🍞 Elevate your home baking game—because fresh bread is the new power move!
The KBS 17-in-1 Bread Maker combines 710W dual infrared heaters and a unique plasma ceramic pan to deliver perfectly baked bread with crispy crusts and fluffy interiors. Featuring 17 versatile programs including gluten-free and yogurt, a 15-hour delay timer, and an auto nut dispenser, it offers professional-grade baking with effortless control via a sleek touch panel. Its compact stainless steel design fits stylishly in any kitchen, backed by ETL/FCC certification and 3 years of support for peace of mind.
Product Care Instructions | Dishwasher Safe |
Material | Fully Stainless Steel Body, Non-stick Ceramic Pan, Stainless Steel Fruit Nut Dispenser, Dual Quartz Heaters (17 Menu; 15 Hours Delay Time; 15-Minute Power Interruption Recovery; 3 Loaf Size & 3 Crust Colors; Low Noise DC Motor Design; Up to 1 Hour Thermostatic) |
Color | Stainless Steel |
Item Dimensions D x W x H | 9.8"D x 13.6"W x 12.2"H |
Item Weight | 14.7 Pounds |
Wattage | 710 watts |
Number of Programs | 17 |
Capacity | 1 Kilograms |
Voltage | 120 Volts (AC) |
N**H
Great bread, good instructions!
When I was about four years old, my grandmother made dinner for the extended family. She made lentil stew with a large beef bone and chunks of meat, and in the delicious broth she cooked lentils. This was served with homemade brown bread, crusty and warm. You ate it by dipping the bread into the broth to soak up the juices.It was the best thing I had ever tasted. 65 years later it is a clear memory and my earliest memory of food. No one believed that a four year old would eat fourths, but I did.I decided to buy a bread machine because there is not a single bakery near me, chain store or independent, that produces a good crusty loaf of bread. Bread brands that, in Fort Lauderdale, have crust, here have brown surfaces that have the same texture as the interiors. I stopped at a stand that sold Italian sausage and peppers on a bun, and the bun was good and crusty. I asked the owner where he got the great bread. He said he had it airshipped weekly from Chicago, he could not get good bread locally.So I wasn't the only person who had noticed. There was no good bread made here. Now this may be just a matter of taste, but my taste finally forced me to bake my own bread. Periodically in my life I have tried to make bread. It was always mediocre. Over or under kneaded, wrong flour. I could buy better bread at the grocery. My grandmother never used a scale, picked the stuff up on sale. She would start bread in the evening, wake without an alarm to punch it down, and bake it first thing in the morning so that it took the chill off of the kitchen, and then we could have fresh baked bread for lunch. I thought it was normal...everyone had hearty, thick sliced fresh baked bread, right? When you had a sandwich in your lunchbox, it was between two slices of heavy tasty brown bread. I never knew how lucky I was.And I can't bake bread. I have tried.So here I am in a dilemma. I know what good bread is, but the local bakeries, either the small ones or the big commercial ones, around here, make crappy bread.If I wanted a loaf that was aught but crustless mush, (or firm crustless bread) I decided I had to bake it myself. I decided to buy this machine. There was an offer but the reviews were good. The deciding factor is that more than one person reported good experience with customer service.And I feel lucky that I bought this machine. Wow! I used the French bread recipe in the book, but salted butter and less salt, everything weighed. Boom! Five stars, perfect, crust that you expect on a French loaf. This was bread I wanted to eat. Light, uniform, with a crusty crust. And...fresh hot bread to boot! Wonderful smells, melty butter.My flours were all from Bob's Red Mill. I used the white flour for the French, and then I tried to make rye bread. I looked on the internet and found some recipes.First try was way too sweet, and the second try was missing something. Third try hit it right on:270ml water22.5 gm light oil (I used light olive)7 gm brown sugar180 gm of bread flour180 gm dark rye flour6 gm salt5 gm bread machine yeast6-12 gm Badia Caraway seeds. This results in a heavy loaf. If you make a large loaf of French, you need to remove the fruit gadget, because it almost hits the top glass. This makes a heavy square loaf that makes it 2/3 up the pan. I have seen recipes that use chocolate, and 4 times the amount of brown sugar. I tried one with way more brown sugar. Too sweet. Cake. I might make a sweet bread someday but when I make rye I want rye bread, not brown sugar bread.This bread had a crust, a great rye flavor, and enough Caraway seeds that they gave me the caraway flavor that is traditional in seeded rye.I have not tried the jam or yogurt or other cycles. I have used the French cycle for the great light crusty French, and the whole