#19 in Rice cookers
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Reddit mentions of Panasonic SR-G06FG Automatic 3.3 Cup (Uncooked) Rice Cooker (Silver)

Sentiment score: 4
Reddit mentions: 5

We found 5 Reddit mentions of Panasonic SR-G06FG Automatic 3.3 Cup (Uncooked) Rice Cooker (Silver). Here are the top ones.

Panasonic SR-G06FG Automatic 3.3 Cup (Uncooked) Rice Cooker (Silver)
Buying options
View on Amazon.com
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    Features:
  • Make up to 3 Cups of uncooked rice with One-step Automatic cooking and shutoff, Just press the button and ready to go,
  • See-thru glass lid for easy viewing, Non-stick coated Aluminum Pan, 310 Watts of Power Consumption
  • This model is not recommended for Brown Rice and it is recommended to clean rice before cooking in a separate pan and not in included pan
  • Accessories include: Measuring Cup and Rice Scoop, Multi-Lingual (English, French, Spanish, Korean, Chinese) Operating Instruction Manual
  • Measures: 9 5/8" (W) x 7 3/4" (D) x 8 1/4" (H), 2.6 lbs, Silver
  • NOTE: Please ensure to measure rice in the cup that comes along with the product ONLY
Specs:
ColorSilver
Height7.32 Inches
Length9.29 Inches
Number of items1
Size3.3 Cup (Uncooked)
Weight5.732018812 Pounds
Width9.29 Inches

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Found 5 comments on Panasonic SR-G06FG Automatic 3.3 Cup (Uncooked) Rice Cooker (Silver):

u/hugsfordummies · 6 pointsr/Cooking

I use this one: http://www.amazon.com/Panasonic-SR-G06FG-Automatic-Uncooked-Cooker/dp/B0009E3F68/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1394810899&sr=8-2

Cheap and reliable. Obviously, has rice function. For steaming veggies or reheating leftovers, I pour about 0.5-1 inch of water into the bottom and throw in a ceramic/pyrex bowl of veggies. Temperature sensor works great and finishes just as it's nice and hot.

u/skrenename4147 · 5 pointsr/Frugal

I bought one two years ago and cannot envision independent life without one now. It has less to do with the physical difficulty of cooking the rice and more to do with freeing you up for other things.

My mealtime nowadays consists of popping a cup of rice in the cooker, flinging random vegetables and meats out of my fridge, cooking them, and stirfrying.

u/fapperontheroof · 2 pointsr/food

Any suggestions for a rice cooker?

Here are two I was looking at on amazon:

u/kgober · 1 pointr/slowcooking

for making smaller amounts of rice, something like this may work well for you. it's easy to use and easy to clean, and it does a decent job (not as good as a $200 Japanese model, but good enough).

I think if you really love rice, 'cheap' and 'great' aren't really compatible, but this one is good enough that we've felt comfortable giving them as gifts (to people we like).

u/metaphorm · 0 pointsr/Cooking

step 1: get a rice cooker

step 2: add flavorings if you want flavored rice.

step 3: follow directions on your rice. typically 1 cup rice, 2 cups water, but check first, some have different proportions.

step 4: wait until machine is finished.

i'm not even trying to be facetious here. cooking rice manually with a steamer, or boiling it in a pot is actually difficult and error prone. these machines are AMAZING. perfect rice every time no effort. i don't usually advocate letting a machine do it for you since often the result is worse, but this is the exception. rice cookers make MUCH better rice than you can typically make yourself.

a couple of my favorite flavorings:

  • a teaspoon of jasmine tea, for tea rice.
  • salt, pepper, onion powder, garlic powder, lemon zest, pine nuts, almonds, parsley for a nice pilaf
  • salt and rice vinegar, added to already cooked rice, for japanese style sushi rice