Microwave ovens

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JamesAC

Senior Member
Location
London
I need one.
I don't know anything about them.

Just my wife and I, a "ready meal" thing a few times a week (we also do "proper" cooking a few times a week, too)

Any advice?

Cheers
 

BrumJim

Forum Stalwart (won't take the hint and leave...)
Ones with buttons that you press last longer than ones with dials that you turn.

I'm also assuming that they all have the same gubbins on the inside, just a different look on the outside.

Hence you are better off with a cheaper own-store version than a trustworthy household name. Same parts, different price.
 

4F

Active member of Helmets Are Sh*t Lobby
Location
Suffolk.
Yes, don't bother with one. I would rather rustle an omlette up or somthing other equally as quick than attempt to eat a "ready meal"

We had a microwave years ago and I have to say would not have one again as it used to give very dissapointing results.
 

tyred

Squire
Location
Ireland
Buy the cheapest you can find. It will last just as long as the most expensive and will be simpler and esier to use.
 
U

User482

Guest
Can't ready meals be heated up in a normal oven?

Anyway, I do have a microwave. It gets used for defrosting (when I've forgotten to take something out of the freezer) and heating up milk for Mrs R's hot chocolate. It also has a combi-oven built in, which is more energy efficient than the main oven.
 

Fnaar

Smutmaster General
Location
Thumberland
Uncle Mort said:
If you are going to be using a microwave for proper cooking I recommend you beg, steal, or borrow a copy of "The Microwave Gourmet" by Barbara Kafka. It's an astonishingly good cookbook and very importantly it's not afraid of telling what you should definitely not try and cook in a microwave. It's out of print though I presume.

Kafka-esque cooking... :blush:
 
U

User482

Guest
Uncle Mort said:
It's much more energy efficient to use a microwave though. Once you've accounted for the manufacturing footprint of course.

True, but I wouldn't bother buying one just for the occasional ready meal.
 

andyfromotley

New Member
tyred said:
Buy the cheapest you can find. It will last just as long as the most expensive and will be simpler and esier to use.

+1

Also you can put live ants in the microwave for as long as you like. They come out alive. (they 'hide' in the gaps between the microwaves).
 

threebikesmcginty

Corn Fed Hick...
Location
...on the slake
Get a half price one, that's what we did - they're less money apparently!

Ours gets used for heating up baked beans and erm........

Never ever ever cook a potato in it and call it a baked potato or I'll come round and smash it with a sledgehammer!
 

Speicher

Vice Admiral
Moderator
I have a combi one. With convection, grill etc.

The pre-programmed settings are useful. Jacket potatoes done on a combination of convection and microwave are quick, fifteen minutes for two large ones, and you get a crispy skin. Also do porridge in it, and small items like fish in breadcrumbs instead of putting on the big oven. I only have a single oven on the "main" cooker, so an extra oven is very useful.

Also does crumpets - lovely in convection mode, baked through and very crispy. I have had my Panasonic "nearly top of the range one" now for ten years. Not sure how many cheaper ones would last that long.
 
U

User482

Guest
Speicher said:
I have a combi one. With convection, grill etc.

The pre-programmed settings are useful. Jacket potatoes done on a combination of convection and microwave are quick, fifteen minutes for two large ones, and you get a crispy skin. Also do porridge in it, and small items like fish in breadcrumbs instead of putting on the big oven. I only have a single oven on the "main" cooker, so an extra oven is very useful.

Also does crumpets - lovely in convection mode, baked through and very crispy. I have had my Panasonic "nearly top of the range one" now for ten years. Not sure how many cheaper ones would last that long.

I have a Panasonic too. I use it mainly for the convection oven - more efficient than my main oven.

I bought it 10 years ago secondhand and it must have been at least 10 years old then. When it eventually dies I'll get another Panasonic - one every 20 years seems pretty good going to me.
 

Speicher

Vice Admiral
Moderator
User482 said:
I have a Panasonic too. I use it mainly for the convection oven - more efficient than my main oven.

I bought it 10 years ago secondhand and it must have been at least 10 years old then. When it eventually dies I'll get another Panasonic - one every 20 years seems pretty good going to me.

I think I can confidently say that my automatic washing machine is older that yours - twenty nine years! :blush:
 
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