21 Best Gifts for Cooks (2025): Vitamix, Frying Pans, Air Fryers

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The Classic Dutch Oven

Staub La Cocotte 4-Quart Dutch Oven

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A Lightweight Cast-Iron Skillet

Field Company No. 8 Cast Iron Skillet

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A Beautiful End-Grain Cutting Board

Boardsmith End-Grain Cutting Board

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The Best Instant-Read Thermometer

ThermoWorks Thermapen One

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The Best gifts for cooks can be a tough prospect, especially because chances are the cook in your life is cooking for you. You want it to feel special, thoughtful, something luxuriant that they wouldn't buy for themselves and will be excited to have. Don't worry. We've got your back.

This is a guide to the best kitchen gifts that mix classic beauty and technological innovation, geared to home chefs who love not just food but the act of cooking. We've gathered up some of our favorite gift ideas for every budget.

For more inspiration, be sure to check out our guides to the best air fryers, the best cast iron pans, the best blenders, chef knives, and pizza ovens. And, of course, our best gifts for coffee lovers.

Updated December 2025: We've added cutting boards from Boardsmith and Steelport, a Tormek knife sharpener, a pizza oven and measuring cups from All-Clad, the Finex cast-iron pan, a Staub La Cocotte Dutch oven, and the Typhur Dome 2 air fryer.

  • The Classic Dutch Oven

    Staub 4quart la cocotte Dutch a dark green pot with a lid inside an illuminated oven

    Photograph: Matthew Korfhage

    Staub

    La Cocotte 4-Quart Dutch Oven

    One could plausibly argue for a 5-quart Le Creuset. But otherwise, when you picture a classic and beautiful cast-iron Dutch oven, what you picture is likely this: The 4-quart Staub La Cocotte. It argues for itself, sitting majestically baroque in its heft and with its trademark self-basting cones on the underside of its lid, its classic shape, and its elegant sense of proportion.

    Most home cooks covet this Staub, not just for its beauty but its durability and versatility. It is welcome in any home. And it will match any home, provided you choose the correct color. And it's on sale during December 2025 for a fraction of its regular price, making this a moment to appear even more generous than you already are. It's also a gift that can last decades, possibly generations. What a wonderful gift-giver you turned out to be. —Matthew Korfhage

  • A Lightweight Cast-Iron Skillet

    Top view of two Field Company Number 8 Cast Iron Skillets scrubbing brush and a tin of seasoning oil.

    Photograph: Scott Gilbertson

    Field Company

    No. 8 Cast Iron Skillet

    Field Company's skillets are exactly what you love to give as a gift: eminently useful, but lovely enough you enjoy keeping it on the stove even when you're not using it. It's hand-machined after casting for excellent balance. It weighs less than nearly all competitors without feeling less sturdy.

    And it's nicely pre-seasoned, which means you can cook with it right away. Though take note: I'd start with a long-caramelized onion cook, anyway, to get it worked in. As with all cast-iron pans, you'll still need to build up a nice, smooth seasoning layer over time to unlock cast iron's nonstick qualities. But once you've got this thing worked in, it'll get close to as nonstick as the ones with all the funny chemicals and coatings—but will last long enough you can give it to your kids or your kids' kids. —Matthew Korfhage

    But: Would you like to be even more distinctive? The Finex cast-iron pan ($250 with lid) is prized for its machined, polished, pre-seasoned, and pristine finish, of course. But it's also an item that combines style and substance. The distinctive octagonal shape allows you to pour from any angle. The spiral handle is heat-resistant, staying cool for a half hour or more in my experience. It's lovely.

  • A Beautiful End-Grain Cutting Board

    Dark brown wooden chopping board

    Photograph: Matthew Korfhage

    Boardsmith

    End-Grain Cutting Board

    Every cook has seen these checkerboard-looking cutting boards and thirsted for them a little. They're handsome, of course, but they're also functional. Using the smaller end-grain wood pieces makes your butcher block harder to nick (which matters not just for aesthetics but bacteria), and easier on your favorite knife. But because an end-grain board must be made from many pieces of wood, they are usually quite expensive. And so they are perfect gifts for the cook in your life—a functional indulgence they may not have afforded themselves, but which they will be grateful for each day they use it.

