Winter cometh, but Cyber Monday kitchen deals are already here. From the only toaster oven you’ll ever love to chef-caliber aprons, we’ve got your back on the best among a flood of kitchen deals. Each one has been personally tested, and attested to, by WIRED staff as fit for your winter nesting or holiday prepping needs. This is the same stuff we’d use in our kitchens, but a heck of a lot cheaper than usual.

Here are some more Cyber Monday deals, plus our tips for navigating Cyber Mondayy. For more recommendations, check out our many product guides, including the Best Cookware and Tools for Small Kitchens, Best Pizza Ovens, and Best Blenders. Or check out the Best Cyber Monday Coffee Deals or Best All-Clad Cyber Monday Deals.

WIRED Featured Deals

WIRED’s Cyber Monday 2024 Coverage

Appliance Deals

Photograph: Amazon; Getty Images

The Zojirushi rice cooker is so beloved by the WIRED Gear team that we put out a guide just to different Zojirushi cookers. It’s versatile and simple to use, with fuzzy logic circuits that adjust cooking time and temperature based on moment-to-moment moisture readings. The result is some of the best rice you’ve ever made, whether brown or white or red. The LGC05XB is one of the most basic Zojirushi models, but it never feels basic. It’s the one I keep in my house, and I love it without reservation.

Image may contain Oven Appliance and Microwave
Breville Smart Oven | $250 Sure, it’s got a frozen pizza function, but it also has a convection fan and a self- calibrating temperature control—two features missing on many traditional ovens. Expect perfect cookies every time.

You’ve got an air fryer (what?). You’ve got a smart toaster (what?). You’ve got a combination air fryer and smart toaster. Sing it, or don’t, to the tune of that old epic poem about Pizza Hut and Taco Bell, but the facts remain: The stand-alone air fryer is mostly dead, and the combo oven has taken its place. The Breville Smart Oven is a standout among combo ovens for its even-better-than-expected versatility. The Smart Oven will convect multiple pounds of less fatty french fries, it’ll roast a 14-pound turkey, and it’s even good at baking or reheating pizza. Will it also do tacos—or at least the fillings for tacos? I feel like you know the answer.

The Typhur dome air fryer cooks with blazing speed. It’s more squat than most air fryers, a round shape that speeds up the cooking process by maximizing both the space of the nonstick cooking surface and airflow across the food, something I appreciated during testing. Wings take just 14 minutes in the Typhur — or 16 if you like them “fried hard” the way I do. —Martin Cizmar

Photograph: Ninja

Let’s say you love slightly healthier french fries and chocolate cake. But you don’t have the counter space to give up to a big combo air fryer and toaster like the Breville? Enter the similarly versatile Ninja Max XL, which won’t leave you scrambling for countertop space to carry out other tasks such as prepping vegetables, as attested by WIRED contributor Emily Peck. You can choose settings that include Max Crisp, Air Fry, Air Roast, Air Broil, Bake, Reheat, and Dehydrate. The Max Crisp setting makes for crispy fries, while the Bake setting successfully makes a small chocolate cake. Even better, you don’t need a phone app to operate it.

Photograph: Cosori

This sleek, black Cosori is our favorite smart air fryer, able to be monitored but also controlled remotely from the comfort of your phone. Setup on the app is simple, and so is remotely adjusting the temperature or scrolling through a range of air fryer recipes. You won’t need an app to operate, however: The device is fully operational through its digital control panel. It offers a broad cooking area, a wide range of temperatures from 175 to 400 degrees Fahrenheit, and ably makes anything from chicken tenders to banana bread on its 12 cooking modes. Note that the sides get hot, so give this one some room to breathe.

Is Balmuda the Toaster the perfect little toaster? Is an appliance better because it brings you a bit of joy when you use it or just look at it? It’s a slippery slope, wrote WIRED contributor Joe Ray in his happy review of this Japanese-made little toaster and steamer (8/10, WIRED Recommends). The toast is good, of course. Cheese toast even better. The device’s steaming function livens up old bread, or helps fresh bread retain its springiness even after toasting. But really: How often does a toaster oven bring you joy?

Once you make ice cream at home, that’s it—you’re addicted. It never stops. There must always be ice cream. Fortunately, Ninja’s Creami can make all kinds of things, not just ice cream. Reddit is full of recipes from people making protein-rich, less-sweat treats in their Creamis. One thing to be aware of: The Creami is not small, so make sure you have plenty of counter space before you invest.

Pizza Oven Deals

Photograph: Ooni

Ooni pretty much invented the category of home pizza oven when the company launched a dozen years ago, and almost everything on its site is 20 percent off right now. The Volt is Ooni’s electric oven, which is what we’ll recommend you use indoors during the winter, assuming you don’t plan to make your pizza in a coat. WIRED reviewer Adrienne So has made everything from roasted broccoli to cookies in her Volt, and she prefers it to the Volt’s closest competitor, the Breville Pizzaiolo.

WIRED reviewer Adrienne So uses this electric oven (7/10, WIRED Review) regularly. (And yes, it’s electric—the “woodfire” title simply refers to a trap door that takes pellets for imparting a smoky flavor.) As the name would suggest, the Ninja has eight functions, including, of course, “Pizza,” which includes Neapolitan, thin crust, New York, frozen, or custom options. She actually didn’t love it for pizza due to its long heat time and lower max heat of 700 degrees Fahrenheit, but has made everything from ribs to muffins and recommends it to anyone who doesn’t want to devote the budget or space to a dedicated outdoor pizza oven. —Kat Merck

This TikTok-famous oven admittedly looks a bit silly—like a giant waffle iron or a Smokey Joe grill that’s been sat upon by a giant. But WIRED reviewer Adrienne So tested it for our guide to the Best Backyard Pizza Ovens and was astonished to find that the top and bottom elements actually heat to 800 degrees Fahrenheit in about 15 minutes. Having to open the hinged lid from the top means the oven isn’t great at retaining heat, but it’s convenient and eminently giftable at this price. —Kat Merck

Kitchen Accessory Deals

Photograph: Amazon

The Global G-2 8-inch chef’s knife is truly global, the knife you’ll find in the kitchen of any number of commercial chefs, and the knife Anthony Bourdain often recommended as the first “real” blade a serious home cook should invest in. It’s light, it’s easy to work with, and holds an edge well without the hassles one expects when maintaining similar blades made of carbon steel. The Global is made with somewhat softer stainless steel that’s easier to hone and sharpen.

