KitchenAid Smart Thermometer brings AI-ready cooking control

KitchenAid smart – KitchenAid has launched its first smart thermometer, offering single- and dual-probe options, app graphs, alerts, and extended Bluetooth range.
One of the most hands-off ways to cook starts with a small piece of hardware: KitchenAid has introduced its first smart thermometer, designed to help home cooks track temperature in real time across a range of cooking styles.
KitchenAid’s Smart Thermometer comes in two versions.. The single-probe model is priced at $100, while the dual-probe option costs $200.. The company hasn’t published a specific maximum temperature in the available specifications. but it positions the device for a broad set of tasks. including grilling. roasting. smoking. air frying. and stovetop cooking.
At the hardware level. both probes are waterproof and dishwasher safe. a practical detail that matters for sticky marinades. splatter-prone sessions. and regular cleanup.. Battery life is also geared toward longer cooks: once fully charged. the battery can last up to 24 hours. letting users monitor extended projects such as smoking a brisket.
If timing is tighter, KitchenAid includes a quick-charge feature. Charging the probe for five minutes can add up to five additional hours of cooking time, reducing the chance of losing control during a busy meal prep window.
The thermometer’s software experience is built around KitchenAid’s app.. The app provides a graph view that visualizes the cooking process. along with a library that can store up to 20 saved cooks.. It also supports timers and alerts. which can nudge the cook when it’s time to move to different steps in a recipe based on temperature.
For wireless connectivity, the probes use Bluetooth.. KitchenAid also offers a Range Extender Mode that can expand the device’s 285-foot range by using a second internet-connected device. which is meant to help in larger homes or outdoor setups where the kitchen isn’t always close to the grill or smoker.
KitchenAid’s entry lands in a market that already has established smart thermometer options.. Several products on the market focus on grilling and wireless meat monitoring. including offerings from specialists such as Meater and ThermoWorks. while other major kitchen brands have also introduced their own smart cooking thermometers.
In the context of the broader industry. KitchenAid’s announcement also reflects how smart home cooking is steadily filling out its ecosystem.. Whirlpool. which was mentioned in connection with similar products. happens to own KitchenAid. underscoring how brands within the same corporate umbrella can influence product direction and how consumers may soon see more cross-brand hardware and app experiences over time.
Beyond convenience, the biggest appeal of a smart thermometer like this is how it changes decision-making during cooking.. Temperature-based notifications and visual graphs can reduce guesswork. especially for multi-stage recipes where timing is tied to internal temperature rather than surface cues.. Over long sessions such as smoking. the combination of battery life and persistent monitoring is likely to be one of the more practical differentiators.
The addition of range extension also hints at real-world use cases: outdoor cooking. patio setups. and homes where the grill or smoker may be far from the kitchen counter.. By addressing distance through Range Extender Mode. the company is aiming to keep the monitoring experience reliable even when the cook isn’t standing next to the phone.
As KitchenAid’s Smart Thermometer becomes available, it will join a growing lineup of connected cooking tools that compete not only on probe durability and battery performance, but also on app features like alerts, saved profiles, and the clarity of how temperature data is presented during the cook.
KitchenAid smart thermometer Bluetooth thermometer smart cooking app wireless meat probes grilling gadgets home cooking tech
So it’s basically a meat thermometer that talks to your phone? Neat.
$200 for a dual probe is wild. My cheap one already beeps at me and I don’t need an app graph to cook chicken lol. Also how’s it “AI-ready” if it just measures temp?
Wait the article says “positions the device for a broad set of tasks” but then no max temp listed… so can it burn your food or what? I swear these smart kitchen gadgets always act like you’re dumb and then it overheats. Bluetooth range extender too? My router is already annoying enough.
I don’t trust any smart thermometer that needs “alerts” like it’s gonna save you from yourself. 24 hours battery sounds cool but like, what if it disconnects mid-smoke and you just gotta guess? Also the quick charge thing… five minutes for five hours? That sounds too good, probably marketing math. I’ll stick with paper recipes and guesswork.