The best rice cooker setting for quinoa is usually “White Rice” or “Normal.”
These settings heat steadily, cook quinoa evenly, and automatically switch to warm when the liquid is absorbed, which is exactly what quinoa needs to turn out fluffy instead of mushy.
If you’re starting from the beginning, read the main guide first:
Can You Make Quinoa in a Rice Cooker?
Quick Answer: Which Button Should You Press?
For most rice cookers, use one of these:
- White Rice
- Normal
- Regular Cook
- Cook
Avoid these settings for quinoa (most of the time):
- Quick Cook / Fast Cook (can cook unevenly)
- Brown Rice (often too long for quinoa)
- Porridge / Congee (too much moisture + too soft)
Why “White Rice” Works Best for Quinoa
Quinoa cooks faster than most grains, and it needs:
- steady heat
- enough time to absorb water
- a clean shutoff point when the liquid is gone
The “White Rice” setting is designed for exactly that.
As long as you use the correct ratio, quinoa usually comes out fluffy and perfect.
For ratio help, see:
Quinoa Water Ratio for a Rice Cooker
Best Settings by Rice Cooker Type
Different rice cookers offer different buttons. Here’s what to use based on what you have.
1) Basic One-Touch Rice Cookers (Cook/Warm Only)
Use: Cook
That’s it. These cookers keep heating until they detect less water and then switch to warm.
Tip: Let quinoa rest for 5 minutes after it finishes, then fluff.
If you want a full cooking-time guide, read:
How Long to Cook Quinoa in a Rice Cooker
2) Rice Cookers with White Rice / Brown Rice Buttons
Use: White Rice
Avoid “Brown Rice” unless you’re mixing quinoa with brown rice and adjusting water and time.
3) Multi-Cookers with Multi-Grain / Quinoa Modes
If your cooker has:
- Multi-Grain
- Grain
- Quinoa
- Whole Grains
These can work very well, but they sometimes run slightly longer.
Best recommendation:
- Use Quinoa mode if available
- Otherwise use White Rice for the most consistent result
Best Settings for Popular Brands
Aroma Rice Cooker
Most Aroma models do best with:
- White Rice or Normal
Brand-specific instructions here:
How to Cook Quinoa in an Aroma Rice Cooker
Zojirushi
Many Zojirushi models do great with:
- White Rice for standard quinoa
- Multi-Grain if you prefer slightly softer quinoa
Because Zojirushi often seals moisture well, quinoa can come out a bit softer, reduce water slightly if needed.
Cuckoo / Tiger / Panasonic
Most of these work best with:
- White Rice / Regular
- Multi-Grain can work for larger batches
What Happens If You Choose the Wrong Setting?
If you use Quick Cook
- quinoa may be partly undercooked
- texture can be uneven
- center might be crunchy
If you use Brown Rice
- quinoa can overcook
- texture becomes soft or mushy
- grains may break
If you use Porridge/Congee
- quinoa becomes very soft
- too wet for salads, bowls, or meal prep
A Simple “Always Works” Method
If you want one method that works on almost every rice cooker:
- Rinse quinoa
- Use the standard ratio
- Press White Rice
- Let rest 5 minutes
- Fluff and serve
What If Quinoa Is Still Crunchy After Cooking?
This usually happens when:
- not enough water was used
- the lid was opened mid-cook
- quick cook mode was used
Fix:
- add ¼ cup water
- close lid
- run Cook / White Rice again for 5 minutes
Final Takeaway
For most rice cookers, the best setting for quinoa is:
White Rice / Normal
It’s simple, reliable, and makes quinoa fluffy with minimal effort. If your cooker has a quinoa or multi-grain mode, you can test it later, but “White Rice” is usually the safest choice for consistent results.
