Induction Heating Pressure Rice Cooker/Warmer Size: 10 Cup

Posted by Nanasa on Tuesday, September 10, 2013

Induction Heating Pressure Rice Cooker/Warmer Size: 10 Cup
Induction Heating Pressure Rice Cooker/Warmer Size: 10 Cup
Code : B001KVZZGW
Category : ,
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Induction Heating Pressure Rice Cooker/Warmer Size: 10 Cup


Induction Heating Pressure Rice Cooker/Warmer Size: 10 Cup



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Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #61654 in Kitchen & Housewares
  • Size: 10 Cup
  • Color: Brown
  • Brand: Zojirushi
  • Model: NPHTC18
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 4.28" h x 3.64" w x 6.13" l, 9.00 pounds

Features

  • Zojirushi Pressure Rice Cooker & Warmer
  • Stainless Steel
  • Easy-to-read colored LCD control panel with clock and timer functions
  • GABA brown menu or brown rice activation for increased nutritional values
  • Induction heating technology with vacuum-insulated inner cooking pan for efficient heating
  • Zojirushi Pressure Rice Cooker & Warmer
  • Stainless Steel
  • Easy-to-read colored LCD control panel with clock and timer functions
  • GABA brown menu or brown rice activation for increased nutritional values
  • Induction heating technology with vacuum-insulated inner cooking pan for efficient heating

Product Description

Zojirushi NP-HTC18 Induction Heating 10-Cup (Uncooked) Pressure Rice Cooker and Warmer

Perfectly Cooked Rice with the NP-HTC18
NP-HTC18

Customer Reviews

Most helpful customer reviews

55 of 59 people found the following review helpful.
5Great Brown Rice at 7,300 ft.
By Betty Louann
Just completed my first pot of brown rice at 7,300 ft. It is so much better than my usual pressure-cooked brown rice, it is amazing. And I didn't have to stand around adjusting the flame on my stove to keep the pressure up, but not too far up. I simply put in the brown rice to the levels recommended. I closed it and set it on the brown rice setting. Perfect the first time. Yes, it is really expensive, but brown rice doesn't really get done at my altitude unless you use a pressure cooker. The controls on a pressure cooker are not very fine. This machine immediately brings the rice to the best temperature for cooking whatever kind of rice one chooses and raises the pressure, if necessary, to get the water to that temperature. I looked at the non-pressurized Zojirushi rice cookers and realized that they would not work for me, so my sweet husband sprang for the NP-HTC18 and gave it to me for a gift. I am very lucky. Great husband, great rice-cooker. He figures he will be paid off in more frequent brown rice from now on and he is right.

62 of 73 people found the following review helpful.
5Yes it's expensive but worth it.......
By Dok S. Hoont
I am quite aware as a non-Asian that my review of a rice cooker which is basically no more than a fancy, perhaps overpriced water boiler, might not be taken too seriously. However, I have been cooking Asian/Chinese cuisine for almost 35 years and for some reason have had an identity, if not a passion for the art of properly cooking rice. During this time I have owned 6 electric rice cookers. I began with a National basic rice cooker. You placed the rinsed rice into the aluminum cooking pot, clicked the switch to on and off it went. When the rice had boiled all the liquid away the temp spiked and my rice cooker shut off. The following rice cooker was again a National brand, but this was a much more sophisticated model that touted "Fuzzy Logic". I realize that it is a bit of a stretch to believe a microprocessor could be needed to merely "boil and cook" rice? However, given the assortment of rice dishes and not just cooking plain rice a convenience like this seemed to be a natural progression in the countries where rice was an everyday staple.My next rung up the automatic rice cooker ladder was a more sophisticated Zojirushi rice cooker with more settings and again "fuzzy logic". Not long after this I was in a Korean grocery store and found a Panasonic brand "pressure" rice cooker that touted that it could not only cook outstanding rice of any variety, but an assortment of mixed grains, stews, and one meal dishes. I bought this and immediately feel in love with all of its features. Not only did it perform flawlessly cooking rice, it could also cook almost anything else, rice, grains, or otherwise and this is with what ever you chose to add.I eventually ordered another pressure Panasonic rice cooker since they had stopped making them, from Ebay in order to have a back-up and/or parts. Some time after I received this second Panasonic pressure rice cooker I happened to have found a link to Zojirushi. I have always been very keen on this Japanese brand. To make a point, I was a very snobbish bread baker; sneering at anyone that would consider making bread in a bread machine. After receiving my Zojirushi BBCCX-20 bread machine I had to eat my words.Anyway, I decided to try the NP-HTC18 Induction Heating 10-cup Pressure Rice Cooker. I have been cooking on induction cooking hobs for years and decided to give this a try, in spite of the cost. All I can tell you is that if you love rice and all the other rice/grain dishes that I do, you should invest in this awesome kitchen device. I have not had it long, but have cooked several batches of various white rices, barley, mixed grains and rice, and mixed rices. All of these have been either plain or with oils, mushrooms, spices, herbs, etc. I am not sure what is on the horizon here, but for me this is the ultimate anything cooker. I hope that more and more people buy this and experiment with all of it's amazing possibilities.

78 of 96 people found the following review helpful.
5The Lexus of Rice Cookers.
By A. Kang
First off I know this rice cooker is super expensive. Why the heck does a rice cooker cost this much? But this isn't even the most expensive, there's a rice cooker that's $2000 in Japan, that's the Bently or Rolls Royce of rice cookers. This one is the Lexus of rice cookers.The main selling point for this one is that it has induction cooking and pressure cooking. I'm assuming that if you are looking at this machine, you are probably Asian and eat rice everyday. Does this machine make the rice so much better that it's worth the price, not really. Not for it to be worth this much but if you like your rice to be perfectly moist, this does a great job. I'm comparing this rice cooker to my old Tiger which is just a standard rice cooker. This one is all computer controlled and you just can't mess up the rice.The main reason to get this rice cooker over a cheaper brand is that you want to eat brown rice. Now to be perfectly clear the brown rice is a lot softer but it is not the consistency of white rice. I was reading some reviews and people say they got the brown rice to have the same consistency as white rice. It's softer by far but the brown rice still has the brown cover on it so it is still harder than white rice but a lot softer. This pressure cooker version even makes it softer than just the induction model. I have both. I bought the induction only model and gave it to my mom and now I have this one.I have no idea if the GABA feature really works but might as well use it, can't hurt.This machine is made in Japan, not China. Some of the cheaper Zojirushi rice cookers are made in China now.

See all 26 customer reviews...

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