    A Boardsmith walnut end-grain is the board I have been using and treasuring for the past year. Walnut wood, like most maple and fruit woods, falls in the sweet spot of hardness that's hard to ding up but easy on knives. It's got that nice dark, uh, walnut color. Its heft makes it unlikely to move around. And it makes me feel a little better each time I cook—as if cutting celery were a form of luxury I'd previously been denied. The cook in your life will likely feel much the same. Note that maple is also a terrific cutting-board wood, and Boardsmith's costs $50 less than walnut. —Matthew Korfhage

    Other great cutting boards: If you don't have room for a big ol' butcher-block board, Steelport has an elegant solution. The Steelport SteelCore ($280) is a rare thing: a genuinely innovative cutting board. It's a still-hefty but much thinner edge-grain board made with end-grain walnut on one side for veggies and everyday prep, a composite cutting board on the flip side for raw meat, and steel beams within for both heft and warp resistance—all in a slim enough package it's easy to stash. I've possibly never met a more useful board, and it's still a bit of a looker.

    On the budget side, this reversible edge-grain block from Boos is also great (if not as great as end-cut boards), and it's only $87.

  • The Best Instant-Read Thermometer

    Overhead view of Thermo Works Thermapen One an orange food thermometer with a small digital screen and long silver rod...

    Photograph: Louryn Strampe

    Instant read thermometers are something every cook should have. It might be cool to saunter over to the grill and gently prod your steak with a finger and pronounce it medium well, but few of us can reliably do that. The Thermapen One will tell you the exact internal temperature in one second. No need for elaborate guesswork.

    Cheap instant read thermometers litter Amazon, but we like the more expensive Thermapen One for its reliability (mine is five years old and still going strong) and speed. Yes, speed really does matter, because the longer the oven is open or the grill lid off, the more it cools and the more unevenly you end up cooking. Get them the best thermometer and you should guarantee they'll temp your hanger steak exactly the way you like it. —Scott Gilbertson

  • Odd-Sized Measuring Cups

    AllClad OddSized Measuring Cups and Spoons in a metallic rose gold color on a dark kitchen countertop

    Photograph: Matthew Korfhage

    All-Clad

    Odd-Size Measuring Cups and Spoons

    This gift is a great mix of beauty and utility. Many of my cook friends already have serious affection for All-Clad's set of measuring spoons ($35), which are preciously shaped not like spoons but like miniature All-Clad pans—a visual pun that also makes small measures of spices or flour much easier to parse visually than you could with a spoon-shaped spoon.

    This set is even more special, and useful. These are the odd and vexing sizes that nonetheless turn up constantly in baking recipes: 1.5 teaspoons or 1.5 cups, a ¾ cup or a ⅔ cup. These are measurements that often require eyeballing or multiple measuring cups to achieve. Any cook, and especially any baker, who receives this gift will feel both charmed and understood. —Matthew Korfhage

  • A Classy Apron

    Hedley  Bennett Waxman Apron

    Photograph: Martin Cizmar

    Hedley & Bennett

    Waxman Apron

    I'm going to spare you my rant on how waxed fabric is the best and just say that these aprons from Hedley & Bennett are the sort you'd expect to find in professional kitchens. They're sturdy, well-made, and—thanks to that waxed fabric—able to withstand a significant spill without any trouble.

    Unlike those tacky Kiss the Cook aprons most people are gifting, these actually stop stains from getting to your clothes. They'll also last a lifetime. Hedley & Bennett does offer some customization options, including monogramming, so if you must add a cheesy slogan, you can. But don't. Seriously. Don't. —Scott Gilbertson

  • The Best Home Knife Sharpener You’ll Actually Use

    Image may contain Reel

    Tormek

    T-1 Kitchen Knife Sharpener

    OK, so technically the best home knife sharpener is probably a set of Shapton stones, plus a knife sharpening class and some diligence. But the best knife is the sharp knife—and that comes from having a knife sharpener you'll actually use. For me right now, that's the Tormek T-1, which is the best pull-through knife sharpener I've tested. It's got a cleverly designed jig to keep your knife to the right angle against the diamond sharpening wheel, and a self-wetting (i.e., no lubrication needed) composite honing wheel.

    That might sound daunting. And it'll look daunting for about five minutes, then feel quite easy—especially on better knives that have a good edge already. The Tormek is no replacement for a skilled knife sharpener, whom you might still engage (or become) for your most valuable blades. But lord, for your everyday and better-than-everyday knives, this is a sexy beast, and upon BESS testing, this Tormek was able to attain sharpness better than new knives straight out of the box. Now, the T-1's not perfect, especially at creating an even edge all the way to the tippy-tip and far back of the knife, but it's the best of its type I've found, and it's simple enough you're likely to actually make use of it.

