Daily Deals Roundup — May 17, 2026

Daily Deals: May 17, 2026

A thread runs through today's picks that has nothing to do with the season and everything to do with how things are made. Several of these products are built around refillable systems that reduce packaging per use cycle. Others are built to last long enough that replacement rarely enters the conversation. The result is a list that rewards spending more once rather than spending a little repeatedly—whether you're outfitting your kitchen, your bathroom shelf, or your closet.


Ted Baker's Peveril borrows the funnel collar from technical outerwear and applies it to a structured suede shell, which closes the gap between sportswear and sharp casual dressing. The silhouette sits close enough through the shoulders to work over a dress shirt without adding bulk, and relaxed enough through the body to layer over a t-shirt when the occasion calls for it. As a between-seasons piece, it earns its place precisely because it doesn't force a choice between dressed-up and casual.


The SLUSHi's core advantage is that it eliminates the need for pre-frozen bases—you pour in juice, soda, or a cocktail mix, and the machine freezes and churns the liquid down to a slushy consistency in minutes. Multiple serving modes and a bowl sized for small gatherings make it a functional piece of equipment for summer entertaining rather than a novelty that gets used once. For anyone who regularly hosts poolside or on a patio, that capacity distinction matters.


Kiehl's Ultra Facial Refillable Moisturizing Cream with Squalane

Squalane is a plant-derived oil that closely mirrors the lipids skin produces naturally, which allows this cream to deliver lasting moisture without the heavy, occlusive feel associated with richer formulas. The practical differentiator here is the refillable system: you keep the glass vessel and replace only the cream cartridge, reducing plastic consumption across every repurchase cycle rather than discarding the entire container. That's a meaningful structural change to the packaging model, not a label adjustment.


Le Creuset Signature 5.5-Qt. Cerise Enameled Cast Iron Dutch Oven

Le Creuset's enameled cast iron Dutch oven has a sand-colored enamel interior engineered to resist staining and chipping across years of regular use, with a 5.5-quart capacity that handles braising, bread baking, and slow cooking for four to six people without crowding the pot. Cast iron distributes heat evenly across the base and retains it for hours, which makes it equally functional moving from stovetop to oven—rated to 500°F. The Cerise colorway is one of the brand's longest-running, which says something about how often this piece turns over in a kitchen.


Ooni Koda 12 Outdoor Pizza Oven

The Koda 12 reaches 932°F through a built-in gas burner, a temperature that cooks a 12-inch pizza in roughly 60 seconds—the kind of heat a conventional home oven cannot approach. Because it runs on gas rather than wood or charcoal, there's no fuel management or extended warm-up ritual; the oven is ready in 15 minutes. Its stainless-steel construction and modular base keep it portable enough to move across a patio or transport between locations, which makes it a workable option for renters without a fixed outdoor kitchen setup.


L'Occitane Almond Cleansing and Softening Refillable Shower Oil

L'Occitane's almond oil formula emulsifies on contact with water into a milky lather that cleanses and conditions simultaneously, a texture that works across both body and face without requiring separate products. Like the Kiehl's moisturizer above, the refillable glass bottle keeps the packaging in rotation across multiple use cycles, reducing plastic at the point of repurchase rather than at the point of initial sale. It's part of a broader sustainability commitment the brand has embedded into its French skincare line.


Today's roundup coheres around a straightforward principle: products that are built with some awareness of what happens after the first purchase. The refillable cosmetics reduce waste at every repurchase. The Le Creuset and the Ooni are investments sized to outlast trends and rental leases alike. The Ninja handles a specific warm-weather task well enough that it won't end up in a cabinet by September. And the Ted Baker jacket bridges enough occasions that it doesn't need a replacement for a few seasons. None of these are impulse buys—they're deliberate ones.