Review: The June Smart Oven Will Take Charge of Your Kitchen

This third-generation smart oven promises to replace 12 appliances. We spent a month testing that claim.

A June Oven on a kitchen countertop

The June Oven isn't watching you, but it's keeping close eyes (and AI) on your food

By Kirk Miller

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I didn’t trust my oven. Even when it was right.

That admittedly makes June, a smart kitchen appliance, sound like a sentient machine. In a way, the “12-in-1” device (more on that later) does possess a weird intelligence and intuition; it could identify foods and adjust temperatures and cooking times without any effort from me.

June works in tandem with an app, an interior camera, artificial intelligence, multiple sensors and a few accessories (primarily a nonstick pan and a food thermometer) to produce an array of foods and meals — emphasis on the latter, as the machine can make your protein and veggies simultaneously. If you follow the hundreds of included recipes — with video instructions — and more simplified “programs” (if you just want to make something simple, like toast or reheat), you’re supposed to end up with perfectly-cooked … well, almost anything, be it steak, a breakfast sandwich, banana bread or grilled veggies. Even pasta (we didn’t try that one).

June launched in 2015; a third-generation model was recently released, and I was able to try out a test unit for about a month and a half, where I forced myself to cook 95% of my meals on the appliance (breakfast, lunch and dinner). I’ll get into the details below, but the big takeaway here is that June is not for everyone, but it could be exactly right for a certain subset of home cooks.

Unboxing the June Oven, which basically took up half our kitchen island
Kirk Miller

Setting up: Getting June on my wifi, downloading the app and getting the appliance up and running took minutes. And you can cook either via the app or a touchscreen on the oven door — if you’ve ever set up any modern device, be it a iPhone, Sonos or Chromecast, getting June going isn’t going to be a problem.

Getting June on my countertop, however? “June isn’t much bigger than your microwave,” as their site claims, but also notes it’s not a use-and-put-away device. No kidding; it’s nearly 40 pounds, and it took up nearly half of our kitchen island.

I can’t criticize June for its size; I live in a tiny Brooklyn apartment, so anything I put in there is going to feel intrusive. But it’s also big enough that you can’t just place it where you’d put, say, a toaster oven or a microwave (it’s certainly not going to work over a traditional stove, either). You’ll need some dedicated space for this. Consider this reality before you consider anything else.

The specs: 

What a larger meal looks like in a June Oven
June

What works:

What kind of works:

What needs work:

The Bottom Line: There were early moments of frustration with June — if you’re a mildly competent home chef (my claim), you have to “unlearn” certain kitchen habits, ignore most of the cookware you currently own and trust the machine. 

But everything I made with June was at worst acceptable and usually very good. No standouts, but there was a wonderful competence to everything. If you have the space and want to simplify (and speed up) your meals, by all means, try one out. Whether this appliance becomes the center of your daily routine or the kitchen equivalent of a Peloton gathering dust and taking up too much space is up to you. Interestingly, if you don’t particularly like to cook but you embrace technology, June might be a fun system to play with (or hack) while getting you to eat a little better.

I’d also suggest if you’re going to buy the June oven, you should go all in and get the “premium” edition, which includes all the accessories (most importantly, the enameled grill). Whatever configuration you get, they all arrive with a 100-day trial period. Even only halfway to that point, I’m not 100% sure if I’m ready to embrace our new kitchen robot overlord, but I’ve come to accept its oversized presence.

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