A number of non-profit organizations will accept a microwave oven as a donation. Additionally, some repair shops will accept, but that isn't usual. Metal recyclers will accept them in some locations, and there are city, county and state organizations that can assist a citizen with a small appliance disposal issue. (The crew that issues a bill for refuse collection is supposed to know this stuff.) A bit of a web search is in order, but call a local charitable group first. They are probably the best bet, though by no means are they the only one. Be smart about this one. Don't our landfills have enough stuff in them? Good luck.
Set the time and hit start! Presto!
you put your food in the microwave and then you add the time you would like to cook your food for. it doesn't take as long as a regular of so start low.
yes or no
You can't. Only if it's a microwave-oven
The use of a microwave oven is to cook food or heat it quickly and efficiently using radiation.
I would use a microwave oven, it's a bit risky in a gas oven.
No - you will get food poisoning - do not heat quiche in a microwave oven - use a conventional oven & heat thoroughly
An oven as it does not use radiation to cook food.
no
Your microwave oven has "combination" features, most likely a combination of microwave and convection cooking. Consult the user manual for your specific oven to find out how to use these features.
In a gas oven, yes. But NOT in a microwave.
Microwave oven is used to create microwave radiation of suitable freq....
It depends, if you need it done fast use the microwave, if you need it slow cooked use the mini oven.
A cooker, an oven a microwave oven, a stove, a fire, a BBQ.
They work relatively well although it is easier to use just a microwave or just an oven.