Panasonic gave a splashy introduction to its Countertop Induction Oven at this year's CES, promising to get tasty dinners on the table in record time by blasting them with impressive-sounding technology.
This oven, aka the CIO, pairs an induction burner—which uses an electromagnet to heat a pan on the oven floor—with more traditional infrared burners up top. At $600, the CIO is very pricey, but I've got a soft spot for induction burners, usually in the form of a stovetop or standalone plug-in burner, and the whole idea sounded like it had potential.
The oven arrived with a slim hardcover cookbook with "recipes created for Panasonic by the Certified Master Chefs of The Culinary Institute of America." I flipped through it to see where to start. I quickly found a recipe for "Tandoori Lamb" and marveled that the Panasonic and a renowned cooking school would dare to go toe-to-toe with a traditional heat-blasting tandoor oven.
That was the high point of my enthusiasm for Panasonic's little oven. I pulled it out of the box, set it on my counter and thought, "Wow! That's small." With its own removable grill pan tucked inside, the interior cavity is even smaller; while it is roughly a foot wide and a foot deep, a respectable footprint, the full height is a scant four inches—less than the width of my hand. There would be no whole roast chicken happening in this oven.
I cubed some leg of lamb, opened my spice drawer, and got stuck. The recipe called for cardamom, coriander, and cumin, which sounded great as part of a marinade, but neglected to mention if they were whole or ground. Another flag shot up right away when it called for the quantities of those ingredients as tablespoon of cardamom, three teaspoons of coriander and a half-ounce of cayenne.
Kitchen-phobes might not get tripped up on the weirdness of a tablespoon versus three teaspoons (they're the same amount), but they'd certainly pause when confronted with a weight measure for the cayenne. Recipe writers and testers like myself cringe at this sort of confusion as it's the equivalent of a sentence using three languages to get a point across. Normally, I wouldn't fixate on something like this, but if you're offering a new way to cook and flying the flag of innovation, you need to offer enough crystal-clear examples that home cooks feel confident when they start using the oven to cook their own recipes.
Lack of this sort of content is a perennial Achilles' heel for manufacturers. With a slim and seemingly unedited cookbook combined with a collaboration with allrecipes.com, which, as I write this, features a total of four recipes by the likes of CoOkInGnUt, Chef Mo, and Cliff G, there's a lot to be desired. No offense to those contributors, but Panasonic needs to provide more of a foundation than a half-baked cookbook before farming it out to the Allrecipes community.

