You got anymore brands I've never heard of?
I used to have a Metex (asian brand) I really liked (I now use a simple fluke).:
http://www.imetex.com/html/product/product_dmm.asp
Agilent is another brand which makes really nice dmm's, I think they're maybe a sub brand of HP (which makes all kind of awesome measuring&logging equipment)
There's also a brand called Nieaf-Smitt; which has origins in the Netherlands

There's a brand called chauvin-arnoux, but I think they rebrand Metrix meters (maybe not all models)
kyoritsu- nice dmms etc from japan
Dynatek is (I think) a big manufacturer (you see them over here regularly; probably cheap)
I think that meterman/amprobe also makes nice multimeters
My opinion is that most multimeters are accurate enough (even the really cheap ones) for 'household use', and the difference is usually found in durablilty, quality of test leads (most important part of the meter

), measurement possibilitys (does it do capacitance, inductance, temperature true rms, frequency.... and do you need it?) and service/warranty.
Knowing what you want to measure is the hardest part to decide
wHAT MODELS WOULD do you RECOMMEND?
They seem to have a few. I see 73,85,86,87,110,115,175,179,90210's.....
Depends on what you want to measure; maybe the fluke 115 or 117? (leave the 114/116 (no high amps)!)
I think basic dmm's should have the following specs:
ACV and DCV (both up to min. 500v)
ACamp and DCamp (both up to 10A; ACamp preferably true rms)
Resistance (0,1 - 10M ohm)
Diode-continuity check
Frequency, capacitance, temperature, transistorcheck are all nice but on average less used, and often not so accurate in a dmm; specialist tools sometimes do the job better.