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Remoskas

(27 Posts)
Mapleleaf Sun 27-Mar-22 21:14:37

Has anyone got one of these, and if so, are they worth having? Which size did you go for if you do have one? My DH keeps looking at them whenever we visit a well known kitchen store, but so far we’ve not bought one. I understand they are very economical electricity usage wise, which might save on using the oven to, for example, roast a small chicken.
If you do have one, what do you cook in them regularly, and do you use them often or are they another one of those gadgets that’s a “one night wonder”, that then gets relegated to the back of a cupboard? I already have, and use regularly, a slow cooker. On the other hand, I have a pressure cooker that only comes out to cook the Xmas (sorry ?) pud. I wouldn’t want a remoska only coming out on such occasions, they’re not cheap to buy.
We like to self cater on many of our holidays, so it might be useful for that, too.
Thanks in advance for any objective opinions.

Lexisgranny Tue 29-Mar-22 09:13:38

We have had a table top Halogen oven for years (looks like a large Pyrex mixing bowl on a stand). I can do everything in it. Grill, roast, make toast, make cakes, defrost Wouldn’t be without it. Easy to clean, easy to use, what more could I ask. Dh agrees that it is the best kitchen item we have ever bought.

roganjosh Tue 29-Mar-22 08:52:04

karmalady

I used to have a remoska, it gets very dangerously hot. I stopped using it and got rid. I do use my pressure cooker which is much more energy efficient and I have an air fryer for when I need grilling of baking

This is exactly how we cook now except for using the hob for my husbands omelette etc. My Instant Pot has been a better buy than a Remoska.

karmalady Tue 29-Mar-22 06:51:52

I used to have a remoska, it gets very dangerously hot. I stopped using it and got rid. I do use my pressure cooker which is much more energy efficient and I have an air fryer for when I need grilling of baking

BlueBelle Tue 29-Mar-22 06:41:07

I ve never heard of them So many gadgets now I wonder how many are dormant

Sloegin Tue 29-Mar-22 01:22:55

We have one which my husband uses every day to bake his frozen croissant. I used to use it for one pot meals but haven't for ages. I certainly think useful for a caravan. I recently bought a Ninja air fryer and think it's an amazing gadget.

Callistemon21 Mon 28-Mar-22 22:57:17

Are they easy to clean?

Mapleleaf Mon 28-Mar-22 22:16:01

Certainly room for thought here. At the moment, I think we’ll make do with what we’ve got, but with the way electricity is going up, it might be something to consider. Thank you to all of you for your responses.

Luckygirl3 Mon 28-Mar-22 10:03:58

I turn the lid over and lie it on its back on the working surface.

henetha Mon 28-Mar-22 09:53:03

I had to google this as i had never heard of them. They certainly look useful.
But I have a halogen cooker which is simply marvellous and which I use regularly. Almost anything you cook in the oven can be cooked in a halogen cooker.

Nannarose Mon 28-Mar-22 09:49:03

Adding in: we bought one many years ago and used it often. Now it is mostly used on camping holidays, as my new kitchen is generally better set up.
However I do use it at home mostly like cornergran plus:
Yorkshire puddings
Roast vegetables (not roast potatoes as the steam isn't driven off, but that makes it excellent for a onion / pepper / aubergine / tomato mix)
Spanish type omelette - heat it up to cook the veg etc., then add eggs and put lid on.
Variations on tarte tatin

When doing a huge roast for the family, I have cooked a batch of stuffing in it.

Chicken joints and similar are excellent as they keep moist, but a whole roast chicken needs too much fiddling about for my liking!

Principle to follow is:
the heated lid will heat the thin metal pot quite quickly so you can quickly fry small things, but of course you lose that heat quickly.
The heated lid then means that you get excellent direct heat and some surrounding heat.
The main issue is that you won't drive off moisture - when the heated lid is on, it is sealed, when off, no heat!

