Why This Microwave Button Should Get Used More Often

May Be Interested In:Let’s Freakin’ GOOO! Linda McMahon Calls Elizabeth Warren’s BLUFF Challenging Her to a Meeting and HOOBOY


Photo by Ekaterina Belinskaya

The microwave may be one of the greatest inventions, at least in the kitchen. It ensures you can make quick and easy meals without being a world-class chef. With so many new models on the market, it’s important to know that you’re getting the full potential out of these machines.

All sorts of features and functions are offered. Here’s one that I hadn’t been fully taking advantage of: the power-level button.

Some people call it the popcorn button. After all, it’s the button that you use to ensure you don’t burn your popcorn. It’s so much more than that.

oven

Image by Frank Wittkowski from Pixabay

Why use the power-level button? There’s no need to blast everything you cook at full power. Some foods are delicate, and they’ll burn and change texture if they’re cooked at full power. Sure, you’d still eat it, but don’t you deserve better than that?

Think of it as a dimmer switch.

You may only need 50% power so that the food is cooked a bit more gently.

If you’ve cooked pizza at 100% before, you know it’s a soggy, gooey mess. Cooking it on 50% or “5,” depending on the microwave, may be a bit better.

When you cook leftovers or fish, a lower power is better, too.

I play around with the power-level button all the time now. 10-30% is great when I’m melting things, and 40-60% is great for reheating foods and soups. 70-100% is only used if I’m boiling water or cooking something from frozen.

 

share Share facebook pinterest whatsapp x print

Similar Content

Trump orders tariffs on digital service tax countries, including Canada - National | Globalnews.ca
Trump orders tariffs on digital service tax countries, including Canada – National | Globalnews.ca
Torvill & Dean: Our Last Dance review – Olympic champs’ classy glide down memory lane
Torvill & Dean: Our Last Dance review – Olympic champs’ classy glide down memory lane
A cultural stroll through Paris with graphic novelist Riad Sattouf and sculptor Nathalie Decoster
A cultural stroll through Paris with graphic novelist Riad Sattouf and sculptor Nathalie Decoster
Cutting Europe's Emissions Could Prevent Thousands of Deaths
Cutting Europe’s Emissions Could Prevent Thousands of Deaths
False-colour scanning electron micrograph of skin from the palm of the hand of a 30 year old man. The skin here is neatly arranged in ridges. Sweat pores are seen as miniature craters along the ridges. The cells forming the external surface of the skin, or epidermis, have been flattened & hardened by deposition within them of the fibrous protein keratin. This tough, dead layer of cells is shed continuously & is replaced by new, maturing cells which take a month to migrate from the base of the epidermis. Magnification: x20 at 6x4.5cm size
Forget aesthetics, the reason to look after our skin should be health
Trump and DOGE Defund Program That Boosted American Manufacturing for Decades
Trump and DOGE Defund Program That Boosted American Manufacturing for Decades
Truth Unveiled: Behind the Global Headlines | © 2024 | Daily News