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The best rice cookers of 2024

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Save some time in the kitchen by outsourcing the labor of making rice to a rice cooker. Rice cookers are kitchen essentials that do all the work of rice cooking for you, without making any mistakes. Use one of these genius machines and you will no longer have to deal with the trial and error that comes with making rice on the stovetop, which often results in rice being undercooked or overcooked — or just plain burnt.

There are a lot of different rice cookers out there, so if you’re new to the rice cooker game, it’s easy to become overwhelmed with all the options. That’s why we did the work for you and rounded up the four best options based on the extensive research we conducted about rice cookers. The best rice cookers churn out perfectly cooked rice every time and have a capacity big enough to suit your family.


Best rice cookers of 2024

Our picks for the best rice cookers of 2024 come from renowned brands in the rice cooker world. Not only that, they’re also highly rated by customers — all CBS Essentials suggestions have a reviewer rating of 4 stars or higher.


Zojirushi NS-TSC10 Micom rice cooker and warmer, 5.5 cups

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Zojirushi is widely considered to be one of the best rice cooker brands on the market, so you’ll definitely get a return on your investment if you splurge on one of these. The brand is lauded for being long-lasting, having multiple cooking options, and most importantly, making perfectly cooked rice with each use.

The Zojirushi NS-TSC10 Micom rice cooker and warmer can cook white/sushi rice, mixed rice, brown rice and sweet rice (also commonly referred to as sticky rice). There’s a quick cooking setting, a steam setting that allows you to prolong the life of your already cooked rice, and a cake setting (yes, you can actually make cake in here). You can even set a timer before you leave your home so that the rice is cooked and freshly made the moment you get home.

Out of all this rice cooker’s capabilities, what really stands out is the sushi and quick cook settings, which aren’t always common in rice cookers. Rated 4.7 stars.


Cuckoo six-cup Micom rice cooker (CR-0655F), six cups

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Amazon


This rice cooker has many of the same features of more expensive rice cookers, though it’s less than $100 in price. It includes an LCD screen and has a tight-fitting lid that’s optimal for keeping steam in and keeping rice warm. It can cook white rice, brown rice and mixed rice, as well as porridge and baby food. 

There is a multi-cook function that allows you to go beyond grains, giving you the capability to make dishes such as soups and roasts. Plus, if you’re short on time, you can activate turbo mode which is essentially the brand’s quick-cooking option. You are able to set a timer too to have your rice later, and can safely reheat leftover rice. It also has a unique auto-clean function that we can’t say we’ve seen in other rice cookers. 

The Cuckoo six-cup Micom rice cooker has a 4.6-star rating on Amazon. One reviewer wrote, “The best rice cooker I have ever had. Worth the money.” 

Another customer said, “I would give this rice cooker ten stars if I could. Rice is perfect every time, it is easy to operate and very easy to clean after use. The instructions can be a bit confusing but the operation is very simple. I am very happy with the quality of this cooker and the rice tastes so much better and has perfect texture every time. Highly recommend!!” 


Zojirushi rice cooker / steamer NHS-06/10/18, three cups

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Zojirushi is so nice we couldn’t help but name the brand twice on this list. If your budget can’t accommodate a $100 plus rice cooker, get this simpler model from the highly rated brand. The NHS-06/10/18 model is great for someone who primarily cooks white or brown rice at home and doesn’t have to feed a large family. This rice cooker only has one cooking function and yields up to six cups of rice, which is more than enough to feed two people for one meal.

Although this doesn’t have all the bells and whistles of high-priced models, it still will make a perfectly cooked cup of rice. And at the end of the day, that is all that truly matters when you’re shopping for a rice cooker. One of our CBS Essentials shopping experts, Rachel Center, who has owned this rice cooker for a year, can confirm this.

The Zojirushi NHS-06/10/18 model has a 4.6-star rating on Amazon. One reviewer said that this rice cooker was a game changer, adding: “I used to cook all my rice on the stove which is usually hit or miss with how it turns out. It would come out all stuck together and in clumps. We just got this rice cooker and it’s like night and day! The rice tastes so much better! It doesn’t come out stuck together and I don’t have to worry about it burning on the bottom. I just put in the recommended water and rice and left it alone while I cooked the rest of dinner. I could tell a huge difference in how the rice came out. VERY HAPPY with this purchase!”


