More kitchen gadgets, but does it mean eating better or more healthily?

I persuaded myself to buy an Instant Pot  - a pressure cooker, steamer & slow cooker in one. My main aim was saving energy as prices rocket. But will this improve my cooking or lead to healthier eating? Will it 'save time'?  Despite all my appliances, I find myself regularly making, 'on toast', jackets, sandwiches and all sorts of cakes and biscuits.

Is your kitchen full of gadgets you rarely use? Why doesn't someone design a comprehensive appliance instead of a myriad of cooking modes - toaster, microwave, ice-cream/yoghurt maker, air fryer, conventional oven, slow cooker, pressure cooker, kettle? Despite all the gadgets, do you eat better? Or do they sit doing very little except looking shiny and filling your kitchen? Time and again I'm lead astray by clever marketing and persuasive arguments about the latest science of healthy eating. 

Parents Reply
  • The glass? Lead crystal, 190cm high x 100cm diameter. The tiffin is a BBC recipe, but I  used ginger biscuits & added dried cranberries, tablespoon each of powdered ginger and star anise. Try this - it's quick and yummy, also easy for kids to make!

    Just need to sort Easter meal - might be something from the Indian Instant Pot Cookbook if the new appliance arrives - the first didn't have the utensils. Trouble with Chinese manufactuers is they keep the line going even when they run out of parts - had this a lot when I had a job at B&Q.

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