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🍚 Master the art of grains with smart precision and effortless style!
The KitchenAid Grain and Rice Cooker 8 Cup (KGC3155) combines an integrated scale and automatic water tank to deliver perfectly cooked grains and beans with zero guesswork. Featuring 21 preset grain options, a removable water tank, and a steamer basket, it’s designed for busy professionals who demand precision, convenience, and versatility in their kitchen. With a sleek black matte finish and intuitive touchscreen, it elevates meal prep with 24-hour delayed cooking and easy cleanup.











| ASIN | B0CS6WVLJ7 |
| Best Sellers Rank | #34,094 in Kitchen & Dining ( See Top 100 in Kitchen & Dining ) #88 in Rice Cookers |
| Brand | KitchenAid |
| Brand Name | KitchenAid |
| Capacity | 8 Cups |
| Color | Black Matte |
| Customer Reviews | 4.5 out of 5 stars 973 Reviews |
| Included Components | Inner Pot, Steamer Basket |
| Item Dimensions D x W x H | 9.75"D x 13.5"W x 8.88"H |
| Item Weight | 10.5 Pounds |
| Lid Material | Plastic |
| Manufacturer | KitchenAid |
| Material | Plastic |
| Model Name | KitchenAid Grain and Rice Cooker 8 Cup with Integrated Scale and Delayed Cook, KGC3155BM |
| Model Number | KGC3155BM |
| Other Special Features of the Product | Timer |
| Part Number | KGC3155BM |
| Power Source | Corded Electric |
| Product Care Instructions | Wipe with Damp Cloth |
| Product Dimensions | 9.75"D x 13.5"W x 8.88"H |
| UPC | 883049637501 |
| Voltage | 120 Volts |
| Wattage | 700 watts |
D**R
Love beans, rice, oats? You NEED this machine!
I seldom write reviews, but this cooker has been a game-changer in the best possible way. I wanted to write a review after the first day with it, but I held off for over a month so I could give you a fair review. I have not had it for years, so I can't speak to its longevity, but I can say confidently that it's far more than a gimmicky expensive gizmo that I used once and forgot. With this little jewel, I can have steel-cut oats for breakfast whenever I want, fried rice is now a prep-cooked staple in my house and much better than any restaurant version, and bean dishes from red beans and rice through baked beans and hummus appear frequently on the menu around here. The problem: So what does this little baby solve? We all need more fiber in our diets. However, getting said fiber isn't always the easiest thing for busy cooks to do. Cooking whole grains and legumes takes time. One solution is the Instant Pot / pressure cooker, but here's the other one. Spoiler Alert: this isn't going to totally replace your IP / pressure cooker. The pros: 1. Variety of cooking - this puppy will cook rice, grains and legumes. They call it a rice and grain cooker, but they should also mention that it will cook peas and beans. 2. Ease of Use - the touch screen is super easy to use, with one exception that will be addressed in the Cons below. Whatever kind of rice you want, there's a program for it. Most grains have their own program, too, as well as many legumes. It has a minimum / maximum capacity shown in the owner's manual. I read it, smiled sweetly and proceeded to ignore it. The machine will tell me if there's too little or too much. You make sure the tank has enough water, switch the unit on, use the touchpad to select the food you want, and follow the instructions. Hint: The instructions will be: leave the unit alone for a sec to let it zero the weight (tare) -> scoop in as much dry ingredient as you want - it will tell you how much you've added -> remove the pot and shake it to level the ingredients -> (close the lid - the instructions don't tell you to do this, but you're smart -> choose from some options and touch either Start or Delayed Start. Delayed Start is a bit unusual which will be listed in the cons. Walk away and forget it. 3. Ease of clean-up - This is amazingly easy to clean. If you're a total minimalist, you don't even have to use a scoop on the dry ingredients. To clean, remove the inner pot and the snap out the lid insert. I believe they're both dishwasher-safe, but they're so easy and quick to clean by hand that I never bother with the dishwasher. After years of using a first-generation Japanese home rice cooker that insisted on scorching the rice at the bottom of the pan, this was a game-changer. 4. Delayed cook - okay, the setting is a bit unusual, but it works very well. I wake up in the morning to perfectly cooked, hot steel-cut oats. Instant fiber! 5. Keep-Warm - It will keep my perfectly cooked food warm for me until I want it. 6. Custom cook, if desired - if you don't want to cook the ingredients in water, you can use the cooker as a traditional cooker and add the grains / legumes and liquid yourself. I almost never bother with that. You can also store custom recipes, but again, I never bother. 7. Set it and forget it - I love this feature. I can start the cooker going or set it on delay cook and walk off. It handles everything itself. 