This post may contain affiliate links. Please read our disclosure policy.

My favorite kitchen tool for eating great and managing my weight is the slow cooker.

If I had to choose a first-runner up, it would be a rice cooker, so today I’m giving one away. You’ll find all the details at the end of the post.

Best Way to Cook Rice Cooker Giveaway

As Nigella Lawson persuasively explains in her wonderful cookbook, Nigella Kitchen: Recipes from the Heart of the Home (affiliate link), “…It isn’t a coincidence that all rice-eating cultures have a version: these things, which range from basic to luxury, really do work. I cannot tell you now much easier it makes your life when you can come home, pour rice and water into the cooker, flick on a switch and just walk away without having to think about it again. And this makes a difference across the board: from feeding children to giving dinner parties…”

The Best Way to Cook Rice

Google, “The Best Way to Cook Rice” and be prepared to be overwhelmed by all the different theories and approaches, from simple to complex, on the best way to cook rice. Just reading some of these recipes made my head hurt. No wonder people get overwhelmed in the kitchen.

My approach to life and cooking is to keep things as simple as possible. Because if things are simple enough, we might actually do them!

The best way to cook rice is with a rice cooker (affiliate link).

Author of The Food Lab: Better Home Cooking Through Science, J. Kenji López-Alt agrees: “There’s no easier, more foolproof way to cook rice and other grains that in a rice cooker. Sure you can cook rice in a pot, carefully monitoring the flame, hoping that you’ve added just the right amount of water and that your rice isn’t burning on the bottom, and taking it off the heat at just the right moment, but if you’re anything like me, you’ve burned one too many batches to fuss with that method any more. With a rice cooker, you just add your rice and water, shut the lid, flip the switch, and go, with the added advantage that it’ll keep the cooked rice (or there grain) hot for hours.”

If you don’t have a rice cooker, two other easy options are to:

  1. cook your rice is in lots of salted water as you would pasta, or to
  2. bake it in the oven

Some of my favorite easy healthy Weight Watchers friendly rice recipes include:

The Best Way to Cook Rice Cooker Giveaway Details

Best Way to Cook Rice Cooker Giveaway

TO ENTER

1. Leave a comment below answering the question, “What is your biggest kitchen/cooking challenge?”

A winner will be selected at random and announced next Sunday.

Good luck!

3/26/17: This giveaway is now over.

The winner is Carole Cushman who commented, “My biggest challenge is planning and then sticking to it!”

Congratulations Carole! Please contact us at support@simple-nourished-living.com to claim your prize.

And thanks so much to everyone who took the time to participate by sharing your biggest kitchen challenge. I loved reading all your comments and learning more about you.

Notes from The SweetHome review site on the best rice cooker (affiliate link)” After more than 100 hours of research and testing, cooking more than 200 pounds of rice, and talking with rice experts specializing in Japanese, Thai, and Chinese cuisine, we recommend the Hamilton Beach 37549 2-to-14-cup Digital Simplicity Rice Cooker and Steamer for most people.

It’s an outstanding value that’s well-suited to most households that want the ease and convenience of no-fuss, no-burning cooked rice.

It makes delicious short-grain and medium-grain white rice—the variety most commonly made in a cooker—faster and better tasting than models 10 times the price.

It offers features you tend not to see on rice cookers at this price, most notably a delay-start mode, stay-warm functions, an insulated lid to hold in steam, large capacity, and a heavy, quality cooking pot.

It’s by far the best low-priced cooker we’ve found.”

About Martha McKinnon

Weight Watchers Lifetime Member, Yoga Practitioner and Blogger who loves to share her passion for trying to create a happy, healthy, balanced life in what often feels like an overwhelming out of control world.

You May Also Like

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

269 Comments

  1. My biggest cooking challenge is fish. I want to prepare it both healthier for a delicious outcome. I want to buy fresh but am afraid of spending a lot of money then ruining it due to my inexperience.

  2. My biggest challenge is to find things to cook that I can follow my weight watchers diet plan and make things that my family likes. I can’t make things that say “DIET” if I do my family will not eat it.

  3. My biggest challenge is cooking salmon. Thanks for the chance to win the rice cooker…..that is also a challenge.

  4. I am working out a weekly menu that will make life easier for my husband the cook and to help with my weight loss program. I find that if I already know what to have for dinner helps.

  5. My greatest cooking challenge is my health. I have RA, Degenerative Disk Disease and Fibromyalgia, as well as several other diseases. Standing at the counter/sink and the stove is a struggle for me. Therefore, I love my slow cooker! Thanks for sharing your recipes and ideas. My next purchase is going to be a rice cooker, once I save the money for one, as I live on a limited income. After which I plan on getting an Instant Pot. In addition to my personal health issues I have disabled adult twin daughters to cook for and of whom I’m responsible. My life is complicated.

  6. I have always wanted the luxury of being able to get the perfect rice and this appears to be the answer. It would be wonderful to be the lucky winner of this.

  7. My biggest challenge in the kitchen is getting my husband to enjoy the nourished living food I cook. He will eat it, but for him, every dinner should just be meat and mashed potatoes smothered in gravy…..if I could find some sauces he would like that I could eat ..,,well meal time would be so much more enjoyable! BTW, I am a type a diabetic of 47 years and eating healthy at every meal is necessary to sustaining my life!

  8. I cook for only me and my husband, and I often struggle with cooking smaller amounts. So many of the recipe I find serve 6 or 8, so I have to rely on my husband to help me reduce the amount of the ingredients used.