Zojirushi NS-ZCC10 5-1/2-Cup Neuro Fuzzy Rice Cooker and Warmer, Premium White

4.7 4.7 out of 5 stars | 11,600 ratings

Price: 167.49

Last update: 01-05-2025


About this item

5-1/2-cup computerized rice cooker and warmer with advanced Neuro Fuzzy logic technology. Wall mountable
Multi-menu selections; automatic keep-warm, extended keep-warm, and reheat cycles. Electrical Rating - 120 volts / 680 watts
Spherical, nonstick inner pan allows for uniform heating; LCD clock and timer; retractable cord
Menu settings include white (regular/sushi, softer or harder), mixed, porridge, sweet, semi-brown, brown, rinse-free and quick cooking
Measures approximately 14 by 8 by 9 inches; 1-year limited warranty, Dimensions (W x D x H) : 10-1/8 x 13 x 8-1/8 inches
Includes 2 measuring cups, nonstick rice spoon/scooper, rice spoon holder, and recipes . NOTE: Please ensure to measure rice in the cup that comes along with the product ONLY

Product information


Top reviews from the United States

  • S. Kessler
    5.0 out of 5 stars This Rice Cooker is Outstanding!
    Reviewed in the United States on April 4, 2012
    I've only had this rice cooker for a week, but in that time I have made two pots of white rice, a pot of brown, and a couple of pots of steel cut oatmeal. This is by far one of the best and most useful electric appliance purchases I've ever made. I've been aware of rice cookers for a long time, but it never occurred to me that it would be something I'd use much. I've always made pretty good rice on the stovetop and don't make it that often, so it didn't seem particularly necessary in my small kitchen. But I kept reading about them, and a friend told me how she keeps brown rice going in hers and she and her husband cook veggies and bit of meat and fish and top the rice with it for quick weeknight dinners. I also wanted to be able to have brown rice more often for dinner but would avoid it because it takes too long to cook stovetop on a weeknight.

    So I started doing research (I research all my cookware and appliances to within an inch of their lives). For my needs, which included brown rices, good oatmeal, and other grains, it soon seemed that a fuzzy logic model would be the right one. Before I made a final decision to buy, I downloaded a copy of kThe Ultimate Rice Cooker Cookbook - Rev: 250 No-Fail Recipes for Pilafs, Risottos, Polenta, Chilis, Soups, Porridges, Puddings, and More, fro to see what I could cook that went beyond rice. I was so impressed with the variety and ease of the recipes that I decided to take the plunge. Then came checking out all the models on Amazon and other sights. From the customer reviews it seemed that the Zojurishi was the right brand. But what model? At first I thought a 3-cup would be enough for me and my husband, but after browsing the cookbook, I decided to go for the 5.5 cup as more versatile, especially when I was entertaining friends.

    A couple of the fuzzy logic models stood out, but after comparing them on the Zojirushi site, the Nero fuzzy model stood out, and then the plethora of 5-star reviews on Amazon convinced me. The price on Amazon was so much less than on any other cookware site so that turned into a no brainer decision.

    The upshot is that I am thrilled with this product. The results of all my rice dishes so far has been perfect, fluffy rice. Th e oatmeal is out of this world. The controls are easy to understand and I had little problem figuring them out from the manual, even as it is obviously translated from the Japanese (which can be a problem). My favorite feature is the timer function, which lets me set up brown rice in the morning to be ready when I get home from work and to set up the oatmeal at night so I have a hot delicious and nutritious breakfast ready for me when I wake up. One of the things that amazes me is that timers usually work by you setting the machine for when you want it to starts cooking. But with the Neuro Fuzzy, I set the timer for when I want the food to be ready to eat. I don't understand how it knows when to start the cooking, but it's electronic brain somehow does and that makes me very happy.

    Finally, the bowl and lid are very easy to clean. And I'm a happy camper.
  • Customer Since 1997
    5.0 out of 5 stars Automated breakfast made easy
    Reviewed in the United States on July 8, 2013
    I have a bad habit of skipping meals to do other things, like sleep in late.

    I usually don't have much appetite until I'm already in a bad way, then I feel extremely hungry and malaise very suddenly.

    This is a problem because I am already very thin. If I don't eat on a regular schedule I lose focus and feel off. So it stands to reason that I should make meals as efficient, cost effective and convenient as possible.

    Begin Operation Breakfast 2.0

    I wanted to come up with a way to have breakfast ready and waiting when I got out of bed so I could eat quickly and get on with my morning.

    First I tried protein bars. That worked pretty well, but I had a problem where the chalky taste got really tiresome after a while. They also feel very heavy in my stomach. Then when I got braces I couldn't bite into the protein bars any more. When I got to the point that I was cutting up the protein bars and then sucking on them to soften them, or microwaving them, I decided this was no more convenient than making a regular breakfast and decided to try other things.

    Next I tried protein shakes. They were disgusting. No matter what I put into them I couldn't find a way to mask the flavor of the protein powder enough that it didn't make me nauseous. I tried several different protein powder sources, all of which were disgusting in their own way.

    After protein shakes I tried smoothies. This worked okay in the taste department, but they didn't contain enough protein or other ingredients that were good for me. They were essentially fruit (which contains a lot of sugar) and other forms of sugar, which left me needing food way before lunch time and made me sugar crash after 2 or 3 hours.

    I then tried a combination of fruit and calorie supplements. They didn't taste too bad, but I tried several different substances, all of which had different adverse health effects. Some of them gave me diarrhea, some made me constipated and some of them had the same problems as previous breakfasts I tried.

    And Now Breakfast 2.0

    I think I have now finally found a solution that works.

