can go straight from your counter to your tabletop.
Spherical shape provides even, consistent heating. Large capacity that holds up to 10 cups of cooked rice. Handy, automatic keep-warm feature gives you meals that are ready whenever you are. Built-in steaming tray offers added versatility. Easy, one-touch operation, auto shutoff, indicator lights to identify the cooking cycle and a removable nonstick pot for simple cleanup provide total convenience. Tempered glass lid with a steam vent helps maintain temperatures. Details: 10-cup cooked rice capacity Dishwasher safe: removable pot & lid Manufacturer's 1-year limited warranty Model no. 4722
$10 for every $50 you spend March 3rd thru March 7th
MARCH30 is the code for 30% off from March 3rd-10th
Free Shipping on Your Order when Using Kohl's Credit Card.
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posted: Mar. 5, 2010 @ 8:42a
motorwerke
New Member
posted: Mar. 5, 2010 @ 9:09a
Just a word of warning on this one... I bought it, and it is really a 3-4 (dry) cup rice cooker. Not sure exactly how many cups that is when cooked, seems the rice maker people use different math. When using a measuring cup with water only, it holds maybe 5 cups. We returned it back to Kohls and are on the search for a true 10cup maker. If you only need small batches, this is a great deal.
Edit: Apparently I'm not the only one who found it small for a 10cup maker. See plenty of reviews on Walmarts site, a bunch also commented on it being small. http://www.WalMart.com/catalog/allReviews.do?product_id=5811501
I'm just trying to help. Even sites like Amazon and WalMart list it is a 3cup dry, 6 cup cooked maker. If you only need to make a few cups, its great, but I needed a 8-10 cup cooked maker.
motorwerke said: Just a word of warning on this one... I bought it, and it is really a 3-4 (dry) cup rice cooker. Not sure exactly how many cups that is when cooked, seems the rice maker people use different math. When using a measuring cup with water only, it holds maybe 5 cups. We returned it back to Kohls and are on the search for a true 10cup maker. If you only need small batches, this is a great deal.
the description CLEARLY shows 10 cups cooked. No need to warn anyone, they aren't misleading you, you just failed to read the Specs prior to buying it. Can't blame the product if you don't read.
rec17988 said: Good deal. Rice cookers are quite useful.
curious, is there any other kind of food you can cook in these?
motorwerke
New Member
posted: Mar. 5, 2010 @ 9:50a
FYI, I found some reason for the measurement discrepancies on the Oster site. Yes, I did read 10 cups cooked, which is why I bought the unit. Amazon/WalMart list is as a 3 uncooked, 6 cooked, not sure why their descriptions vary from what was on the box.
What type of measurements are used with the Oster® Rice Cooker and Instruction Manual? Measurements are in Chinese quantities, not regular ounces. One American cup is equal to 3/4 Chinese cup.
As for other uses, they work really well as steamers for vegtables.
Rice cooker cup measurements are 3/4th of the real 1 cup measurement. I found this when I bought another rice cooker. It is misleading if you don't know the difference. I am not sure why they wouldn't use the standard measurement.
check your local store if you have one, the sale price is the same there and my store allowed me to use the 30% off discount (MARCH30) since it went OOS online. The store didn't have any in stock so they gave me an addition 10% off for a total of 40%. As always...YMMV
coolpri said: Rice cooker cup measurements are 3/4th of the real 1 cup measurement. I found this when I bought another rice cooker. It is misleading if you don't know the difference. I am not sure why they wouldn't use the standard measurement.
It is indeed tiny. They have plenty in stock at the store in North Phoenix.. Glad I could see it before I bought it.... By the way, cooking rice in microwave is the easiest and simplest among all other forms of rice-cooking...
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