    This said! One shouldn't use the sharpener as a first resort. If the cook of your affections doesn't have a good honing rod, that's the best thing to use on a more consistent basis. Try this dandy ceramic honing rod from Zwilling ($75). —Matthew Korfhage

  • The Best Blender

    Vitamix 5200 blender

    Photograph Courtesy of Vitamix

    Every Vitamix story sounds the same. First, the resistance: How is this $400-something blender possibly that much better than those that cost $50? Then, the conversion story. It's become almost a genre of WIRED article, where one reviewer after another turns into a Vitamix fan after initial skepticism. Vitamix has newer models that can go in the dishwasher, but maybe no item is more agreed upon, owned, and treasured by the WIRED Reviews team than the classically tulip-shaped Vitamix 5200, which my colleague Scott Gilbertson has called the “reference blender in the world of blenders.”

    No, it's not just for smoothies, though that's how multiple people on our squad like to use it. While testing blenders and robot blenders, I've become a convert to fresh mayo, taqueria-style salsas, and blender soups made with squash, carrots, split peas, and/or potatoes. In the summer, you'll find me with tomato puree. I've lately become a … pesto person? When your blender doesn't suck, it really is a lot like adding a new world of things to your home life—delicious things once reserved for restaurants or factories. —Matthew Korfhage

  • The Ultimate Cast-Iron Cleaner

    Field Company Cast Iron Care Kit including a brush with a wooden knob handle mesh and a tin of seasoning oil

    Photograph: Field Company

    Field Company

    Cast Iron Care Kit

    If you gift the Field Company pan above, or if your foodie friend already has some cast iron pans, this cleaning kit is worth its weight in gold. The chain mail scrubber makes cast iron cleanup insanely easy—easier than a nonstick pan, in fact. (Note from fellow WIRED reviewer Matthew Korfhage: He co-signs heftily on this care kit, especially because the scrubber is also excellent for evening out the seasoning on your pan if you went wild with the oil.)

    I'll admit I was hesitant to use this at first, fearing it would strip off my hard-won seasoning, but that turns out to be a nonissue (well, I suppose you could strip your pans if you went overboard on the elbow grease, but I've had no issues in six months of testing). Instead, the scrubber made cleaning cast iron so easy my kids can do it. —Scott Gilbertson

  • A Basket for the Baker

    Bulka Banneton Bread Proofing Basket in white beside brown cardboard packaging

    Bulka

    Banneton Bread Proofing Basket

    I've been baking sourdough bread for years, though I am somewhat new to gluten-free sourdough, which I am currently trying to master. In all that time, I just let my loaves rise laid on a towel in whatever bowl was handy. This worked (especially using the trick of sprinkling some rice flour on your towel, which stops sticking), but it is nowhere near as nice as using this bowl.

    This makes a great gift because this is the sort of thing many of us would never have bought on our own, but immediately simplifies life, thanks to the nonstick properties of the wood pulp. I don't even have to use the rice flour trick with this thing. Dough just doesn't stick. I also like the nice waffle texture this adds to the loaf, though there is also a smooth version and a grooved version if you prefer. Want to make a bread-baking package gift? Throw in a nice Danish dough whisk ($20) and a good bread lame ($9). —Scott Gilbertson

  • The Easiest Pizza Oven

    • Photograph: Matthew Korfhage

    • Photograph: Matthew Korfhage

    • Photograph: Matthew Korfhage

    While testing pizza ovens, I wrote that this propane All-Clad Pizza Oven is the pizza oven I'd choose if cost were no object. It's got 16 inches of room, enough to cook a family-sized pie. It heats wicked fast, with a built-in oven thermometer that mostly works (a rarity among pizza ovens). It gets hot enough for Neapolitan if you'd like, 900 degrees Fahrenheit. And it has a rotating pizza stone, which means you don't have to spend a bunch of time twirling your dough inside the oven.

    Usually, this All-Clad costs close to a thousand dollars. But for reasons I don't quite understand, it's just $500 on the All-Clad website and has been for weeks. Holy cow, what a gift. And what a discount. Pizza! Anytime! —Matthew Korfhage

    But: If and when the All-Clad's price goes back up, the entry-level option I'd choose is the wildly simple and lightweight Ooni Koda 2 ($499).

