Modern Electric Multi Cooker on a wooden table. 3d Rendering

Your Rice Cooker Does Way More Than Rice — Here’s What You’re Missing

Healthy Fact of the Day

The rice cooker's steam function is one of the most underrated healthy cooking tools in your kitchen. Steaming preserves more nutrients than boiling or roasting — particularly water-soluble vitamins like B and C that break down with heat and water exposure. If your rice cooker came with a steam tray, use it to cook vegetables or fish while your grains cook below. One appliance, one button, a complete and balanced meal with almost no effort.

Why Your Rice Cooker Is More Versatile Than You Think

The rice cooker is one of the most reliable appliances ever made — consistent heat, automatic shutoff, zero babysitting required. What most people don’t realize is that those same qualities that make it perfect for rice make it surprisingly capable for a whole range of other things. You don’t need a new appliance. You just need to use the one you have differently.

The One Thing to Know Before You Start

Most rice cookers operate on a simple principle: they heat until the moisture is absorbed or evaporated, then switch to warm. That cycle is what makes rice foolproof — and it’s also what makes the following hacks work. The key is adding the right amount of liquid for whatever you’re cooking so the cooker completes its cycle at the right time.

Six Things Your Rice Cooker Can Do

1. Cook Any Grain Rice cookers handle quinoa, farro, barley, millet, and oats just as well as rice. Use the same liquid-to-grain ratio on the package and let the cooker do its thing. Steel cut oats are particularly good — add oats, water, a pinch of salt, and a handful of cinnamon, and wake up to breakfast that’s been keeping warm since it finished.

2. Steam Vegetables and Fish If your rice cooker came with a steam tray, use it. Add water to the bowl, place vegetables or a fish fillet in the tray, and run the cook cycle. Broccoli, carrots, and green beans take about 10–15 minutes. A salmon fillet takes about 15–18 minutes. Everything comes out tender and nothing gets waterlogged.

3. Poach Chicken Place boneless chicken breasts or thighs in the rice cooker with enough chicken broth to cover halfway. Add garlic, a bay leaf, and a pinch of salt. Run the cook cycle — it takes about 20–25 minutes depending on thickness. The result is moist, tender poached chicken that works in salads, tacos, soups, or sandwiches.

4. Make Soup Add broth, vegetables, cooked protein, and any seasonings directly to the rice cooker bowl. Run the cook cycle once, stir, and run it again if needed. It won’t replicate a long simmer, but for a quick weeknight soup — chicken and noodle, miso with tofu, or minestrone — it gets the job done without dirtying a pot.

5. Cook Lentils Red lentils are ideal here. Add one cup of lentils to two cups of water or broth with garlic, cumin, and a pinch of turmeric. Run the cook cycle. By the time it finishes, you have a thick, savory lentil base that works as a side dish, a soup, or a protein-packed grain bowl topping.

6. Make Steamed Cake This one sounds unlikely but works surprisingly well. Mix a simple mug cake-style batter — flour, sugar, egg, butter, milk, baking powder — pour it into the lightly oiled rice cooker bowl, and run two cook cycles back to back. The result is a soft, moist steamed cake. Not a showstopper, but genuinely impressive for one button and no oven.

Rice Cooker Cheat Sheet

What to CookLiquid RatioCycle TimeNotes
Quinoa1:1.751 cycleRinse first
Steel Cut Oats1:31 cycleAdd toppings after
Steamed VegetablesWater in bowl only10–15 minUse steam tray
Poached ChickenBroth to halfway20–25 minCheck for doneness
Red Lentils1:21 cycleStir before serving
Steamed CakePer batter recipe2 cyclesOil bowl first

The Bottom Line

Your rice cooker has been quietly capable of all of this the entire time. One appliance, one button, and a lot more than rice — that’s the whole pitch. Start with the grains and work your way up to the cake.

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Tip of the Day

“Always let your meat rest before slicing.”

Whether you're roasting a chicken, grilling steak, or baking pork tenderloin, letting cooked meat rest for 5–10 minutes before slicing allows the juices to redistribute evenly. This simple step keeps your meat juicy and tender, ensuring every bite is flavorful and moist. Bonus: It gives you a moment to plate your sides or garnish for a perfect presentation!

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