Panasonic rice cooker SR-CN108, five cups 

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Amazon


This rice cooker from Panasonic has an astonishing amount of cooking options, which is why we’re so into it. You can cook white rice, brown rice, multi-grain, jasmine rice, sticky rice and even clay pot rice. You also get the option to customize the texture of your rice (soft, regular or hard), which is convenient as not everybody likes their rice prepared the exact same way. 

And that’s just the rice. The SR-CN108 model also gives you the ability to cook quinoa, porridge, cake, bread and slow-cooking soup. Plus, with a steam basket, you can steam veggies or meats to go along with your grain side. And if you ever find yourself needing to transport this machine, such as if you’re going over to a friend’s house to help cook for a dinner party, it comes with a convenient handle. 

The Panasonic rice cooker SR-CN108 has a 4.3-star rating on Amazon. One reviewer wrote, “I’ve had this for over a month now. [I] have done four different types of rice, oatmeal, soup, and baked the banana cake recipe that comes with it … Everything turned out great.” 




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Malcolm Gladwell’s life has changed; he has not

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On Tuesday, a new Malcolm Gladwell book comes out. And if history is any guide, it will be a bestseller. “They’re stories about ideas,” he said. “They have characters. They have plots. I’m usually trying to say something about the world.”

His first book, “The Tipping Point,” published in 2000, established the Gladwell recipe: he explores a theme through anecdotes and little-known scientific studies. “‘Tipping Point’ was about the epidemic as an incredibly useful way of understanding how ideas move through society,” Gladwell said. “And epidemics have rules. Let’s learn the rules, right?” 

His seven New York Times bestsellers have sold 23 million copies in North America alone. His fee for corporate speeches is $350,000. His fans have downloaded a quarter-billion episodes of his podcast, “Revisionist History,” and he founded a company called Pushkin Industries to produce it. 

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Malcolm Gladwell recording his “Revisionist History” podcast. 

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In other words, Gladwell has come a long way from the small Canadian town where he grew up, son of a British father and a Jamaican mother, whom he describes as “subversive,” someone who would write notes to excuse her son from class with a blank space. “I would just fill out the date,” said the man who skipped a lot of school.

He attended the University of Toronto, but his best education was the ten years he worked for the Washington Post. “I knew nothing about newspapers,” he said. “I was so raw. I was 23, I think, or 24. Bob Woodward was two rows away from me. I learned at the feet of the greatest journalists of my generation.”

In 1996, Gladwell joined The New Yorker. He wrote about why, in the 1990s, New York’s crime rate plummeted in an article called, “The Tipping Point.” A book followed. It introduced a recurring Gladwellian theme: hidden patterns in the way the world works.

He’s a world-class contrarian, about college (“You should never go to the best institution you get into, never; go to your second or your third choice. Go to the place where you’re guaranteed to be in the top part of your class”); about working from home (“It’s not in your best interest to work at home. … If you’re just sitting in your pajamas in your bedroom, is that the work life you want to live, right? Don’t you want to feel part of something?”); about football (“I think the sport is a moral abomination”).

Gladwell says he enjoys being provocative: “Of course!” he said. “I like poking the bear. I mean, journalists should poke the bear.”

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Bestselling author Malcolm Gladwell’s latest, “Revenge of the Tipping Point,” builds on a familiar idea from his books: You may think you know how the world works, but you’re wrong!

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Gladwell’s fans love his storytelling, and the A-ha! moments they bring. His critics, on the other hand, have described his writing as “generalizations that are banal, obtuse, or flat wrong,” and “simple, vacuous truths [dressed] up with flowery language.” “I’m with the idea that not everyone’s gonna like my work,” Gladwell said. “100% of people don’t like anything.”

In a 2021 “Sunday Morning” interview, Gladwell said, “I would rather be interesting than correct.” He called that “an overly provocative way of saying things! No, I think what I meant was, if I turn out not to be right, I’m not devastated. I accept that as the price of doing business.”