Mapleleaf Mon 28-Mar-22 09:37:26

Thank you to all of you. The verdict seems quite mixed but I’ll pass this thread to DH to read then take it from there. ?

cornergran Mon 28-Mar-22 07:52:49

We have had one for years. Initially to use in our caravan now we use it at home. It sits on top of the induction hob (with two to cook for we rarely use more than the front two rings) and is used for meats, jacket potatoes, previously batch cooked cottage pie, sausages, fruit crumble, fish, the occasional ready meal, warming pastries - probably more that I’m recalling as it’s switched on most days. I don’t find the lid a problem, turn it off, flip it over and put it down beside the remoska. It works for us and definitely saves power especially when Mr C wants a hot meat meal and I prefer salad. It’s like any kitchen appliance, they don’t all suit everyone.

PECS Mon 28-Mar-22 07:49:20

I have a pressure cooker which is regularly used , except in the summer, a microwave/ regular oven, and a separate electric oven both of which are used often. Not sure another oven or cooker is useful to us as we don't go camping or caravanning or have a holiday home.

shysal Mon 28-Mar-22 07:48:13

I have had a standard sized one one for years, but it seems rather old fashioned now compared to the halogen ones and the new Ninja and similar machines. I use it for anything that would normally go in the oven - roasts, sausages, puddings etc.
I agree the hot lid is a pain to put down. I tend to place it on my hob, but it has melted parts of the plastic knobs! I find myself using it less these days, but this has prompted me to start using it more.

storynanny Mon 28-Mar-22 07:24:51

I wanted one for years, my friend uses hers every day. I bought one three or four years ago and have used it about 4 times! The lid is heavy, I scorched the work top with it and it lives in the back of a cupboard

roganjosh Sun 27-Mar-22 23:11:36

I think what put me off it was lifting the hot lid off it and been stood there with it in my hand wondering where to put it when I was cooking other things, most of the time I used to put it on the tiled floor.

roganjosh Sun 27-Mar-22 23:09:32

I have had one for years and bought it for a holiday home and hardly used it except for jacket potatoes and chicken. To be fair I think I bought the wrong size, bought the largest one and there are only 2 of use so now I use the pot for growing herbs in.
Do use my Ninja Foodie Grill all the time.

marionk Sun 27-Mar-22 21:53:28

Use ours a lot. We have the standard, it’s great for jacket potatoes, roasting chicken, scones, bread, cooking ready meals when we are away in the caravan and reheating stuff. It’s way quicker than a slow cooker and there is a whole group of people on Facebook who use their’s all the time, they swap recipes

Luckygirl3 Sun 27-Mar-22 21:50:22

I have had mine for years and it is in regular use most days.

Mapleleaf Sun 27-Mar-22 21:49:32

Yes, the slow cooker is as transportable, but I wondered if it was as versatile as a remoska is said to be?
I know I could look at online reviews, but they can be rather skewed, so thought I’d ask GN’s for their views first.
Thanks for your responses, Chewbacca ?

Chewbacca Sun 27-Mar-22 21:44:07

It is a lot of money Mapleleaf but, if you'd use it on holidays as well, that wouldn't be too bad. My friend bought hers to use in their campervan but then realised that they don't always pitch up on sites with hook up electricity! Doh! grin
If you have a slow cooker, that would be just as transportable to take away with you?

Mapleleaf Sun 27-Mar-22 21:37:19

No, I don’t know anyone who has one to borrow. I suspect it might be a waste of money, but just wondered what other people thought who had one..
Sorry, not sure what you are saying there, Shinamae?

Shinamae Sun 27-Mar-22 21:27:25

Say what? ?‍♀️

midgey Sun 27-Mar-22 21:24:57

Off to Google I go!

Chewbacca Sun 27-Mar-22 21:23:05

I saw them on special offer, about 6 months ago and, although I didn't buy one, my friend did. She's used it twice in all that time and said that she didn't get particularly good results on either occasion. Do you know anyone that you could borrow one off, so that you can see if it's something you would use regularly?