Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A rice cooker is an extremely useful gift. Even people who don't cook very much appreciate the never-fail quality of this item.
That said, I'm not a fan of useful gifts. I love gifts that are unexpected luxuries -- doesn't matter if they're small ones. I'd rather have one delicious chocolate bar than a Roomba (what my BIL gave my sister last year -- it was not a pretty scene).
A rice cooker - one more small appliance that I'd donate as soon as I got it because I don't want to store it. The few times I make rice, I make it in a pot that I use for 1,000 other things.
I used to say that . . . until I got one (not as a gift, but because DS's college roommate, who is Korean-American, didn't want to ship it home to LA). When I used it, I felt like I was witnessing a miracle. It is a very simple appliance that produces perfect rice. Not good rice; perfect rice.
It’s still just rice. I got rid of our rice cooker for the same reasons as the PP. Theres nothing complicated about making rice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What am I missing not having the real vanilla extract? What are you using it for?
All these mentions are leading me to assume it gets you high somehow.
HA! DC bakes a lot and swears by it over the cheaper imitation stuff I pick up at the grocery store.
I don't understand. I buy real vanilla extract from the Giant. It's expensive but it's not unusual.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A rice cooker is an extremely useful gift. Even people who don't cook very much appreciate the never-fail quality of this item.
That said, I'm not a fan of useful gifts. I love gifts that are unexpected luxuries -- doesn't matter if they're small ones. I'd rather have one delicious chocolate bar than a Roomba (what my BIL gave my sister last year -- it was not a pretty scene).
A rice cooker - one more small appliance that I'd donate as soon as I got it because I don't want to store it. The few times I make rice, I make it in a pot that I use for 1,000 other things.
I used to say that . . . until I got one (not as a gift, but because DS's college roommate, who is Korean-American, didn't want to ship it home to LA). When I used it, I felt like I was witnessing a miracle. It is a very simple appliance that produces perfect rice. Not good rice; perfect rice.
Anonymous wrote:Different types of olive oils and vinegars. When I have them, I use them all the time. But it's just not something I necessarily think to buy on my own.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A rice cooker is an extremely useful gift. Even people who don't cook very much appreciate the never-fail quality of this item.
That said, I'm not a fan of useful gifts. I love gifts that are unexpected luxuries -- doesn't matter if they're small ones. I'd rather have one delicious chocolate bar than a Roomba (what my BIL gave my sister last year -- it was not a pretty scene).
A rice cooker - one more small appliance that I'd donate as soon as I got it because I don't want to store it. The few times I make rice, I make it in a pot that I use for 1,000 other things.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A lighted toilet seat !
Like a joke gift but surprisingly useful
We love ours and our kids love it in their bathroom too!
do you guys have a suggested brand? this is growing on me as a gift idea.
Anonymous wrote:What am I missing not having the real vanilla extract? What are you using it for?
Anonymous wrote:What am I missing not having the real vanilla extract? What are you using it for?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What am I missing not having the real vanilla extract? What are you using it for?
All these mentions are leading me to assume it gets you high somehow.
HA! DC bakes a lot and swears by it over the cheaper imitation stuff I pick up at the grocery store.