8. Customizations - I'm not picky about how I want my grains cooked. I pretty much always leave it on medium and go happily about my business. However, my sister is a steel-cut oats gourmet. Every grain has to be perfectly cooked and separate, not mushed together. She saw mine cook once and ran out to get one. She swears by the firm option. The cons - there are a few, but I don't find any of them to be show-stoppers. 1. The price - okay, Elephant-in-the-Room time. It's expensive. There's no getting around that. Watch for it on sale. If you're not picky about the color, you can usually snag it for a good price during Amazon Days. I've noticed they frequently put one of the colors on sale, but not the other. To me, it would have been worth full price. I use it about every other day for something. My three biggest uses are steel-cut oats, garbanzos, and brown rice. I've never had it cook me a bad batch. 2. Time - If you're looking for a quick meal, haul out the IP or pressure cooker. That's what I've used most of my life for cooking dried beans. However, balance the time it takes a pressure cooker to come up to pressure and release. They take longer than you might think. 3. Capacity - One day I decided to cook enough garbanzos for both hummus and curried veggies. This probably came out to about a pound of dried beans. That much went over its limit. Okay, I cooked two batches. It wasn't any big deal. However, if you typically cook for big crowds or prep cook large amounts of grains or legumes, you may want to haul out the IP or pressure cooker. 4. Counter space - Yep, it's one more thing on the counter. I find it as indispensable as my mixer or food processor (it sits on the counter with them), but if you're tight on space, it may not work for you. 5. Delayed Start Programming - Most delayed start appliances have you enter the time you want the job to be finished - or the food to be ready. This one doesn't have a clock. It was an interesting design decision and I'm not sure why they made it except that you can shut the unit completely off when it's not in use. So to tell it that you want your steel cut oats at 6am, you have to calculate the time between the time you set it and 6am. For example, if I'm closing down the house at 9pm and getting my oats ready for the morning, I make sure the tank is full or at least has enough water, add the oats and all as mentioned above and then (I'm not ashamed to admit it) count on my fingers how many hours between, say 9:15 pm and 6:00am. Between 9pm and 6am is 9 hours, but it isn't 9:00pm anymore, it's 9:15. So I deduct 15 minutes and enter 8 hours and 45 minutes. Got that? Yeah, a clock would be SO much easier, but again, it's not a show-stopper. Alexa or your friendly electronic home assistant will happily tell you, but I also use the good ol' digital calculator. (Fingers... digits... got it??) So yeah. As my sister says, my favorite small appliance is still my coffeemaker, but it's getting nervous. VERY nervous!
A**N
Expensive but Great product
I think there's been a quite a few times in my life that I would get something expensive only to think once I got it that I never really needed it. I would say this is not the case with this rice cooker. I found myself cooking a lot more and using this for Rice, Quinoa, and couscous quite often. It really is for me, an investment into me eating at home and eating healthier. The interface for the rice cooker is really easy and straightforward. It's efficient for my time and for me being a beginner cooker and it cooks everything correctly. I don't have to add time adjust anything. I can't express enough how amazing it is to dump a random amount of rice in the cooker and have it calculate how much water is needed, without guesswork or asking what the water to rice ratio is (because I forget every time) Things to know: You cannot steam and cooked rice together. The steamer attachment that goes over the rice cooker bowl does not leave much room to stuff veggies to steam. I also found that steaming used alot of water compared to cooking rice/quinoa.
H**W
Absolutely Love This Rice Cooker!
I couldn’t be happier with this KitchenAid grain and rice cooker. From the very first use, it was clear how thoughtfully designed and easy it is to operate. The interface is simple and intuitive, no guessing, no complicated setup, just add your ingredients, select your setting, and let it do the work. What really impressed me is the quality of the rice. It comes out perfectly cooked every single time, fluffy, evenly textured, and never mushy or dry. It’s also incredibly convenient for everyday use. Whether I’m making a quick side or prepping meals for the week, it takes all the stress out of cooking grains. If you’re looking for something reliable, easy to use, and capable of delivering consistently great results, this is absolutely worth it. Highly recommend!