Gladwell often turns his mistakes into new chapters or podcast episodes. In “The Tipping Point,” he explained that New York’s crime drop was the result of “broken windows policing.” As he described it, “Little crimes were tipping points for big crimes.” But that philosophy led to New York’s policy of “stop and frisk.”

“Doing 700,000 police stops a year of young Black and Hispanic men is deeply problematic,” Gladwell said. “We were wrong. I was part of that. I’m sorry.”

Which brings us to the new book, “Revenge of the Tipping Point.” “The original ‘Tipping Point’ is a very optimistic, rosy book about the possibilities for using the laws of epidemics to promote positive social change,” he said. “In the last 25 years, I spent a lot of time thinking about the other side of that problem, which is, what happens when people use the laws of epidemics in ways that are malicious or damaging or self-interested?”

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The book’s stories range from topics as obscure as cheetah reproduction, to stories as big as the Holocaust. He writes that almost nobody talked about the Holocaust, or even called it that, until NBC aired a miniseries called “Holocaust” in 1978. “And what changed happened like [snaps fingers]. I mean, it was just there was a tipping point in our understanding of the Holocaust,” he said.

This book arrives at a tipping point in Gladwell’s own life. In a span of five years, he got engaged, had two children, turned 61, and moved from Manhattan to pastoral Hudson, New York. “It’s a lot to handle. There isn’t a single person who ever lived whose parents did not say, ‘This is a lot!'” he laughed. “I have become the person that, you know, I once despised, and nothing makes me happier.”

He also despises Ivy League colleges, accusing them of prioritizing their own reputations over focusing on their students.

Has parenthood affected his outlook on any of the things that he’s written about before? “Well, it’s prepared me for the possibility that I will be a massive hypocrite!” Gladwell laughed. “So, you know, it’s one thing to write about what you should do with your kids when you don’t have them.”

For all his success, Malcolm Gladwell maintains that nothing has changed in his approach, his work ethic, or his contrarianism. “It hasn’t changed what I do,” he said. “I don’t farm out my research; I still go on reporting trips. It hasn’t gotten old. In fact, my great regret is I don’t have time to do more.”

     
READ AN EXCERPT: “Revenge of the Tipping Point” by Malcolm Gladwell

     
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Story produced by Wonbo Woo. Editor: Remington Korper. 



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Coldplay on their record-breaking world tour

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Coldplay on their record-breaking world tour – CBS News


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Twenty-five years after their first hit record, Coldplay’s current world tour, which Billboard calls “the biggest rock tour of all time,” has earned more than a billion dollars and sold more than 10 million tickets. During a stop in Dublin, correspondent Anthony Mason catches up with Chris Martin, Will Champion, Guy Berryman and Jonny Buckland to talk about “Moon Music” (the band’s tenth studio album), the songwriting process, and their future playing together.

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Coldplay on their record-breaking world tour: “We’re having such a great time”

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Dublin’s Grafton Street was mobbed last month when word spread that Coldplay was coming to shoot the video for their new single, “We Pray.”

“I was a little nervous for you there in the beginning,” said Mason.

“Yeah, but you have to just trust in the goodness of people – and the proficiency of the police!” laughed Chris Martin.

Martin was joined by collaborators Burna Boy, Tini, Elyanna and Little Simz. “The five of us actually had never actually played the song in the same place before,” said Martin. “So, our first time doing it was on the street in the middle of all those people.”


Coldplay – WE PRAY (TINI Version) (Official) by
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Coldplay was in Dublin for four sold-out nights at Croke Park, on their “Music of the Spheres” world tour. With more than 10 million tickets sold, and box office of over $1 billion, Billboard has crowned it “the biggest rock tour of all time.”

Mason asked drummer Will Champion, “You guys are in the middle of literally a record-breaking tour. Does it feel like that to you?”

“Sometimes it’s hard to see the woods for the trees,” Champion replied. “We’re aware that we’re having such a great time. We’re really enjoying ourselves.”

“It definitely was extremely loud last night,” said bassist Guy Berryman.

Champion, Berryman, Martin and guitarist Jonny Buckland haven’t always felt the love, especially in the early years. But critics, who once asked “Why does everyone hate Coldplay?” are now calling them “the 21st century’s defining band.”

“It seems like you’ve kind of been fully embraced even by the music critics,” said Mason.

