I've got two IP Duo 6L pots. The first my son bought me for Mother's day 3 years ago to replace my Prestige pressure cooker which had seen better days and finding seals for it was getting hard. The IP was in use nearly every day, often twice a day depending on what I was making. Late last year for some reason it lost it's beep and when it did beep, you could hardly hear it. Amazon had their Black Friday on so son saw the IPs were on special and immediately bought me a second one. Useful as it gave me two inner pots. The old one is in a box and kept as a back up. I love them. I've made so many different things in the IP from stews, curries, chillies to cheesecakes and yogurt. It's a great timesaver and I wouldn't be without it. I use the slow cooker function too and every piece of meat I've cooked this way has turned out so tender and full of flavour. There's only my adult son and me now (I'm a widow) so the Pro Plus wouldn't really be viable. I've never used the delay feature for the same reason as you. I'm retired now so don't need it anyway. The IP is my most used kitchen appliance followed by my Kenwood Chef. You've probably guessed I love cooking and baking. Can't beat home made 😋
Hi. I have two instant pots in my house, the Evo plus which is now obsolete and the instant pot duo 3 L pot which I use for side dishes. I've just discovered I may have an issue with my Evo plus and may have to invest in a new pot. As someone who is blind, the fact that I can control the pressure cooker from an app is a game changer. Particularly as this device has a touchscreen which we could possibly modify as we have done in the past with bump on to mark each program button, But for me, there's no more memorising or guesswork as to whether or not I've picked the right time, setting et cetera or knowing how much time I have left to wait. This is possibly a used case you didn't think of. Whether or not the app is accessible I have yet to find out, but certainly I can use the app for looking at recipes And have used it to make some in the past. Obviously though, I had to press the buttons on the pot itself.
Being visually impaired the original instant pot Bluetooth, which came out in 2014, and now this new addition is a godsend. I can control everything through the app and don’t have to worry about trying to read the screen. And I think instant brands for releasing this device.
I've got two IP Duo 6L pots. The first my son bought me for Mother's day 3 years ago to replace my Prestige pressure cooker which had seen better days and finding seals for it was getting hard. The IP was in use nearly every day, often twice a day depending on what I was making. Late last year for some reason it lost it's beep and when it did beep, you could hardly hear it. Amazon had their Black Friday on so son saw the IPs were on special and immediately bought me a second one. Useful as it gave me two inner pots. The old one is in a box and kept as a back up. I love them. I've made so many different things in the IP from stews, curries, chillies to cheesecakes and yogurt. It's a great timesaver and I wouldn't be without it. I use the slow cooker function too and every piece of meat I've cooked this way has turned out so tender and full of flavour. There's only my adult son and me now (I'm a widow) so the Pro Plus wouldn't really be viable. I've never used the delay feature for the same reason as you. I'm retired now so don't need it anyway. The IP is my most used kitchen appliance followed by my Kenwood Chef. You've probably guessed I love cooking and baking. Can't beat home made 😋
Hi. I have two instant pots in my house, the Evo plus which is now obsolete and the instant pot duo 3 L pot which I use for side dishes. I've just discovered I may have an issue with my Evo plus and may have to invest in a new pot. As someone who is blind, the fact that I can control the pressure cooker from an app is a game changer. Particularly as this device has a touchscreen which we could possibly modify as we have done in the past with bump on to mark each program button, But for me, there's no more memorising or guesswork as to whether or not I've picked the right time, setting et cetera or knowing how much time I have left to wait. This is possibly a used case you didn't think of. Whether or not the app is accessible I have yet to find out, but certainly I can use the app for looking at recipes And have used it to make some in the past. Obviously though, I had to press the buttons on the pot itself.
Being visually impaired the original instant pot Bluetooth, which came out in 2014, and now this new addition is a godsend. I can control everything through the app and don’t have to worry about trying to read the screen. And I think instant brands for releasing this device.
Thanks for sharing I wouldn't have thought of that as an issue but I'm glad this is a solution for you
Very helpful. Cheers Alex 👍🏿
No problem 👍
Do it also fry :0 ??
It will saute (not quite the same thing, sorry to any chefs out there) but if you're asking if it's an air fryer type device, then no.
I think instapot have like 2 that do air fry and pressure cook
True. The crisp variants have an airfryer function.
@@olivepetersen22 INSTANT! It says it right there on the box.
Did i ask u to correct me with yo smart ass I call it wah i want @Bob-bo8ik
E-Pressure cooker is very efficient .