San Francisco Chronicle

Countertop appliances with smarts

- The following Cnet staff contribute­d to this story: Brian Bennett, Andrew Gebhart, Ashlee Clark Thompson, Megan Wollerton and Laura K. Cucullu. For more reviews of personal technology products, visit www.cnet.com.

Joule

Cnet rating: 4 stars out of 5

The good: The Wi-Fi-enabled $200 Joule immersion circulator has an app that will teach you a thing or two about sous vide cooking. It also works with Alexa, Amazon’s digital assistant, to help connect your cooking to the rest of your smart home. The bad: The lack of controls on the body of the Joule could be irritating if you want to just glance at the immersion circulator to get an update. The integratio­n with Alexa still has some kinks to work out. The cost: $199 The bottom line: It’s the right product for the ambitious chef who’s also into smart-home technology.

Anova Precision Cooker

Cnet rating: 4 stars out of 5 The good: The easy-to-use Anova Precision Cooker Bluetooth + Wi-Fi prepares food that retains its moisture and keeps a steady water-bath temperatur­e. It is also poised to have expanded connectivi­ty to Apple’s HomeKit in the future.

The bad: Other than Wi-Fi, Anova’s latest isn’t much different than its predecesso­r. Like other sous vide devices, you still have to properly prep food in plastic bags before you place it in your water bath and sear some items at the end of your cooking time. The cost: $129 to $180 The bottom line: The Anova Wi-Fi makes it easy to sous vide from afar, thanks to a response app that the company keeps improving. This is a good product to add to your own kitchen drawer.

Behmor Connected Coffee Brewer

Cnet rating: 3.5 stars out of 5

The good: This makes excellent pots of drip and keeps it hot for hours. The coffee maker also links to an app for an outstandin­g amount of control over the brewing process. Thanks to support for software updates, the appliance has the potential to improve over time. The bad: Like other machines that heat their water first, the Behmor needs more time to brew than its competitio­n. The coffee maker also lacks features found in its predecesso­r such as tracking water temperatur­e and manual water release. The cost: $170 to $200 The bottom line: This makes great drip coffee and uses its app smarts in clever ways, but compared with ordinary luxury machines it’s still kind of expensive.

Crock-Pot WeMo Smart Slow Cooker

Cnet rating: 3.5 stars out of 5 The good: You can monitor and adjust the timer and heat settings straight from the Belkin WeMo app. It makes a mean pot roast, too. The bad: This slow cooker can’t tell the difference between a Wi-Fi outage and a power outage, so spotty home Wi-Fi might return frequent error messages and cause you to question whether your food is safe to eat. The cost: $112 to $147

The bottom line: If you have a stable home Wi-Fi connection and want more control over your slow-cooked meals, the cooker can give you the on-the-go access you crave. For everyone else, it’s an overpriced slow cooker that makes a hands-off process much more involved.

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