“Well, you’re very sweet. I mean, that’s just not true!” laughed Martin.

“I don’t think you’re ever fully embraced,” said Buckland.

“Also, we are really not a rock band,” said Martin. “So, when we’re judged by those parameters, we’re always gonna come up short. One thing I’d say that we’ve become more comfortable with is just being ourselves.”

Their catalog of hits stretches across a quarter of a century. Martin said, “The truth of it is, some songs arrive fully formed, basically – not Jonny’s parts or Will’s or Guy’s parts, but my part. And those are the rarest, but they’re always the best, the ones that I had least to do with.”

“But sometimes they’re the hardest to produce, because you don’t want to ruin them!” laughed Buckland.

Martin says he can feel that right away: “Definitely, yeah. The songs of ours that have connected with the most people, they connected with me first. I was like, ‘Oh, this is really good!’ ‘Yellow,’ ‘Viva La Vida,’ ‘Fix You,’ ‘Sky Full of Stars.’ They just land.”

“Viva La Vida” by Coldplay:


Coldplay – Viva La Vida (Official Video) by
Coldplay on
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“So, in a strange way, you’re listening to it, you’re the first person to listen to it; that’s what it feels like,” said Martin. “With the song ‘We Pray,’ we were in Taiwan on tour about ten months ago. I think it was after a show and I woke up in the middle of the night, this song was just in my head called ‘We Pray.’ And it said, ‘You have to get outta bed and do this now.'”

Coldplay performed “We Pray” with their collaborators on stage for the first time in Dublin. “To have heard a song in the middle of the night in Taiwan and then ten months later it’s on stage in Dublin? I mean, that’s in itself an amazing journey,” Martin said.

Martin started writing songs at a young age: “The first one arrived when I was about 11,” he said.

Martin is always writing, even while on the road. Every morning, he sits down to write freeform – whatever he’s thinking about. “I do that as a way of staying sane!” he laughed. “For 12 minutes in the mornings, I write anything that’s in my head, and it’s often very terrible and very depressed or very anxious, or all of the stuff that you don’t really want anyone else to hear, but you need to release. So, I do that for 12 minutes, and then I burn it.”

“You literally light it on fire?” asked Mason.

“Yeah, or tear it up and flush it away. And it just kind of gets rid of so much nonsense,” Martin said. “Definitely helps in a band, too. Because in the old days we would have a lot more tension and a lot more volatility. But that’s calmed down a lot.”

Buckland was asked about the incredible sense of community at their concerts. “I think this is the point where we are most happy,” he said. “I think we got to that point by being in a band for 25 years and then finally it sort of all clicking into place.”

“Is that just a process of time?” asked Mason.

“Well, I think a process of time and hard work,” said Martin. “We’ve worked quite hard on how we communicate with each other and giving each other space. We tour a lot slower now. We only do about 65 shows a year, which isn’t that many.”

Coldplay’s new record, “Moon Music,” is the band’s tenth studio album.

Martin has said the band would release its last album in 2025. “It was right and it was wrong, like most things I say,” Martin explained. “We are only going to do 12 proper Coldplay albums, but we’re a little bit behind. Not too far behind!”

Buckland explained, “We’re asking for an extension!”

So, why 12 albums? “That’s just what it’s supposed to be,” Martin replied. “I don’t think anyone needs more than that from us. The Beatles did 12.” 

Mason asked, “Do you guys have other things you want to do? Is that part of this?”

“Not at all. We’d like to keep playing live,” said Martin.  

“So, that goes on?”

“Oh, yeah, yeah – that gets better and better,” Martin said.

“Don’t wanna stop Coldplay,” said Buckland.  

You can’t stop Coldplay. Chris Martin says he has to keep sprinting across stadiums.

Why does he have to? “I think it’s like asking an apple tree why does it make apples?” Martin replied. “That’s ’cause that’s what I was made to do. And also, I’m really happy doing it.”

Coldplay performs “feelslikeimfallinginlove” at Glastonbury 2024:


Coldplay – feelslikeimfallinginlove (Glastonbury 2024) by
BBC Music on
YouTube

For more info:

     
Story produced by Jon Carras. Editor: Mike Levine.

     
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