A few weeks back, my editor asked if I’d be interested in reviewing a new Japanese kitchen appliance called the Vermicular Musui-Kamado, something that looked so novel and clever that I said "Let’s do it!" based on the photo alone.
Oddly, straight out of the box, it needed a fair amount of inspection just to figure out what it was. After a few weeks of testing, I have a better handle on its capabilities, but why it exists is still a bit of a mystery to me.
A quick way to explain the Vermicular is as a 3.9-liter Dutch oven (the musui) that comes with a dedicated countertop induction burner. The burner has a heated collar that goes three-quarters of the way up the pot’s walls, swaddling it like a hot cradle and providing what the company calls "three-dimensional" heating. Delving deeper, the pot itself is particularly well-machined, creating an impressively tight seal between the lid and pot. Along with traditional "low" and "medium" style heat control, a little nubbin at the center of the burner takes the temperature of the pot and allows for to-the-degree heat control. This is a much coveted function we’ve seen from countertop induction burners like the amazing Breville Control Freak, which replaces the vagaries of "low," "medium," and "high," which are different on every stove, with a to-the-digit number that’s the same for everyone.
Here’s a curveball: Unlike the Breville and a handful of other precision burners on the market, the Vermicular’s to-the-degree temperature control only works between 90 and 200 degrees Fahrenheit, meaning higher-temperature operations like precision searing, browning, and stir-frying aren’t options.



