Back in March at my favorite trade show, the guy at the Cuckoo rice cooker stand glossed over a new model in favor of one with more bells and whistles.
“Wait,” I asked, “can we go back one?”
Reluctantly, he did, and it was like catnip for me: a rice cooker that uses induction heat with an option to cook it with pressure.
In my book, rice cookers are among the most convenient of kitchen appliances, making good rice and keeping it warm and ready for an extended period of time. Pressure-cooker rice became an Instant-Pot crowd craze a few years back because it can create distinct grains with no mushiness. It’s really good rice. Induction heating makes for incredibly efficient and consistent heat. These were all the bells and whistles I needed.
Chez Joe, we're the kind of household that's had the same nice, middle-of-the-road rice cooker for going on 12 years. It's safe to say that our machine has been cooking rice or keeping it warm for more than half that time, so I was excited to take the Cuckoo CRP-MHTR0309F (confusingly aka CRP-MH03) for a spin. It's a 3-cup model that's part of Cuckoo's “Fuzzy Series” of cookers, and I wanted to see how it performed against a similarly appointed Zojirushi that I reviewed in 2020.
Instead of dragging you on a boring ride through my extensive testing, I'll just say that I had a fuzzy series of results. I’ll give you the top-line summary.
After more than a month of heavy rice testing and consumption featuring different types of rice on many different settings, the results were so … peculiar … that at the end, I just went back and graded each round on a 10-point scale in the margin, then looked at the results. Yes, my taste tests were subjective, and the fact that the Cuckoo costs a lot—around $400—factored into the score a bit, but the sad truth was that only a quarter of all the batches I tested scored higher than a 5. Normally, at this part of the story I'd go deep into the nitty-gritty of all of its capabilities, but with scores that low, there's not much point.
Let's start with a compliment. I will say that it cooked brown rice very nicely on its “Super Turbo” setting the first time I made it, but subsequent tests on the same setting with different quantities of rice left it very al dente once and somehow sticky and al dente the next time.