  • The Gift of Meat

    Porter Road Meats 3 packages of NY strip steak sitting on a wooden table

    Photograph: Scott Gilbertson

    You know what cooks love more than tools and gear? Food. Why not give your favorite cook some actual food, like a gift box of richly marbled grass-fed beef, pasture-raised pork, and free-range chicken? Porter Road is one of our favorite online sources for meat thanks to its huge selection of cuts (though my favorite, the hanger steak, is rarely in stock). If you're not sure what your giftee likes, you can always get them a curated box.

    This is another one I know makes a great gift because I got Porter Road as a birthday present years ago and I've given it as a gift to several people since. You really can't go wrong with anything here, unless the person you're buying for is vegetarian or vegan, in which case you can get them a gift box from Purple Carrot. —Scott Gilbertson

  • The Best Air Fryer

    • Photograph: Matthew Korfhage

    • Photograph: Matthew Korfhage

    • Photograph: Matthew Korfhage

    For lovers of french fries, tots, wings, and crispy things, the Typhur Dome 2 air fryer is not just better than other air fryers. It's different in kind, engineered with two heating elements on its top. Plus, its bottom and air speeds can be adjusted. It self-cleans just like an oven. And its shallow, broad basket means faster cooks and crispier wings and fries. It also means you can bake a freezer pizza in it, and get crispier and much better results than you've been getting in your oven. And yet, you can also char veggies or cook up a pork loin on its grill and roast settings—including some oddly excellent asparagus.

    A well-designed smart app contains scads of recipes from London broil to salmon croquettes to birthday cakes, and will ping you when your food's done. It's quite the thing, and tops my list of the best air fryers for good reason. One caveat: It's a bit shallow to air fry a whole chicken, if that's your thing. But this Typhur is maybe the only air fryer extravagant and fun enough to give as a gift. —Matthew Korfhage

  • The Stand Mixer

    KitchenAid Stand Mixer

    KitchenAid

    Artisan Tilt-Head Stand Mixer

    There are other stand mixers; in fact, we have a guide to stand mixers, but let's face it—this is the stand mixer. If your food-loving friend doesn't have a KitchenAid stand mixer, and you can afford it, this will probably be the best gift they get. KitchenAid has been making this thing since 1937. While I wouldn't say the design is unchanged (the original apparently weighed more than 50 pounds and wasn't as sleek), it hasn't changed much, which is a testament to how well it works.

    In our testing, it was the most stable mixer at high speeds, and the tilt head model makes changing attachments a snap. It's also quite versatile, with extra attachments such as a metal food grinder for meat, an ice shaver, a pasta roller, and a spice and citrus grinder (most sold separately). —Scott Gilbertson

  • A Countertop Oven/Air Fryer Combo

    Breville Air Fryer

    Breville the Smart Oven Air Fryer Pro

    This Breville Smart Oven Air Fryer Pro is the countertop oven that the WIRED Reviews team gives most often as a gift to themselves—an oven that replaces the need to heat up your oven at all, or subs in as a second oven when you're cooking feasts. I like the autopilot functions on the upgrade Breville Joule ($500), my favorite accessory oven of them all. But this Smart Oven Pro is almost the same hardware at a slightly lower price.

    Why's it so good? It's way more precise and diverse in its cooking functions than your regular oven, with 13 functions from air frying to roasting to dough proofing and plain old baking. Breville swears there's enough room, one cubic foot, that you can cook a 14-pound turkey in it. I believe them: It's remarkably roomy, without taking over your counter. Cleanup is easy, but you'll want to be diligent, lest you bake grease spots into the drip tray. —Matthew Korfhage

  • A Salt Cellar

    Overhead view of Zero Japan Salt Box a wooden container and wooden spoon with salt in the bowl

    If you're not a cook this might not make sense, but trust me; few things will improve cooking more than having a salt box (or cellar or pig or whatever you want to call it) by your stove. Sure, you can get by with a ramekin or similar small dish, but that's the point of giving gifts—to elevate your loved one's cooking experience in ways they never would themselves.

