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This item is eligible for Free Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Usually ships in 3 to 5 weeks
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Sales Rank on Amazon.com: 402
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- -Round jar with 4 food bowls for hot or cold lunch storage
- -Vacuum-insulated stainless-steel construction keeps food warm
- -Microwaveable bowls measure 15.2, 10.1, 9.5, and 6.8 ounces
- -Easy-to-clean container washes quickly
- -Includes convenient carrying bag for transport
Product Specifications for: Zojirushi Mr. Bento Stainless-Steel lined Lunch Jar, Silver
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- Model: SL-JAE14
- Manufacturer: Zojirushi
- Part number: SLJA14SA
- UPC code: 023596134232
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- Length: 10 inches
- Width: 6 inches
- Height: 6 inches
- Weight: 3 pounds
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- Package length: 10.2 inches
- Package width: 6.4 inches
- Package height: 6 inches
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230 Reviews
690 out of 749 people found this review helpful:
Worth every dime! Ideal for high school students
My daughter, a high school senior who agrees with her friends that the school lunches "suck," is sold on this. She wanted to lose a few pounds, which this has helped her do despite the fact that she now eats a higher volume of food during lunch.
How? She, like all her friends, used to skip lunch and leave school famished, scarfing down the first things she could get her hands on - usually high fat, high calorie junk food. This lunch box has eliminated her after-school munchies, keeping her appetite in check all day long. For the first time, she can pack hot (or cold) nutritious lunches at 6:30am, and they are still piping hot (or ice cold) when she pulls it out of her locker at 11:30. Her friends, who good-naturedly mocked her "space capsule" lunch at first, now crowd around her during lunch with their tongues hanging out, jockeying in line for her scraps. One remarked: "Your lunch container is about the same size as my water bottle, but you've got, like, a 4-course gourmet meal in there."
She's lost 10 pounds in the 2 months since she started taking her lunch in the Zojirushi jar, has gained noteriety among peers for having the "best lunches ever," has become more good-natured and less surly (better nutrition), and dances in her seat during 4th period as she waits for the bell to signal lunch period, where she can spread out her containers before her envious yet admiring friends and hold court over her "gourmet surprise" meal, trying to decide what to eat first. By her own admission, she has more energy and better concentration in class and during studies (her grades are up, by the way). She admits it's a pain to have yet one more thing to carry around in addition to her backpack (not that it wouldn't fit, but the backpack is already stuffed tight with books), but swears the payoff makes it worth the minor trouble. As a parent, it tickles me to see this self-described "laziest person on earth" hunkered over the sink at nights, lovingly and painstakingly cleaning out every container and lid (no doubt thinking ahead to the delicious and wholesome treats it will contain tomorrow).
Such a good buy, I bought another Zojirushi model better suited for my 11-year-old daughter. My kids say they will never go back to school cafeteria lunches, and have become much more nutritionally aware and involved in meal preparation. While their friends waste half their lunch period standing in line for tasteless and overprocessed entrees laden with salt, refined sugar and carbs, my kids dine on veggie chili and hot cornbread w/butter, delicious main course salads with homemade dressing, pita sandwiches and hummus, and stir fried teriyaki veggies over whole grain rice. And that's just the bottom 2 containers! The top 2 containers are perfect for fruit, tortilla chips, nuts and/or healthy desserts, all items middle and high schoolers love to eat. I'm thrilled with the product, which is solidly constructed, and which works completely as advertisied, with even better results if you preheat or pre-cool containers for 5-10 mins. We replaced the chopsticks with a plastic cutlery set, which fits nicely upright in the cloth carrier, thanks to the stretch loop on the inside.
NOTE: Like the other reviewer, I too was mildly annoyed at the Japanese-only user documentation, but then called the company at their California office (800-733-6270) and they promptly mailed/faxed English instructions. Don't even get me started on the money this saves by eliminating costly meals out and packaged foods. Excellent, excellent buy that has already paid for itself tenfold.
490 out of 503 people found this review helpful:
So cool!
The picture doesn't show that each bowl has a lid. The two smaller bowls have snap on tuperware type lids.
The rice bowl has a thick, insulated lid but it's not airtight. Instructions say to use it only for rice as other contents may spill.
The soup bowl has a twist on lid that has a valve on it. However, the instructions say not to microwave the bowls with the lids on, so I'm not sure why the valve is there.
You're not supposed to put the pieces in the dishwasher, nor put any food directly into the outer container.
My lunch jar came with both English and Japanese instructions.
367 out of 368 people found this review helpful:
Great product as long as you understand it
It's a great "lunchbox" if you adapt your menu to it.
First the description
The lunchbox is a Thermos Jar with a non-insulated plastic top. There are four containers that fit into the jar in a specific order.
-The bottom container is a insulated bowl. It has a gasket sealed screw on top, insulated side walls and a small vent for pressure. The most insulative of the bunch it is designed for soup or other liquids
-The next container is the biggest. It has a slide and lock insulated top.
-The third container is notably smaller and has a Tupperware like pop top.
-The fourth container is smaller yet and has the same top.