T**E
Absolutely love it
I've just used it a few times and just for rice. It's the best thing since sliced bread! I'm very happy I bought this machine. It's pricey yes, but the ease of use and convenience can't be beat. Over the years I've had simple/cheap rice cookers that worked but did not give consistent results. So far this KitchenAid beats all of them by far. I've been making long grain Basmati rice because I love the taste and aroma. Start with a good brand of rice! The old saying is true, you get what you pay for. Using good quality ingredients will result in good results. I rinsed the rice a few times in a bowl to remove the excess starch. Put the rinsed/wet rice in the cooking pot, close the lid and follow the on screen prompts to start the cooker. It couldn't be easier. I then walk away to do other things until I hear the sound that the rice was done. It's been perfect every time just using the regular setting. I'm in my mid 60s and I've become a rather lazy cook. Having perfect rice is wonderful without watching a pot. Really is a "set it and forget it" kind of thing. After my first time using the rice cooker I put some rice in a bowl and added a little butter and S&P. It was excellent. I could eat rice like that every day. Next time I used it as a base for a slow cooker chicken curry and I felt like a chef, LOL. The keep warm feature works very well too. I'm not someone who wants the keep warm feature to work for 10-12 hours. I read one review that thinks that's a deal breaker but I'll say I think the average person wouldn't need a 10 hour keep warm feature. This rice cooker/steamer is a game changer for me. Perfect rice without measuring anything and clean up is a breeze. The interior pot is non-stick and I hand wash it quickly and easily. After using I dump out the leftover water from the tank as a personal preference but you could certainly leave the water there for next use. Overall this was worth the price for me and the machine will be on my countertop to use often. Very happy with this purchase.
R**N
Perfect for a disabled household!
I absolutely love this rice cooker. I made sure to use it multiple times and try out different things before writing this review. Pros: Super easy to clean. It has a self clean mechanism, but what I love is that all the parts that need cleaning, pop right out and are easy to wash. Cooking. I have loved everything that i've tried in it. Everything from soaking and cooking dried beans, one pot fried rice, just plain rice and even oatmeal. The recipes have all turned out excellent and i love that I can choose how well cooked I want the oats or rice. Layout. I love all of the options offered, from texture, to alternative liquids, to delay start. I love that I can soak my beans and cook them immediately after with ease. It weighs everything within the pot, so I don't even have to dirty my measuring cups if I don't want to. Cons: Overwhelming options. This one is a pro and a con. I love that there are so many choices, but it can definitely get a bit overwhelming. Overall i think the pro of options outweighs the con, but that's just my personal opinion. Ease of use at first. I definitely found it confusing the first time i used alternative liquid instead of the water dispenser. In my case, I used coconut milk and the rice didn't end up cooking. I tried it again with half milk, half water (which I had to add to the pot) and it worked fine. So i think it just takes some trial and error for that. Price. For a good rice cooker, it ends up being worth the price, but I think a lot of the cost is because of the touch screen and to me, it definitely doesn't need to be so expensive. I'm still glad i purchased it though. Overall: This rice cooker is amazing for so many purposes. In a disabled household especially, I love that i can throw the food in, set a delay and not worry until I'm hungry and ready for food. I love the versatile cooking options and ease of cleaning.
S**B
Transformed Me from Rice Reluctant to Rice Enthusiast – A Year of Flawless Results!