wheat cycle for rye. It seems like there are few differences in the cycles, but there are differences, rise time, baking time and temperature. The machine can do three rise cycles but most of the cycles use two, sourdough (which is my next goal) and a couple of others use 3. You can pick a cycle, a loaf size and crust darkness, but you can't make other adjustments to the cycles. Then again, I have not needed those adjustments, but the implication is that a "Pro" machine should allow such adjustments, at least to me.If you are a novice at bread baking, get a scale that will measure in grams and will go to 5kg. Get another scale that will measure in 0.1 or 0.01 gram increments for yeast and salt. Get a bread box and a cooling rack. Get a bread knife. A crappy knife will crush your bread while cutting. Put your good knife in a knife block, not in a drawer, and not in the dishwasher. Protect the edge.That is all you need. Consider a bread box or bread bag.The book that comes with the machine is Excellent. It is written in English (not chinglish). I have no idea what language it was originally written in, but if it was not English, the translation is excellent. It has decent instruction for many things including how to make a sourdough starter. The instructions are detailed, not cursory.I have found that the bread is easy to get out of the coated pan.I have owned other machines. They would make decent bread. I am a bread novice and now I can make better bread than I can buy.Great bread, good instructions, and (others report) good customer service. I would like to have a cycle where I could adjust every aspect rather than just a separate timed bake, but honestly I do not need to. This machine is a buy.Edit: the machine is still a buy but when you make sourdough make the smallest loaf. I tried making a mid sized loaf and it spilled all over the inside of the machine. I cleaned the baked bread out of the bottom with a shopvac, surprisingly easy. I also thought their sourdough was way sweet. If your small loaf works and fits in the loaf pan, then move up.
C**N
Love This Machine
I bought this as a gift for my husband who insists on "Homemade bread is the best." I don't have the patience to make bread let alone to make it often.This bread machine is the best. Lightweight and easy to move around the kitchen from the cabinet to the counter. It is not too big and easily could stay on the counter as well. Super fast from start to taking bread out it is amazing.The instruction book gives you some recipes and they are easy. (My husband who doesn't cook makes bread often and has only messed it up once and that was his error as he forgot to add yeast)The whole house uses the machine, it is so easy the kids can make bread too!From un boxing, it comes with great instructions, the machine, a tan bowl and a little paddle. There is not much to it and it can make a loaf of bread from start to cool in 4 hours.
W**1
Great machine, a little louder than expected but powerful.
A little noisier than expected but very powerful and full of options. I sent the first one back for two reasons, made a pretty loud banging noise half way through resting and kneading cycles and I thought it broke. Second reason, the paddle got stuck, even after I layered it with cooking oil... I couldn't get it out even after soaking it. I sent the unit back and ordered another one, since the outside reviews kept saying this unit was the best bang for the buck.The second unit made the same noise during my bread making extravaganza (by the way, the bread itself came out wonderful - first time bread maker!!! Yeh!), but did run a little quieter overall. Turns out the loud bang was the nut/fruit dispenser firing off after the second kneading cycle. I can live with this, now that I know it's normal. Still have issues with the paddle being stuck on firm, but managed to get this one to come off. Glad I did, it really needs to be cleaned after making a loaf.The reason I say it is POWERFUL: I tried to make a Sourdough loaf and it ended up a little drier than it should have. Thankfully, I followed the recipe's suggestion that I check for this throughout the process and add water or flour to get the consistency that was expected. Well being so dry, the paddle was really struggling to get through the first kneading, until I corrected the moisture level. I was very surprised that the paddle kept going because the dough was like brick being pushed around. The motor never stalled and the dough got the right consistency after a little correction with water.Overall, I am very pleased with the design and the built in capabilities of this machine. Their cook book sucks big time, but I had purchased a bread making book separately that leans towards bread making machines and this seems to be a good solution. I really like the enamel bucket, easy to clean and I think it will last for awhile.
Trustpilot
2 weeks ago
2 days ago