How do make sure my Tendies cook evenly? Whenever I cook them they always stay frozen in the middl, and when I am hunger, if they cook through, they are too hot to eat immediate
Microwave them for half time then finish in the oven
>>7480302
I am not allowed to use oven
>>7480304
Then you're kind of fucked, aren't you?
>>7480559
You shouldn't be putting hamsters in the microwave either. How are you even allowed to have one if you're this retarded?
>>7480304
>>7480595
>>7480603
>taking the bait
>>7480629
You cook them hot, and ACTUALLY wait a minute or two to cool down. You instant self-gratification fuck.
And it is bait. And I took it twice.
>>7480637
Sometimes if you cook them hot too much, they get hard on outside, is my microwave broken? I can probably have it run with door open to vent extra heat
>>7480629
come on.
>>7480646
>is my microwave broken? I
No, you're overcooking them. Also don't expect perfection with microwaved food. If you want good tenders then deep fry them.
> I can probably have it run with door open to vent extra heat
1) Lol.
2) That won't help; microwaves don't heat via radiation or convection, they cook by directly vibrating the water molecules in the food.
3) Your microwave already has a vent in it. You can hear the fan running when the microwave runs.
>>7480650
I may not be the sharpest pen in toolbox, but I can tell when I'm made fun of
>>7480656
what is a good time to cook them? If I try 1:30, the are froze, If I do 6:00, they are hard
Maybe if I put them in water, more water will get hot and cook them in less time, but not so much where they get hardened
>>7480656
>microwaves cook by vibrating water molecules
>>7480667
http://www.schoolphysics.co.uk/age16-19/Wave%2520properties/Wave%20properties/text/Microwave_ovens/index.html
preheat your oven
>>7480685
The article isn't too wrong, but it isn't just water molecules, it's all molecules with a dipole moment that are involved in heating up.