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4 votes
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Can we talk about rice cookers?
I've always made rice in a pot on the stove and that's served me very well but I also like to steam vegetables, dumplings (usually from frozen), and eat oats for breakfast. After a bit of...
I've always made rice in a pot on the stove and that's served me very well but I also like to steam vegetables, dumplings (usually from frozen), and eat oats for breakfast. After a bit of research, I've determined that I'm in the market for a rice cooker, an appliance I have never owned and have 0 experience with. Like most kitchen gadgets, I find that the market is oversaturated with options and my attempts at research have led me to some wildly different conclusions. Do I stick with brands I know like Cuisinart or KitchenAid? Do I spring for the fancy Japanese brands? Or do I cheap out and then upgrade when the device burns out? How large of a volume do I need? Are the fancy steamer inserts worth it? What if I want to steam rice and veges in one go? And so on
For my personal use case, I make rice 3-4 times per week easily. I need to be able to make enough rice for 4-6 adults max in one sitting. I would like to make a decent amount of dumplings in one go, say enough to get 4-6 adults started while I steam a second round. I want to be capable of steaming veggies and making oats. I want it to have a removable insert for cleaning. I'd like it to be fairly easy to use. Are these common wishlist items for a rice cooker? I am really not sure
Beyond my use case, I'm interested in what people own and use. Do you use it often? Any regrets? What other foods can I make with this gadget?
Edit: I appreciate everyone who has weighed in so far. I did want to add that I prefer not to add an instant pot. Not to discount anyone's experience but I have had bad luck with them (I've had a pair that burned out in the warranty period, one on its first use) and already have a slow cooker and pressure cooker cooker I am very happy with. I know they're amazing and do all kinds of different things but I'm interested primarily in a rice cooker that can handle a few extra tasks
50 votes -
Over 200 years after being sunk by the British Royal Navy under Admiral Horatio Nelson, one of Denmark's most famous warships has been discovered at the bottom of Copenhagen Harbor
15 votes -
Google partners with Back Market to distribute ChromeOS Flex USB sticks
15 votes -
Semisonic - Closing Time (1998)
12 votes -
Bush: Tiny Desk Concert (2026)
9 votes -
Moomins are the billion dollar comic franchise Americans don't know about
13 votes -
NASA’s Hubble detects first-ever spin reversal of tiny comet
15 votes -
Super Mario Bros. arbitrary code execution glitch discovered
21 votes -
Widow's Bay | Official teaser trailer
2 votes -
Enjoying reading in the age of LLMs
I used to really value the art of essay writing. There seemed to be such a richness in the different ways people would construct arguments, structure those arguments, then deliver those arguments...
I used to really value the art of essay writing. There seemed to be such a richness in the different ways people would construct arguments, structure those arguments, then deliver those arguments stylistically, not just from the perspective of being persuaded as a reader but also from the perspective of seeing how a given writer thinks, relates to the living tradition of language, and understands the world conceptually. But it's basically lost most of its meaning to me in this age of LLMs. The reality is, LLMs are capable of writing texts that, if you gave them to a seasoned reader 5 years ago, they'd say it was well written and indicative of a truly thoughtful mind. Even if there currently exist certain tells with LLMs, those styles certainly existed in different ways in real human writing beforehand. Now, those perfectly reasonable set of styles are verboten and we have to dedicate half our deep focus to figuring out whether, or to what extent, an essay or article was written by AI. It's difficult to enjoy, let alone care, about essay writing and the writers behind them now.
I can still find value in books, though, because they were written in the past and I don't mind never reading any non-scientific book published after 2022 if it comes down to it.
23 votes -
Olivia Rodrigo announces third studio album, ‘you seem pretty sad for a girl so in love’
12 votes -
[Steyr] AUG
13 votes -
Why Swedish schools are bringing back books
14 votes -
Babylon 5 S01E06: "The Parliament of Dreams" - Episode Discussion
7 votes -
Artemis II April 1 launch
63 votes -
Wuppertal Schwebebahn
11 votes -
YouTube gets its own FAST channels
6 votes -
Linux kernel czar says AI bug reports aren't slop anymore
30 votes -
Quantum computing bombshells that are not April Fools
17 votes -
What programming/technical projects have you been working on?
This is a recurring post to discuss programming or other technical projects that we've been working on. Tell us about one of your recent projects, either at work or personal projects. What's...
This is a recurring post to discuss programming or other technical projects that we've been working on. Tell us about one of your recent projects, either at work or personal projects. What's interesting about it? Are you having trouble with anything?
12 votes -
Backrooms | Official trailer
35 votes -
What is your favourite shark?
I've been working on an ocean life repository website for work, and I found myself randomly rambling about sharks because they've always been such a fascinating example to me of how evolution can...
I've been working on an ocean life repository website for work, and I found myself randomly rambling about sharks because they've always been such a fascinating example to me of how evolution can keep a very recognizable blueprint while splitting into a ridiculous range of lifestyles.
