- Multi-cooker can be used to steam, stew, simmer, braise, boil, roast, and deep-fry
- Versatile basket with metal handle snaps onto the rim for easy draining
- Heavy cast-aluminum base heats evenly; nonstick surfaces; tempered-glass lid
- Stay-cool handles; dishwasher-safe with Control Master heat control removed
- Measures approximately 10-1/5 by 8-2/7 by 10-2/5 inches
Product Description
Premium nonstick finish, inside and out for stick-free cooking and easy cleaning, fully immiscible and dishwasher safe with heat control removed…. More >>
Presto 06006 Kitchen Kettle Electric Multi-Cooker and Fryer
Incoming search terms for the article:
Tags: 06006, Electric, Fryer, Kettle, Kitchen, MultiCooker, Presto
5 Responses to “Presto 06006 Kitchen Kettle Electric Multi-Cooker and Fryer”
Leave a Reply
Filled Under: Kitchen





August 31st, 2010 at 6:41 am
This unit is similar to the one I have (old style 06000), so I have included my review here as well.
I bought one at Walmart last year. I use it pretty often, but mostly for making popcorn. Turn temp to 350, put a couple-three tablespoons of peanut oil in the bottom, and then when the oil heats up throw in 1/3 to 1/2 cup of popcorn. Put the cover on and keep the pot moving while the corn pops. When the corn has just about stopped popping, turn the heat off and pour the popcorn into a bowl. Butter, salt and eat. YUM!
I’ve deep-fried scallops in it, steamed vegetables, cooked rice, made soup and even baked potatoes. The thing works great! I wasn’t going to write a review until I saw Alton Brown talk some trash about it on Good Eats. I got pretty defensive about my humble Presto cooker! He was doing a silly episode about “man food” like corn dogs and thin, square hamburgers. Well, when Mr. Brown was explaining how to fry the corn dogs he said (while holding a Presto mutlti-cooker) that a pot with an heating element on the outside of the bottom wasn’t a good idea because first the element had to heat the pot and then it had to heat up the oil. Too slow. After that he displayed three home-use rectangular fryers with immersion type heating elements. He said they were also better because they each had cooking baskets and break-away magnetic cords. He picked the one with the digital controls, while implying that this was somehow better than the manual rotary temp control.
I don’t know if A. B. gets paid for product placement on his show, but I really thought he was being disingenuous regarding the Presto “pot.” First of all, about the heating element on the bottom of the Presto cooker: During the frying demonstration, Mr. Brown had some text placed over the screen that said that if you didn’t have a special electric fryer, that a pot on the stove-top would work fine. Isn’t that interesting? What the heck is a pot on the stove, but just a heating element on the outside of a pot that heats up the pot and then the oil inside? That’s exactly what he was criticizing the Presto kettle about. What gives? Secondly, the Presto cooker DOES TOO have a magnetic break-away electric cord to keep the unit from tipping when the cord is yanked by accident. Also, the Presto cooker DOES TOO come with a frying-steaming basket, which Brown implied it didn’t have. Nya, nya, nya! See, I can be just as immature as Alton Brown!
I don’t know if the rectangular fryers are really better, but I’m sure they cost a lot more. My Presto cooker was $26.85 at Walmart. I keep it in a lower cabinet – it doesn’t take up much space there. I pull it out when I need it. It’s inexpensive, easy to use, and simple. When we go to Maine in August, I’m allowed to take only one of my counter-top appliances. So, I just take the Presto cooker with me. Normally, I cook steel cut oats in a small bowl, sitting in water, in a slow cooker (a bain marie – sort of – found the idea here [link deleted]) I can do the same thing with the Presto cooker. And I have a pot with me on vacation that I can do so much more with.
One last thing. With my slow cooker I use a plug-in timer called a Rival Smart-Part. But it’s not rated to control the wattage of the Presto multi-cooker. I found a heavy-duty programmable digital timer that I use to turn the Presto cooker off and on automatically. This device really allows me to use the Presto cooker like a slow cooker, without over-cooking stews and such when I am out of the house all day. The Presto multi-cooker is a terrific appliance! Buy one now, and don’t believe everything you see on TV!
Flash Update! Here is another reason to buy a Presto multi-cooker: I’m making a beef stew with red wine tonight. What a mess browning the stew beef! I have a 3 quart Wagner cast-iron chicken fryer, and this is what I used to brown the beef chuck cubes. These days the meat hasn’t been aged much, and so it is very difficult to brown properly. I managed to do it in batches, but the stove-top got pretty messy by the time I was done. I put the browned meat, vegetables, and garlic into the Presto cooker ( I made sure to deglaze the chicken fryer with wine and include all the tasty bits) and continued to cook the stew. And then I could proceed to clean up the stove-top while the beef stew simmered away in a different part of the kitchen. I am very pleased not to have to clean up all that oil splatter after dinner!
Rating: 5 / 5
August 31st, 2010 at 8:43 am
After a frustrating experience using this cooker last night, I came to amazon looking looking for a replacement and now feel compelled to write a review.
I wanted to get a fryer to use for light and infrequent kitchen deep frying. This unit seemed like a good deal since it also doubles as slow cooker so I took a chance. The first (and last) frying event did not go well. I tried to fry some breaded vegetables but the cooker could not keep up. In other words, I’d add like 3 items to the pot and the cooker could not bring the temp. of the oil back up. Well, that’s ok, I’ve still got a slow cooker right?
Wrong. I tried to slow cook some beans last night…this thing can not maintain a simmer. Here’s the deal, the thing is made of aluminum…just a terrible material to use for a slow cooker. Aluminum is an extremely responsive conductor but does not store heat so you are at the mercy of the cooker’s heating element cycle; your cooker is always too hot or too cold to maintain a basic simmer.
You set it at 200 and you get boiling so you turn the temp. down the tiniest amount possible and you get nothing (because the element is now off. But just leave that temp. alone and wait a minute or two, that’s right! it’ll start boiling again when the element cycles back (for 20 seconds or so), then back to nothing. It will not simmer, only boil intermittently.
So for all this things touted uses, you get a warming device that will boil your food for 20 seconds every 2 minutes and something that will boil water rather quickly. I recommend passing.
Rating: 1 / 5
August 31st, 2010 at 11:23 am
I’ve had mine sine either 1997 or 1998. Thereabout. Right now as I write, I’m frying some fish and the result has always been as it was when I first bought it. I’m looking for a replacement basket because someone, whom I let use my deep fryer for a party, lost my basket. That was 11 years ago. I’ve been frying without the basket since then and it’s the same result. Now I want to get a new basket, not a new fryer. For as long it works, I will continue to use it. So expect me back in 15 years.
Rating: 5 / 5
August 31st, 2010 at 12:14 pm
I had this deep fryer years ago and let someone borrow it & naturally I never got it back. I wanted some home deepfried chicken so I searched Amazon and there it was. It deep fries the best chicken and french fries. I have seen the other newer deep fryers but for me this is by far the best. I would recommend this fryer to anyone. It says that it is a multi-cooker but i basically use it for deep frying.
Also purchased the stainless steel funnel with strainer so that I can drain oil back into container. I feel the strainer is a must for this product.
Rating: 5 / 5
August 31st, 2010 at 12:34 pm
The new unit replaced an older unit that had failed in the sense that oil temperature reached only 290F as measured by a candy thermometer.
New one seems to work better, although same thermometer ( also new by the way ) says that oil temp reaches only 365F. Thermometer in boiling water ( at sea level ) shows 215F, so there isn’t a gross calibration problem.
The 365F is hot enough to do frying, which is the main purpose of the device.
Rating: 4 / 5