I've had this KitchenAid Grain and Rice Cooker (KGC315 in Black Matte) for almost a year now—purchased back in December 2024—and I can honestly say it's one of the best kitchen investments I've ever made. Before this, I wasn't much of a rice eater, not because I didn't like it, but because every batch I tried on the stovetop ended up with a scorched bottom. It was frustrating enough to make me avoid rice altogether. But this cooker? Total game-changer. It's turned rice prep into something almost fun, like having a smart sous-chef right on my counter. The magic starts right after washing the rice (which I still do by hand for that perfect rinse). Pop in the grains, fire it up, and the integrated scale and water tank take over with crystal-clear, step-by-step prompts on the display. It asks what type of rice you're using (white, brown, you name it), checks if it's rinsed, and guides you to add and level it out evenly. Then—bam—it weighs the rice precisely and dispenses exactly the right amount of water from the tank. No more guesswork or overflow disasters. It even gives you an estimated cook time upfront, followed by a handy countdown as it steams away to perfection. When it's done (usually spot-on with the timing), it beeps cheerfully, lets you know it's ready, and automatically switches to warm mode to keep everything fluffy without drying out. I've cooked everything from basmati for curries to wild rice blends for salads, and it handles grains like a pro every time. One tiny tweak I made for extra insurance: I added a thin silicone disk cut to fit the bottom of the pot. Since then, not even a whisper of browning or sticking—though honestly, it was rare even without it. Cleanup is a breeze too; the non-stick inner pot rinses clean in seconds. Yes, it's on the pricier side, but after nearly a year of consistent, foolproof performance that's made rice a staple in our meals, it's absolutely worth every penny. If you're tired of rice mishaps or just want to elevate your grain game effortlessly, grab this. I couldn't be happier—five stars.
N**N
Over priced, doesn’t work well
I’ve had this for a couple months now and I’m kicking myself for not returning it when I had the chance. I’ll start out by saying I do like the steamer setting. In fact I exclusively make hard boiled eggs using this steamer and they come out perfect every time. I’ve used it to steam veggies as well. For making rice, however, I’m quite disappointed. You cannot adjust the water level using the pre set rice setting and for some reason it seems to use a 1:1 ratio. It comes out all dry and gross. You have to use to custom setting to control the amount of water used which defeats the purpose of having the auto dispense water reservoir. For brown rice, it takes somewhere around an hour and a half to cook which is just crazy. The reservoir itself is a good idea but it’s a terrible design. There is no where to grab it so it’s a pain getting it on and off the stand. I was super excited to get this but it is extremely over priced for what you get.
J**Y
Makes weekly dinners much easier
I purchased this over a year ago and in that time use this product several times a week. The interactive menu, built in scale, options for rice/beans prep, make this a comprehensive tool that reduces your cooking efforts. I work from home and try to prep what I can for dinner briefly on my lunch breaks. For rice, simply follow the menu prompts to 1) choose your rice or bean option, 2) pour the contents into the non-stick bowl as it weighs the contents 3) select how it was prepared (dry or rinsed) and texture (soft or normal), 4) set an optional completion time when you want it to be ready (its 12pm, want it finished at 5pm, set delay for 5 hours, and 5) hit start. Based on the weight of the rice/beans, the system will pump in the correct amount of water for it to be complete at the desired time, and keeps the food warm until opened again. I have cooked a variety of items including brown jasmine, brown basmati, kidney beans, black beans, chickpeas, and forbidden rice and all have come out great. If you’re looking to save time cooking on a nightly basis and want to incorporate more rice/beans into your diet I highly recommend this product.
D**E
More Than a Rice Cooker
This more than just an average rice cooker. It makes oats, barley, and quinoa while simultaneously steams vegetables. The digital display is easy to use and the built in weigh scale allows for perfect portions. Each grain has a timer and results were perfect every time
J**E
Se necesita adaptador de voltaje
El producto en España con el adaptador de voltaje que me mandaron no funciona ya que el que mandan es americano 120v y en España son 240w. Tube que devolverlo pero la atención del proveedor fue excepcional.
V**.
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ Amazing Rice Cooker — Perfect Rice Every Time!
This rice cooker has been such a game‑changer in my kitchen! I absolutely love how effortless it makes cooking rice — I never have to measure water or watch the pot anymore. I just add the rice, press start, and it comes out perfect every single time. The convenience is incredible — whether I’m making a quick dinner or prepping multiple meals, it frees up so much time and mental energy. There’s no guesswork or stress about overcooking or undercooking anymore. It’s also really easy to clean, and the pot itself is nice and roomy for family‑sized portions. If you want consistently great rice with zero fuss, this rice cooker is worth it. I’m honestly so impressed! Highly recommended ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
F**S
Efficacité
Tres simple d’utilisation et cuisson parfaite à tout coup
V**.
Wow!!!!!
Wow belle qualité ! Je l'ai utilisé ue pour le riz blanc depuis que je l'ai reçu mais wow! C'était parfait ! En 30 min j'avais un riz parfait, rien n'a coller, facile à nettoyer et les instructions sur l'écran sont très claire! J'adore!
Trustpilot
2 weeks ago
1 month ago