sht yeah!
When preparing to preserve porcelain tableware first carefully hand wash the tableware in warm soapy water. Avoid shocking the porcelain with extreme hot or cold temperatures. Don't ever put it in the microwave to reheat food.
In general, non-microwave-safe cookware is non-microwave-safe not because of any toxic compounds or fumes the cookware may emit during cooking, but because the material used to make the pot cannot withstand the high temperatures caused by the microwaves. If you've ever microwaved an antique dish or plate, for example, you know it can get really hot. Over time, this weakens many pieces, and the piece (bowl, cup, plate, whatever) will crack sooner than if you'd not used it in the microwave. Plus, it'll burn you when you take it out of the microwave. In addition, dishware with metallic trim (gold or platinum) can emit sparks in the trim area, which is not good for both the plate and the microwave oven itself.
It simply is the dish one prefers.
microwave
No metal object should be used in a microwave.
yes
NO!!! Never ever place metallic items into a microwave, put the frosting into a plastic bowl which is safe if you need to microwave the frosting, but never place metallic objects in a microwave, it can lead to the microwave exploding and serious injuries to the user
1: Knock Knock. 2:Who's there. 1:Crack 2: Crack who? 1: It wasn't a joke. Crack isn't funny - the end.
The C-Max Microwave Oven has 1200 watts of power which I believe is the most power of any microwave oven.
Water expands when frozen thus widening the crack ever deeper and splits the asphalt's crack even more than before .
Microwave ovens don't heat up vessels if they're microwave proof. Usually the information relating to their microwave capability will be found on the base of the vessels. If you use a vessel which isn't microwave proof it will heat up, very possibly dangerously so: it will be likely to crack or explode. To test for microwave proofing, if there's no information on your vessel, put the item into your microwave with a vessel you know to be microwave proof - maybe a coffee mug. Fill it with water; this will help protect your oven; its magnetron won't cope well with unsuitable vessels . Heat for half a minute. At the end of that time your mug of water will have heated, but your untested vessel will also have become hot. If this happens, never, ever use that vessel in a microwave oven; you risk at best the thing cracking open and making a heck of a mess of your oven interior and at worst might cause injury to someone removing it from the oven.
Yes, of course he is! Haven't any of you ever seen him before? Many ppl r on crack. Including Lauren and Stephanie. toodles!