You stack the containers in the jar and then clip the top on with little side clips. The whole thing then goes in a nice nylon carry bag that also has a pair of chopsticks in a narrow plastic box. There are little pockets on the side for extra sauce packets or condiments (or I-pod video's to watch while your eating lunch).
This unit is optimally designed for the Japanese style lunch. A soup, Rice, entrée and pickled/salted vegetables. Normally you'd put your soup in the bottom container, fill the middle container up with rice. Your entrée would go in the third and the veggies in the fourth. Since the soup and the rice container both have insulated tops they stay warm. The other containers are not insulated and neither is the top. This allows some heat coming off the bottom two containers to escape so that your veggies are at room temperature. Understanding this is important. Its not supposed to keep the entire meal at the same temperature. Its supposed to keep one part hot and the other part at room temperature.
I've found that in real use the soup container stays steaming hot. The stuff in the rice container stays warm (but not hot) the stuff in the top two containers heats up to room temperature, maybe a little bit more.
Naturally you don't have to use it as designed (soup/rice/entrée/veggie) but departures require a little bit adaptation and creativity. You need to balance both amounts and what you want to keep the hottest vs coolest. Also if you have access to a microwave at lunch it kind of makes this not quite as useful since you could just heat your food up there (as opposed to heating it up in the morning before you go). You could use the whole thing as a cooler (everything remains cold/cool till you heat up what you want). That might be a better way to go if your using it for the office.
The size of the room temperature containers is not large enough to handle American sized sandwiches and breads, so if your looking to take that traditional lunch box stuff this isn't the best unit for that.
If your looking to make the most of this unit you might check out some Bento Box cookbooks. They give receipies and menu sets more in line with what this is designed to handle. In particular I enjoyed the book "Bento Boxes" by Naomi Kijima
Bento Boxes: Japanese Meals on the Go
I'll cook something up out of that and thrown in a packet of instant miso soup for a Japanese style lunch.
Pros-
Compact and efficient use of space- It all goes in the tube, no bag full of different containers
Allows for two temperatures in the same container - Allows for flexible combinations
Lots of interesting comments from your co-workers
Cons-
Cleanup is a bit of a pain - Not dishwasher safe. The soup top is a little tricky at times.
Soft plastic will eventually pick up strong smells/Stains
Two temperatures in the same container - Requires a little creativity, doesn't keep everything uniformly hot/cold.
Conclusion-
As long as you understand how it works and adapt it's a great product. Might encourage you to cook a bit more healthy food and eat more vegetables.
76 out of 82 people found this review helpful:
Has limitations
I returned this item because I discovered that it is not suitable for dairy items. I imagine this is because the outer shell is not thermally insulated. Only the two plastic bottom containers for soup/rice have insulation for hot items and I didn't see any thermal insulation for keeping the cold items at refrigerated temperature. This limits you to items that won't spoil at room temperature.
I am also wary of plastics that claim to be microwaveable yet can't be put through the dishwasher. Per the instruction manual, unless scrupulously cleaned by hand this plastic can absorb odors.
The instruction manual advised the outer shell container be kept absolutely dry or rusting may occur. So much for stainless steel.
64 out of 65 people found this review helpful:
Brilliant! Will pay for itself in no time.
This lunch jar is the best thing to happen to lunch since the peanut butter and jelly sandwich. In fact, it's even BETTER than PB&J because it will accomodate much healthier food! I was fortunate enough to receive this as a gift, but I would've bought it in a second had I known how quickly it would pay for itself. I brought my lunch to work in this jar today, in fact. On the menu: homemade asparagus/leek soup, tomato-saffron stewed chicken over spaghetti squash, cucumber and bell pepper chopped salad, and some raw almonds. Food like that has takeout and vending machine fare beat hands down. I've saved myself a small fortune in fast food costs since I started taking my lunch in this jar, and I've lost weight because I'm eating better.
I have had no problems with leaking dishes, not even when I have consomme or other really "runny" soup. The dishes are good quality and have stood up well to three months of almost constant use. The only caveat I'd offer is to avoid tomato soup. I tried that once, and it stained the inside of my soup bowl orange. Dishes made with fresh or canned tomatoes, however, do not stain the dishes, so bring on the pasta with marinara sauce without worry.
The carrying bag is very convenient; I just sling it over my shoulder along with my workbag. There's enough room in it to tote along a few healthy snacks, too -- essential for those days when you know you'll be in the office for 12 hrs or longer.
My only complaint is that lettuce-based salads do not hold up well when packed with an otherwise warm lunch. The "rice" bowl has a thick, insulated lid, but it's not enough to keep the heat in the jar from rising and affecting the food in the top two dishes. Raw veggies like broccoli, cauliflower, grape tomatoes, and baby carrots can survive that sort of treatment in better shape, though even they will be rather warmish if you've packed hot soup and a hot entree. The flip side of that, however, is that the jar holds heat brilliantly. My lunch has waited for me for as long as 7 hours before, and even then, the soup was still steaming and my main dish was still piping hot.
I absolutely, unreservedly recommend this product to anyone who is willing to spend the time necessary to prepare delicious, healthy food to take to work or school. Do NOT let the sticker price chase you away; it is absolutely worth every cent.
(...more Amazon.com reviews)
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