    The thing about a salt box is you want easy access, but you also want to keep moisture at bay as much as possible. This salt cellar is the best compromise. It comes with a hinged lid that is easy to lift open with a fingernail, sits propped up while you're cooking, and is easy to flap back down when you're done. While you're at it, grab them some fancy Peruvian pink salt to put in it. —Scott Gilbertson

  • A Stocking Stuffer Turner

    Image may contain Cutlery Smoke Pipe Kitchen Utensil and Spatula

    Dexter-Russell

    Walnut Handled Pancake Turner

    I got my first Dexter-Russell turner years ago now, and I like it so much I went out and bought three more. Perhaps it is irrational to like a $25 turner this much, but these are what enabled me to give up nonstick pans. Using this turner with a well-seasoned cast iron, in my experience, makes flipping food as easy as it is in a non-stick pan, but without the weird polymers potentially in your food.

    These days I cook exclusively with cast iron and stainless steel, and these are hands-down the best turners I've ever used for everything except fish. For delicate things like fish you need a slotted turner like this ($25). For everything else, this is what you need. Stick a couple in your foodie's stocking and I promise they'll love it. —Scott Gilbertson

  • The Good Instant Pot

    Instant Pot Pro Plus on kitchen counter

    Photograph: Instant Pot/Drop

    There are many Instant Pots, but the Pro Plus (8/10, WIRED Recommends) is the best. The big difference is that the cooking surface is nice and flat (unlike most of the others, where the center is domed up slightly), which means your oil is distributed evenly and you can properly sear things in this model. The control panel is definitely the nicest of the Instant Pot line. There are eight programs, including pressure cook, slow cook, steam, rice, sauté, and warm. The Pro Plus also has a bit more power—1,200 watts to the 1,000 watts on many of the other models, which makes for better browning, a key component of many pressure-cooker recipes. Speaking of recipes, the one downside is the smart portion of the equation. We found it not that smart. Instructions are vague, and recipes did not come out well in our testing. Tell whomever you give it to to just ignore the app. —Scott Gilbertson

  • Natural Wrap

    Package of Bee's Wrap cooking paper.

    Bees Wrap

    Cotton Food Wraps

    Let's face it. Plastic is kinda gross. Do you really want to swaddle your food in it? Help your friends and family kick the plastic habit with these awesome plastic wrap alternatives. Made of organic cotton that is then coated with a blend of beeswax, plant oil, and tree resin, these wraps take the place of plastic-wrap-seal containers. You can store cheese or even wrap up sandwiches for a picnic. This three-pack makes a good starter set with sizes ranging from the smallest—perfect for wrapping up the other half of that avocado—to the largest, which is 13 by 14 inches. If your friend is vegan, Bee's Wrap also has some non-bee wraps coated with coconut and soy. —Scott Gilbertson

  • A Tortilla Press and Heirloom Masa Harina

    Masienda Tortilla Starter Kit 2 bags of corn flour and a bright red press for flattening the bread

    Masienda

    Tortilla Starter Kit

    After living in Mexico for a year, I am unable to eat store-bought tortillas. Sure, they're easy, there's nothing to do but warm them, but they're also limp, flavorless, sad little excuses for food. Fortunately making your own tortillas is incredibly easy—well, if you have a tortilla press. The best tortilla press I've used is this one from Masienda. I particularly like the ability to press larger tortillas.

    If your foodie friend likes Mexican food, this gift will change their cooking world. This combo pack gives them everything they need to get started making their own tortillas: masa and a press. Homemade tortillas are things of beauty and exemplify what I love about cooking: using simple, high-quality ingredients to produce something far better than you would expect. The key to great tortillas is great masa harina and Masienda's flour is my favorite (well, outside of Mexico anyway). —Scott Gilbertson

  • The Book of Mexican-Style Grilling

    Asada The Art of MexicanStyle Grilling cookbook cover

    by Bricia Lopez and Javier Cabral

    Every year WIRED does a roundup of our favorite cookbooks, and this was our pick from 2023's guide. It's so good, I am putting it here for a third time. Most cookbooks I've ever had I end up trying maybe a dozen recipes and coming away with one or two that I actually make regularly. Not so here. I've made almost everything in Asada, and regularly cook at least a dozen of the recipes. The Pollo Yucateco Asado and Arrachera Verde are favorites in my family, as is the Cauliflower and Jalapeño en Escabeche, which even my vegetable-shunning 10-year-old loves. If the cook in your life likes Mexican food, this is one of the most consistently excellent cookbooks I own. Pair it with the tortilla press gift set above to get your cook off to a solid start. —Scott Gilbertson

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