Remix.run Logo
Loughla 6 hours ago

And yet, if you make it like I do, there always manages to be one piece that is ice cold while the rest is shockingly hot. Even if you're start with warm ingredients.

Physics does not apply to lasagna.

Also I suck at making lasagna.

LoganDark 4 hours ago | parent [-]

I don't know how you cook your lasagna, but cooking for longer at a lower temperature usually results in more even heating than cooking for less long at a higher temperature. (This is one of the reasons microwaves are so terrible at heating evenly.) If you're not already, that may help.

(I also imagine using the circulation in a convection oven might help as well. Also, preheating your oven! Even if it's a toaster oven.)

esseph 4 hours ago | parent [-]

Microwave tip:

Use the power button to select a lower power level, and cook the food for longer.

dataflow 2 hours ago | parent | next [-]

Only works adequately if your microwave is the rarer kind that actually lowers the power (inverter), instead of just switching between 100% and 0% repeatedly.

vel0city 2 hours ago | parent [-]

I don't have the fancier inverter style. Setting a power level still works pretty well even though flawed. Drawing the overall cooking time still manages to get things more evenly heated in the end when you give the food time to distribute the heat throughout the food.

Cooking food for 2 minutes at 50% power gives a noticeable difference in average temperature compared to cooking food for 1 minute at 100% power and waiting a minute.

And I don't always know what it decides to do as far as turning the magnetron on and off on its sensor modes, but it'll spend a while doing automated reheat and potatoes and what not and it'll be dang near perfect every time.

Don't get me wrong I'd love an inverter microwave, truly a better option. But its not like the duty cycle process has no impact.

chongli an hour ago | parent [-]

It's funny, because the inverter microwave is actually cheaper to build nowadays. It uses a small switching power supply to generate the needed voltage to run the magnetron at different power levels. The older style duty cycle microwaves use a huge transformer to generate the high voltage, which makes them way heavier and more expensive due to all that copper.

goopypoop 3 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

toroidal lasagne microwaves better

stavros 3 hours ago | parent [-]

Spotted the Brit.

goopypoop 14 minutes ago | parent [-]

u wot m8