A big pasta and soup pot is one of those things that you can do without, until you very much can’t. This one is recommended by our Gear team, and by America’s Test Kitchen for that matter. It’s nice for everything from sous vide to corn on the cob to a big ol’ batch of mashed potatoes. Chances are if you don’t already have one of these in your arsenal, you missed it during Thanksgiving prep. This is a chance to catch a discount on a good stockpot, before another holiday catches you unawares.

Photograph: Vitamix

The Vitamix FoodCycler is the OG of countertop composters, a handsome indoor device that looks like a breadmaker but is in fact a maker of wondrous, nutritious compost. Just throw in your veggie scraps, your pet food, your green waste, and potato skins, drop the lid, and process the results into soil. Plenty of high-tech food recycling devices products have followed its example, but the FoodCycler still holds its own, as long as you don’t get too ambitious with “compostable” packaging or a pile of banana peels. Even at regular price it remains the lowest-cost device our reviewers heartily recommend.

Most thin aprons won’t withstand a sauce mishap and will leave you nursing wet pants. Not these sturdy waxed numbers from Hedley & Bennett. These are the sort you might expect to find in professional kitchens. There’s very little a dad likes to hear more than that a gift is “what the professionals use,” and so small wonder WIRED’s commerce director, Martin Cizmar, put this toward the top of his list of gifts for Dad. But there’s an apron for everyone, in themes that range from “bagel lover” to Star Wars. Pretty much everything Hedley sells is at least 20 percent off for Cyber Monday, so you’ve got your run of the place. Just note that the discounts won’t show up until you check your shopping cart.

Photograph: Braun

The Braun MQ7 (8/10, WIRED Recommends) is a fantastic 500-watt, variable-speed immersion blender with a grip like the handle of a ski pole whose trigger responds to the pressure of your finger. It’s the slightly older version of our current favorite, but right now the MQ7 set with a chopper, whisk, and beaker costs about a third as much and still offers plenty of oomph.

Photograph: Simon Hill

Ember’s temperature-controlled mugs get more attention, perhaps. But Ohom’s take on the genre is a lot simpler: No phone apps or notifications, just a mug and a heating pad that keep your coffee at the temperature you like. Note that you can’t put this mug in the microwave. But microwaving coffee is a habit worth breaking, anyway.

Joseph Shin

Throwing away sandwich bags after a short turn in the fridge isn’t just wasteful, it’s kinda frustrating and expensive over the long haul. Well, here’s the solution when a storage container just won’t cut it. Stasher’s silicone bags are both reusable and versatile, not just for storing leftovers but also cooking sous vide (7/10, WIRED Recommends). Don’t dangle them upside down when filled with liquid—such faith would prove foolish, according to our testing—but the bags are both dishwasher and microwave-safe, and designed to last through thousands of uses. This hefty discount makes for a good time to stock up on a few.

Photograph: Fly By Jing 

You already know the person in your life whose hot sauce collection substitutes for all the excitement they otherwise can’t have on a Tuesday. Chances are they already have plenty of feelings about Sichuan-style chili crisp—the crunchy, umami-rich, fried-shallot chili sauce that can happily adorn anything from Sichuan noodles to vanilla ice cream. Fly by Jing is a cheffy, spendy, and slightly more complex take on the genre than unimpeachably classic brand Lao Gan Ma, and therefore fodder for a gift. Note that the whole Fly by Jing site is at least 20 percent off. If I recommend the Big Boi size instead of the basic 6-ounce, it’s the result of my own illiberal habits where chili crisp is concerned.

This heavy-duty number is the preferred kitchen scale of WIRED contributor Tyler Shane, a baker and chocolatier with 10 years’ experience in the industry. It’s big and bulky, but as Shane points out in our guide to the Best Kitchen Scales, the base is angled toward the viewer for easy viewing, and the scale is raised to make it easier for large bowls to not hide the display. It comes with an adapter in addition to being battery-powered, though Shane says she’s been using it for more than five years and has only had to change the batteries a couple of times. —Kat Merck

Soda Maker and Juicer Deals

Photograph: Emily Peck

The Ultra looks like a bullet and it’s built for speed. It’s a quiet but whippet-quick personal-sized blender that’ll whizz together a hummus or a berry smoothie in 30 seconds. The controls are simple: One button pulses, the other blends for a half-minute. And despite its wee size, it sports a powerful 1,200-watt motor and titanium-coated blades that come with a five-year warranty. If your breakfast or lunch routine demands speed and simplicity, this is the wee blender we recommend.

The Ninja Thirsti’s water compartment makes it a bit thirsty for counter space, but it’s our recommended sparkling device for those who’d like to make their own flavored sodas rather than simply zhuzh up some fruit juice. The system, already reasonably priced even when it’s not discounted, comes with a variety box of flavor pods and a CO2 canister. Flavors include lemonade, dragonfruit, watermelon lime, and strawberry kiwi—which may include some B vitamins or a little caffeine for pep. A light appears when the CO2 canister is running low, which is a helpful feature that most machines don’t have.

Share.
Exit mobile version