    Here are the ingredients:

    A programmable rice cooker
    I use a Zojirushi NS-ZCC10 5-1/2-Cup Neuro Fuzzy RiceCooker and Warmer that I bought on Amazon back in January. I chose it because it was the rice cooker with the most positive reviews from people who know the most about rice (Japanese, Korean, Chinese folks who consider rice a staple food). It is truly an amazing rice cooker. If you take a modern high efficiency washing machine and apply all the design axioms that make it human compatible to a rice cooker, you get the Zojirushi NS-ZCC10. It does really cool things like let you set multiple timers to start cooking at any time day or night, cancels the timer if you forget to close the cooker; it even plays a different song when it starts, when it's done and when it starts from the timer.

    Pre-cooked, frozen chicken strips (Fajita style) (1 serving per Nutritional Information on package)
    I got these in the frozen foods section at the grocery. I probably could buy chicken and grill it myself, then freeze it, but I'm more comfortable using the pre-packaged strips because I am more confident that the conditions under which the meat was prepared and cooked will be sanitary than my own kitchen would be. Besides that, they have a nice smokey grilled flavor that I like.

    Store brand garden vegetables mix (Half cup serving per Nutritional Information on package)
    These are generic frozen vegetables, because vegetables are vegetables to me. They don't taste any different to me if they're organic or GMO, but these happen to be organic (or so it says on the label). They consist of corn, carrots, broccoli and some kind of green beans I forget the name of.

    Regular rice (Half japanese cup)
    Plain old generic, medium grain rice in the store brand bag.

    Half a can of cream of mushroom soup
    This is purely for flavor. It acts as a base. I might try other soups or different bases as I get bored with cream of mushroom.

    Water
    Straight out of the tap.

    Putting Together the Ingredients

    I tested my recipe last night so that I wouldn't wake up groggy in the morning to a disgusting mess if things went wrong.

    I have experimented with different ingredients before, so I know which ingredients can be safely left overnight without spoiling. I intentionally use frozen chicken and vegetables rather than thawing them because they will keep cool in the closed rice cooker overnight without spoiling.

    Here's how to put it all together:

    When measuring your rice, always use a Japanese rice measuring cup (unless the instructions with your rice cooker indicate otherwise), not an American one. Rice cookers are labelled with water levels that assume a Japanese cup. If you use an American cup your rice will not cook properly and your cooker may boil over.

    First I wash the rice. I don't just give it a quick rinse, I wash it thoroughly. I wash my rice by putting it into a tall plasticware container with a snap-on lid with some water and shaking it. I put in water, shake, drain off the water through a sane and repeat until the water runs clear. This is important because if the rice isn't washed thoroughly the bran powder will act as an emollient, which will mess up the chemical balance when other ingredients are added and could cause the cooker to boil over.

    I should note here that I've been washing and cooking rice the Japanese traditional way for years, so it's a bit of a ritual for me.

    Next I fill the rice cooker pan slightly above halfway to the 1 cup water mark. I have experimented with different amounts of water with my cooker, and I have found that this amount of water works well for regular rice when I am using other wet ingredients. YMMV.

    After adding water I add the half cup of rice. I swish the water around so the rice settles down into the water, then I toss in the frozen vegetables. I follow that by dolloping the mushroom soup onto the vegetables, then I place the chicken strips around the perimeter of the other ingredients.

    The reason for this order:

    Water and rice goes in the bottom because it needs the most heat to cook.
    Frozen veggies go next because they need a medium amount of heat to steam.
    Soup goes next because it's already cooked and only needs to be warmed up.
    Chicken goes around the perimeter because it's already cooked. The perimeter is where the least heat goes, so the chicken will heat up without overcooking.
    Finally I put the cooker pan into the rice cooker, close the lid and set the timer for one hour before I wake.

    By morning the ingredients are thawed and ready to be cooked and heated up. The rice cooker kicks on an hour before I'm ready for breakfast and I have a warm, delicious meal waiting for me in the rice cooker. The rice cooker will switch from cook to warm automatically when cooking is done and keep the food warm for as long as I want.

    If I don't feel like cleaning up I can close the lid and leave the rice cooker messy then clean it when I get home. Since it has a very good non-stick surface it is easy to clean off dried-on ingredients.

    The combination of ingredients represents an ideal set of food groups for breakfast including starch, vegetables, protein and essential vitamins and minerals.

    This reduces eating breakfast to the simplest of activities: Dumping it into a bowl and stuffing it in my face.

    As a result I eat breakfast more consistently and I'm more productive and less malaise during the day.

    As a result, I eat breakfast more consistently and I'm more productive during the day.
  • Tim
    5.0 out of 5 stars Perfect Rice-Effortlessly
    Reviewed in the United States on March 20, 2024
    I like well-made rice, but really don't like spending time in the kitchen. For years I had the standard electric rice cooker that so many people use, but was disappointed in the inconsistency, despite the relative convenience. This Zojirushi NS-ZCC10 cost more than I wanted to spend, but was more than worth the cost. I was really surprised at the advances in this cooker over my prior cooker.
    -It takes me 3 minutes to get the rice cooking, and 2 of those minutes are for washing the rice.
    -It takes me 2 minutes to clean the cooker when I'm done.
    -The rice is done to perfection (including when used for sushi) and keeps its quality even if I have to let it sit in the pot for an hour or more after it's done.
    - Another very useful feature is that it is simple to program it hours ahead to start cooking so that the rice is done at the exact time I want it ready to serve. This is a sophisticated little appliance that lives up to the hype.

    >>Follow-up 9 months after purchase: This has become my all-time favorite kitchen appliance. It continues to make perfect rice (I most frequently cook sushi rice, but also basmati at least monthly). Two minutes to get it started and 2 minutes to clean and stow. For most meals, I set it up earlier in the day and have it programmed to be ready when I plan on serving dinner---and it's always ready exactly on time. Highly recommended.

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