mathsnerd: (coffee addict)
[personal profile] mathsnerd posting in [community profile] cookability
Hello all!

I'm hoping to pick to your collective brains in the hopes that someone has the answer to this question. I have recently acquired a 20L microwave/grill/convection oven and am now facing the cold hard truth that I don't know how to use it other than re-heating things. (Oops.)

The weather here in Germany is getting colder, and I am craving PASTA! Hence, my question to you all: how can I cook pasta in a microwave? What kind of dishes/equipment do I need to purchase? (I have, quite literally, nothing.) Are some sorts of pasta going to be harder than others? I do own an electric hot water cooker, so I can boil water ahead of time, if that helps.

In other important information, I share a tiny room, have next to no storage space, have almost no prep space, have a sink, share a tiny under-the-counter-fridge, do NOT have a freezer, have two hot plates but do not use them (hence the microwave/oven) due to fear of burns, do not currently have any storage containers but can get some when I get cooking dishes/equipment if it's recommended.

I am disabled, hence the not cooking on hot plates, use crutches and hand/arm braces, and have reduced motor skills in my hands/arms/legs. Spoons vary wildly by day and time of day.

I need to eat more and eat warm food. I turn to you in hopes of being able to start having pasta. If I can cook pasta, I can make a batch and refrigerate it, and then re-heat it and make sauces or dress it as my stomach permits (I have weird food things due to a chronic illness) and a lot of things would be better. At least one of my closer friends and her mother would stop bitching (they bought the microwave).

I thank you all in advance and look forward to being able to have pasta! X-posted to [community profile] boilingwater

Date: 2010-09-10 02:49 am (UTC)
shopfront: Source: Teen Wolf. Close up of Lydia smiling with her chin raised. (Default)
From: [personal profile] shopfront
I've never used one, but I understand that convection ovens can be used for recipes created for regular ovens by adjusting the temperature/cooking time. If no-one pops up with actual experience on the subject, this looks fairly comprehensive. This would probably extend your pasta capabilities to pasta bakes and lasagnes, both of which reheat really well and make excellent cold weather food. See if there are 'oven-ready' lasagne/pasta options (the packaging usually specifies that the pasta sheets don't need to be boiled before baking, you can just pop them straight into the lasagne from the packet while they're still dry) in your local stores, I often use them for lasagne when I'm low on spoons. I also don't worry about the crazy layering many people like to do with lasagne and just do one or two thicker layers, to make it more manageable.

Pasta bake style dishes might also help if you find you have to fuss a little to get the pasta as well cooked with the microwave as you would on the stove. You could pre-cook a batch, and then when you re-do it in smaller portions for the bake style recipe it'd finish cooking the pasta for you. The grill setting on your oven would also probably warm/crisp a pasta bake and melt any cheese on top quite nicely, for a texture that's less microwave-y.

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