Thursday, June 4, 2015

Popular cooking appliances make meal prep easy for busy home cooks

Whether you’re the best home chef or just the busiest, everyone can use a bit of electric assistance in the kitchen. Rice cookers, steamers, slow cookers and more can cut prep time without cutting back on flavour.

“The manufacturers have given some weight to the fact that a lot of people, they don’t want to have these big oversize pieces,” says KC Lapiana, owner of In The Kitchen. “I think that the manufacturers have spent some time thinking about the profiles of the products and making them not only efficient, but a little bit smaller.”

Slow cookers, for one, are enjoying a resurgence in popularity, especially among younger consumers, says Mary Beth Brault, group manager of corporate and consumer communications at Hamilton Beach. Advancements in technology mean some models are more adaptable to your schedule, and they can be programmed to go into a “keep warm” mode to prevent overcooking.

“Slow cookers certainly picked up in momentum about five years ago when the economy started to go down,” Brault says. “The beauty of a slow cooker is that you can take a cheap piece of meat and turn it into a delicious meal.”

Lapiana recommends “multi-cookers,” which perform slow cooking, rice steaming and pressure-cooking without the hassle of three separate devices.

Rice cookers can also provide convenience for home cooks. “It’s changed in the ease of making rice and getting the right water-to-rice ratio,” Brault says. “And it really allows you to multitask better in the kitchen.” Some models double as food steamers, too.

Immersion blenders are another easy, timesaving kitchen tool ideal for soups and sauces, Lapiana says. “You don’t have to cut up everything into small pieces anymore, just roughly chop them; I’m talking the garlic and the tomatoes. Once they’re cooked through, you put in the immersion blender and it makes it all smooth.”

Source: awok.co/sAPcF5
Buy Home Appliances: http://awok.co/rth6fX
Website: www.awok.com
Post By: Ramiz Ali Khan

Apple says 'Apple Watch,' the world says 'iWatch'

Apple iWatch [three models]
Many consumers still think of Apple's first smartwatch as the 'iWatch,' as evidenced by a recent trip to San Francisco for a wearable technology conference. The branding confusion represents at least a minor marketing misstep for Apple.

"Is that the iWatch?"

Early on an unseasonably brisk morning last week, a purposefully stern TSA agent in the JetBlue terminal of the Boston's Logan International Airport posed that question after I used my Apple Watch as a boarding pass and moved through security on the way to a wearable technology conference in San Francisco.
state of cios
State of the CIO 2015

More than 500 top IT leaders responded to our online survey to help us gauge the state of the READ NOW I considered the question for a moment, showed a hint of smile and said simply, "Yeah, it is," even though the nit-picky editor in me wanted to inform the gentlemen that it's an Apple Watch, not an iWatch. Had I chosen to correct the agent — it's never a good idea to correct a man in uniform, by the way — my efforts would have been futile. For better or worse, the Apple Watch is still the iWatch to lots of people, thanks in no small part to the seemingly endless deluge of "iWatch rumor" stories that led up to Apple's official announcement last fall. 

The TSA example is just one of many instances during the past week in which I watched complete strangers refer to the Apple Watch as the iWatch. The second incident occurred on the same day, inside an infamous beer bar in San Francisco's Lower Haight neighborhood, called Toronado. The surly, tattooed bartender was showing his Apple Watch to another patron, and I overheard the barfly refer to it multiple times as an iWatch. (The bartender didn't correct him either.)

A couple of days later, I called Capital One customer service to activate Apple Pay on my Watch. After I successfully answered a handful of security questions and verified my identity, the bubbly female representative said, "Congratulations on your iWatch! Enjoy using Apple Pay."
At the Wearable World Congress event, the Apple Watch was front and center, and guess what? More than a few attendees unconsciously referred to the smartwatch as the iWatch.

In other words, Apple appears to have a slight branding issue.

If the company had its way, the Apple Watch might have been the next great iProduct, falling in line with the iMac, iBook, iTunes, iPod, iPhone and iPad. Apple even filed for trademark on the name "iWatch" in a number of countries, including Columbia, Japan, Mexico, Russia, Taiwan and Turkey, according to 9to5Mac.com.

Other entities have attempted to trademark the term in the United States and Europe during the past years, according to CNBC, and Swiss watchmaker Swatch, initiated a few different legal filings to block the use of the name iWatch, which it says is too similar to its trademarked "iSwatch" name.
Apple is a marketing and branding juggernaut. It puts just as much energy and attention to detail into the way it presents its products as it does designing them to function as seamlessly as possible. And its failure to secure and use the name iWatch seems like an unfortunate misstep for a marketing team that doesn't make many of them.
Of course, the fact that lots of folks are calling Apple's first smartwatch the iWatch, even though that is not its name, isn't really a big deal. The name won't significantly affect sales, and it also won't fix many of the software bugs spotted by early users. (My Apple Watch's fitness tracking features pale in comparison to my Fitbit, and in some cases don't work at all, for instance.) 
Regardless, I can't remember the last time I saw a technology product on par with the Apple Watch so frequently "misidentified" in the market, and it's hard to believe Apple didn't see this branding confusion coming — or do something more to avoid it.


Source:awok.co/sCz5n7
Check Apple Watch or iWatch price in UAE* >>>awok.co/q9xuJR
Website: www.awok.com
Post By: Ramiz Ali Khan

Awok.com -Blog: Top 5 Features To Expect: iPhone 6s

Awok.com -Blog: Top 5 Features To Expect: iPhone 6s: While the iPhone 6 was a huge success, some expect its successor, the iPhone 6s, to be leaps and bounds ahead of it. From Force Touch ...

Website Support: www.awok.com

Post By: Ramiz Ali Khan

Awok.com -Blog: Apple Is Building Google Now Rival 'Proactive' Int...

Awok.com -Blog: Apple Is Building Google Now Rival 'Proactive' Int...: Rumors about a new Apple search engine have been doing the rounds since the start of the year. For once, this tech rumor seems to have had...



Website Support: www.awok.com

Post By: Ramiz Ali Khan

Awok.com -Blog: King of Games (PS4-PS3-Xbox1-Xbox 360)

Awok.com -Blog: King of Games (PS4-PS3-Xbox1-Xbox 360): King of Games (PS4-PS3-Xbox1-Xbox 360) : Buy Battle field Games from UAE No.1 Online shopping site Awok.com Buy Battllefield game>&g...



Website Support: www.awok.com

Post By: Ramiz Ali Khan

Awok.com -Blog: Apple Watch: how scratch resistant is the screen?

Awok.com -Blog: Apple Watch: how scratch resistant is the screen?: Cheapest model lacks hard sapphire screen, instead relying on hardened glass similar to smartphones. But is it scratch resistant enough for...



Website Support: www.awok.com

Post By: Ramiz Ali Khan

Awok.com -Blog: Aluminium battery to charge mobile in 1 minute?

Awok.com -Blog: Aluminium battery to charge mobile in 1 minute?: ‘Won’t catch fire, even if you drill through it’ London: US scientists said they have invented a cheap, long-lasting and flexible batter...



Website Support: www.awok.com

Post By: Ramiz Ali Khan