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  • I usually start with too cold and when I put it in for a bit more, I get it lava hot.

  • Put it on level 5 or 6 and microwave it for 5 minutes

    • I've never seen a microwave with levels before, is it a fancy one or are they just not popular in the UK?

      • Pretty standard feature in every microwave I've ever seen

      • Every microwave I think I've ever used here in the US has some form of power setting.

        The problem is that it's completely nonstandardized, so saying "power level 6" can't be applied to arbitrary other microwaves to get a comparable effect.

        I think that it's rarely useful, because generally you might as well just run at full power for less time and then wait afterwards for heat to spread.

        What I really wish we had would be at least semi-standard settings across microwaves. Like, instead of a time setting -- microwaves apply energy at different rates -- the base unit should be a number of watt-hours to be applied, something like that.

        not popular in the UK

        Trivia: the UK invented the gizmo that can output that shit-ton of power in the form of microwave radiation in a microwave. It was an absolutely critical technical development in World War II -- it let radars be vastly more powerful then they had been, and it was a "Eureka" moment, a major nonobvious breakthrough that other countries wouldn't have just gotten iteratively shortly.

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cavity_magnetron

        The cavity magnetron is a high-power vacuum tube used in early radar systems and subsequently in microwave ovens and in linear particle accelerators.

        The cavity magnetron was a radical improvement introduced by John Randall and Harry Boot at the University of Birmingham, England in 1940. Their first working example produced hundreds of watts at 10 cm wavelength, an unprecedented achievement. Within weeks, engineers at GEC had improved this to well over a kilowatt, and within months 25 kilowatts, over 100 kW by 1941 and pushing towards a megawatt by 1943. The high power pulses were generated from a device the size of a small book and transmitted from an antenna only centimeters long, reducing the size of practical radar systems by orders of magnitude. New radars appeared for night-fighters, anti-submarine aircraft and even the smallest escort ships, and from that point on the Allies of World War II held a lead in radar that their counterparts in Germany and Japan were never able to close. By the end of the war, practically every Allied radar was based on a magnetron.

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tizard_Mission

        The Tizard Mission, officially the British Technical and Scientific Mission, was a British delegation that visited the United States during World War II to share secret research and development (R&D) work that had military applications. It received its popular name from the programme's instigator, Henry Tizard, a British scientist and chairman of the Aeronautical Research Committee which had orchestrated the development of radar.

        The mission travelled to the U.S. in September 1940 during the Battle of Britain. They conveyed a number of technical and scientific secrets with the objective of securing U.S. assistance in sustaining the war effort and obtaining the industrial resources to exploit the military potential of these technologies, which Britain itself could not due to the immediate demands of other war-related production. American historian James Phinney Baxter III later said "When the members of the Tizard Mission brought one cavity magnetron to America in 1940, they carried the most valuable cargo ever brought to our shores."

      • Pretty standard

  • I got a steam owen, and it's a game changer. The reheat setting is 10 minutes at 120 C, the food comes out tasting as if freshly made, evenly hot, but almost ready to eat. If I wait for 2 minutes after I pull it out (make a coffee for after-lunch dessert), the food is just right.

  • Neither. I put a wet paper towel over the food. The water in the towel gets REALLY hot and helps distribute the heat better

  • Cold, everytime. Eating something cool or at room temp - when that thing was at one time perfectly delicious before being chilled - means the flavour is still delicious, just not the right temp. You are never getting that steak back to medium rare after a 2 minute nuke. Plus you can eat it without the fear of burning your mouth.

  • I use the defrost setting and cook it like 12 minutes or so and then let to cool to where I can handle theoutside with my hand.

  • Depends, when cooking an egg in the microwave you damn well better not overcook it lest you end up with eploding scrambled eggs all over the microwave. When it comes to potatoes you have to let them heat up and cook so its unavoidable to wait for the cool down

65 comments