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Kitchen Couture 2000W Induction Cooker + Bonus Pot $59 Delivered @ Kogan [Presale Despach -17/7]

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Enjoy delicious food anywhere with this portable cooker that utilises magnetic induction technology to cook your meals faster.

New Deluxe Induction cooking is the newest and most environmentally friendly way to cook. By using a combination of digital frequencies and magnetic fields, the Kitchen Couture 2000W Induction Cooker produces no flames, smoke or pollution. If the environment is important to you, or if you just want a fast, easy, transportable cook top alternative, then an induction cooker is an absolute must.

Highlights:

Silver decorated panel
Intelligent keystroke control, fashion simplicity
Used germany technology ST hard black crystal board
Four big digital display, freely cook with the 24 hours appointment time function
10 grade firepower adjustment, with automatic battery voltage check
4D waterproof technology, turbine fan

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closed Comments

  • +1

    and if you're quick you can select a 5 year warranty for free!

    • +1

      You sir have just leveled up to level 380!

    • Im on the mobile site and cant seem to see the 5 year warranty?
      edit: 5 yr warranty removed :(

      • I did say to be quick!

  • So at 2000w can this be used in a standard 10amp plug?

    • Yes - with about 1 amp to spare.

    • +1

      Power = Voltage x Current

      So 2000w = 240v x 8.33A

      Therefore yes, it can be used via a 10 plug theoretically.

      • -1

        lol wut….doesn't quite work like that. DC power is what you're calculating and it applies to an AC circuit if nothing is being varied (which is never the case).

        OP: The appliance is of course safe to use at home. The plug is already supplied with the appliance.

  • Interesting. When I try to checkout, the email field is already populated with somebody else's email. Does this constitute a potential privacy breach?

    • +1

      Hi Moo - this is nothing to worry about as the link posted to OzBargain came directly from one of our subscriber's email newsletter.
      Look forward to shipping to you very soon! :)
      -Stacey

  • +1

    This might be good for boiling up some malt & hops in the shed for home Brew, but theres no info on how big the pot is…

  • +3

    Good for asian hot pot in this weather!

  • I got one from Groupon before for $49 + delivery. The cooker stops working in less than a year.

    Considering 5 years warranty from Kogan, which include free shipment back to them. You probably end up getting it for free within warranty period. It is a bargain indeed, if you can get it with the 5 year free warranty. So acts fast!

    • My one from Kogan started to have problem from the 2nd use. Frequently stop heating and have to keep turning off and on.

      • This happened to me in 2 months time. Then, few months later, stopped working completely.

        • What a shame! My previous one lasted over 10 years. No wonder people warned about Kogan product.

        • @shraky: Mine comes from Groupon. Still under warranty. returns it and gets a refund.

        • @O O: Wait to see how long my Kogan cooker survive

  • I would buy one but all my pots are 18/10 stainless steel.

    • +2

      SS pots often have an encapsulated base with metal in them. best way to test your pots is to grab a fridge magnet and see if they stick to the bottom of your pot. if a magnet sticks induction will work

      • Thanks, tried the magnet - no luck.

  • portable

    It still needs to be plugged into mains right? So it's not really portable?

    • +2

      Yes, not portable while in use. Brilliant observation there. ("port" means carry)

  • can't find 5Yr Warranty ???

    • +1

      Sorry, too late. Probably Stacey had read my comment, and decided to remove the option for 5 year free warranty. Lol.

      Normally, at the checkout page, there is a section between Delivery section and Total Due section called Extended Warranties section with options of 1, 3 and 5 years warranty. In our case, we have 3 options

      Warranty for 1 year FREE
      Warranty for 3 year FREE
      Warranty for 5 year FREE

      Probably they're not decided how much to charge for the extended warranty yet, and the computer system uses a default value, FREE to fill in. Now the whole Extended Warranty section is missing, probably taking down to prevent further loss.

  • bear in mind the pots that usually come with these are next to useless.
    metal is so thin that first thing it burns it becomes useless.

    $59 is not that cheap, I bought mine on ebay for about $50

    • You'll find that the "free" pot is normally used for hot-pot (or steam boating). So yeah, don't cook with it unless you are boiling liquids.

      • yup,that's what I use it for… some tofu got stuck at the bottom, and was ruined.

        • -1

          You'll find that the "free" pot is normally used for hot-pot (or steam boating).

          http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=steamboating

          Top Definition
          steamboating
          having sex with a girl doggy-style in the pool, in deep enough water that she has to keep paddling to stay afloat.
          "I was in the pool with Catherine, and we ended up steamboating! The huffing and puffing when she ran out of breath only made it better!"

          i… i dont… i just dont kn.. err…. how do you use the pot?

    • Yup, found that out the hard way when I tried to fry an egg in it. Scrubbed it clean with steel wool and now only use it for my Indomie.

      The problem with these cheap induction cookers (I got mine for $40 at The Reject shop) is that they 'control' heat-level by intermittently switching on & off - so you get blasts of full power punctuated by zero power (the bottom of the pot actually glowed red hot!) - instead of real 'analog' control, making them all but useless for anything other than soups and stews (forget about tempering chocolate!).

      Now I'm looking for 'real' temperature control ICs eg. maybe the Newwave models or the Nuwave PIC2?

      • +1

        If you have someone going to china or HK, buy a Midea brand one…best in the market for the price

        • Thanks soupy_pork_buns! I'd already spotted the Midea ICs in the IGA cum Asian Grocery :-o in Sydney's Chinatown, will go investigate them further.

  • +2

    I am not against induction cookers (as I use one for hot pots on the table with friend every now and again), but be careful when choosing one of these cookers and make sure that the whole surface is knob/button-free (i.e. buy one with touch-sense buttons). The one listed here has a raised button and doesn't look liquid-proof.

    • Well it does have "4D waterproof technology"….. whatever that means!

    • Not only that, that slope will only channel any liquids into the groove faster.

  • Any offers on electric pressure cookers?

  • Can't buy it anymore

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