D'Piucchstre wrote:Also, I hate to say this but.....I think it's ironic that the resident asian people on this forum that have spoken up about this seem to only know how to cook rice by loading up, and pushing a few buttons on a rice cooker.
Cooking from scratch is very time-consuming in various Asian cuisines, and labor-intensive recipes for everyday dishes are based on the presence of large quantities of unpaid female labor. Being able to buy basic spice mixes in boxes, to take one example, relieves Indian women of countless hours spent pounding and blending spices (if they can afford them, which many can't, at least over there).
It's pretty unironic that households that rely on a basic staple make a modest investment in a relatively foolproof and uncomplicated way of preparing that staple. Rice cookers free up women's labor power, and when women's labor power can command a decent price on the labor market, it makes sense to put it to work augmenting household income (to invest in labor-saving technology) rather than engage in gendered tasks.
I
capital accumulation