A whale shark, a thresher shark, an angelshark, a tiger shark, a goblin shark, and a reef shark all still read instantly as "shark", and yet they're doing such different things that it almost feels wrong. Filter-feeding giants, ambush predators, open-water hunters, deep-sea weirdos, tail-whip specialists. All while still sticking to this unmistakable shark... ness?
I've been trying to pin down what I even mean by that "blueprint". Not just body shape exactly, but some deeper structural identity that survives a lot of diversification. Other groups feel a bit like this too. Felines, canines, birds… they can branch into very different niches, sizes, and behaviors while still feeling strongly constrained by a common template. A tiger, a lynx, and a house cat are all very clearly "cat". Wolves, foxes, and chihuahuas are very clearly "dog". Canaries, hawks, parrots, and hummingbirds are all still "bird".
It fascinates me how common this is in evolution: nature finding one robust structure and then radiating outward in very different directions without losing the core design. Not the most morphologically extreme variation possible, maybe, but variation under a very conserved plan.
Sharks just feel like one of the wildest examples of that.
So: what's everyone's favourite shark, and why?
Mine is probably either the lemon shark or the thresher shark because of how smart they are. Lemon sharks are fascinating for their social behavior and learning, then threshers are incredible both for that absurd tail and for feeling like such a weirdly specialized, clever branch of the shark blueprint.
29 votes -
How to tolerate annoying things
29 votes -
Anticipating a world where LLM use is widespread
16 votes -
Diablo Swing Orchestra - Superhero Jagganath (2017)
9 votes -
oktobernatt - Rasa (2026)
4 votes -
Trans Day of Visibility
Hey folks, My apologies but you've rolled a nat 1 on your stealth check (the D&D kind...) as today you have disadvantage. If you are trans, including all sorts of folks under the broader umbrella,...
Hey folks,
My apologies but you've rolled a nat 1 on your stealth check (the D&D kind...) as today you have disadvantage.
If you are trans, including all sorts of folks under the broader umbrella, please, if you choose, take this moment to be visible, share something that brings you joy, gender euphoria or just small happinesses.
You are valid and loved even when this world does not feel validating or loving
(˘︶˘).。*♡
76 votes -
What have you been watching / reading this week? (Anime/Manga)
What have you been watching and reading this week? You don't need to give us a whole essay if you don't want to, but please write something! Feel free to talk about something you saw that was...
What have you been watching and reading this week? You don't need to give us a whole essay if you don't want to, but please write something! Feel free to talk about something you saw that was cool, something that was bad, ask for recommendations, or anything else you can think of.
If you want to, feel free to find the thing you're talking about and link to its pages on Anilist, MAL, or any other database you use!
7 votes -
Can plants count? Study suggests they can track the number of events they experience.
16 votes -
I’m supposed to be visible today — but why?
18 votes -
Midweek Movie Free Talk
Warning: this post may contain spoilers
Have you watched any movies recently you want to discuss? Any films you want to recommend or are hyped about? Feel free to discuss anything here.
Please just try to provide fair warning of spoilers if you can.
4 votes -
What have you been eating, drinking, and cooking?
What food and drinks have you been enjoying (or not enjoying) recently? Have you cooked or created anything interesting? Tell us about it!
5 votes -
Norway's cherished Eastertime obsession of retreating to isolated cabins to binge crime fiction
6 votes -
Playboy Manbaby - Fire To My Yard (2026)
4 votes -
Vanir – Helgrinidir (2026)
2 votes -
Professors are designing AI apps meant to help students think through problems
10 votes -
Gyre
15 votes -
TV Tuesdays Free Talk
Warning: this post may contain spoilers
Have you watched any TV shows recently you want to discuss? Any shows you want to recommend or are hyped about? Feel free to discuss anything here.
Please just try to provide fair warning of spoilers if you can.
7 votes -
Disney reportedly keen on buying Fortnite developer Epic Games
29 votes -
Viktor Gyökeres the hero as Graham Potter rescues Sweden's 2026 World Cup dream with a win over Poland
2 votes -
See how Hollywood’s job market is collapsing
25 votes -
Email obfuscation: What works in 2026?
24 votes -
'Banal and hollow': Why the quaint paintings of Thomas Kinkade divided the US
25 votes -
Pokémon Go players built a thirty-billion-photo map for AI
21 votes -
US Supreme Court rules against Colorado ban on ‘conversion therapy’ for LGBTQ+ kids
42 votes -
Inside the ‘self-driving’ lab revolution
10 votes -
NASA's Artemis II L-1 countdown status news conference
25 votes -
Jeopardy! YouTube Edition | Full episode feat. Monét X Change, Rebecca Black & Brennan Lee Mulligan
10 votes -
Vaping likely to cause lung and oral cancer, Australian researchers find in new review of evidence
42 votes