How to Boil Water with Electric JUG!

Posted by admin on June 1st, 2010 and filed under boil water electric | No Comments »

How to Boil water with a electric jug! so easy i could cry. http://directorzone.cyberlink.com/video/29824

Duration : 0:1:4

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Can you boil water for Pasta, Hard Boiled Eggs, etc. in an Electric Roaster? If so, how?

Posted by admin on May 31st, 2010 and filed under boil water electric | 1 Comment »


Yes, you can. You put the water in and turn it on. It will boil after some time. The amount of water will vary, I found some sites that recommend not filling the roaster more than 1/3 or 1/2 full.

For hard cooked eggs, since it will take a long time for the water to come to a boil (one site said 50 minutes), you should use the ‘boiling water start’ method. Lower the room-temperature eggs into the boiling water, and time 12 to 15 minutes, depending on the size of your eggs.

For pasta, there will be a large volume of water in the pan even with just 2 or 3 or 4 inches of water in there. Depending on the amount of pasta you’ll be preparing, as long as the pasta is covered by some water, it should be fine, and should take roughly the same time as on the stove (see package directions to tell how long to cook the shape you’re using).

During both of these cooking processes, keep the lid on as much as possible to hold in heat and keep the water boiling.

Electric Stove Erlenmeyer Flask Boiling Yeast Starter

Posted by admin on May 28th, 2010 and filed under boil water electric | 1 Comment »

Boiling 2000mL+ of water on “old fashioned” electric stove top. This was a trial run for yeast starters. It is generally recommended not to boil with Erlenmeyer flasks on an electric stove. It appears it is possible with a burner plate to dissipate heat although either the flask or the plate or both are not flat because there was only a circle of contact between the flask and the plate. It boiled for over 1/2 an hour which is twice as long as you need to boil a yeast starter without cracking or exploding. Success!

Duration : 0:0:31

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What it the cheapest way to boil water? On a stove,electric kettle,in a microwave or what? for a cup or pint .

Posted by admin on May 28th, 2010 and filed under boil water electric | 13 Comments »


Complicated question, considering it’s so simple. You can look up gas and/or electric rates in your area, in case the stove is gas. My take is that microwaving in a glass measuring cup heats up mostly the water and to some degree, the cup. Boiling water on a stove heats up the water, the pan, and half the kitchen. On that basis I’d pick the microwave.

Why does my electric stove smoke when I boil water?

Posted by admin on May 25th, 2010 and filed under boil water electric | 5 Comments »

I’ve never had a problem with this using a gas stove, but now I’ve moved to an apartment, and it has an electric stove. Any advice about this is appreciated. Thanks.

You have to make sure your electric parts that you set your pan on is clean, nothing can be on them. and make sure the bottom of your pans are grease free and completely dry. I had that problem when I went from gas to electric, always clean them after every use.

RC How-To: Unglue Tires, with acetone

Posted by admin on May 24th, 2010 and filed under boil water electric | 18 Comments »

The easiest way to remove the tires from your RC’s wheels so that you can reuse either or both. No baked rubber smell to overwhelm your house, no dangerous handling of foams soaked with boiling water. Acetone does all the work for ya! Questions or comments? Visit my forums at http://www.UltimateRC.com/

Duration : 0:9:54

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Is it cheaper to boil a kettle of water, by gas or electric?

Posted by admin on May 22nd, 2010 and filed under boil water electric | 16 Comments »

I prefer to boil my water, for making a pot of tea, by using a kettle on the gas ring of my cooker. I also own an electric kettle, which my husband prefers to use, if he is making the tea. I was wondering which is the cheaper option and kinder to the environment?

I have in fact done this by reading the meters each time and seeing how much it cost to boil the water. Gas worked out cheaper

Rikki’s Powers – Scandolous

Posted by admin on May 19th, 2010 and filed under boil water electric | 22 Comments »

enjoy! :D emma is next,

Rikki’s Powers Level 1:
he best known people on H2O to have this power are Rikki Chadwick and Julia. This is the ability to boil water. It can also be used to heat water. Rikki first discovered her power at the JuiceNet Cafe with Lewis. She and Lewis were having a disagreement and Rikki balled up her fist in frustration at the same time heating up a drink the waitress had brought. This is the most dangerous power of the three original ones.

The hand movement for this power is a closing/closed fist. This may symbolize pressure, tension and the amount of heat need to boil water.

If the mermaid with this power was in the moon pool during the planetary alignment, it would be enhanced, so the owner can now summon lightning, and create fire. It’s possible that Julia couldn’t do this, on the contrary of Rikki.

Rikki’s Powers Upgraded Level 2:
Electrokinesis is the particle or fluid transport produced by an electric field acting on a fluid having a net mobile charge. (See -kinesis for explanation and further uses of the kinesis suffix.) Electrokinesis was first observed by Reuss in 1809 and has been studied extensively since the 19th century. Such study is known as electrohydrodynamics or electrokinetics, and was documented by Thomas Townsend Brown in 1921. It was later refined in scientific terms during the 1930s in conjunction with Dr. Paul Alfred Biefeld. The flow rate in such a mechanism is linear in the electric field. Electrokinesis is of considerable practical importance in microfluidics, since it offers a way to manipulate and convey fluids in microsystems using only electric fields, with no moving parts.

The force acting on the fluid, is given by the equation:

Rikki’s Powers Level 3 upgrade:
Pyrokinesis, derived from the Greek words ??? (pûr, meaning “fire, lightning”) and ??????? (kínesis, meaning “motion”), was the name, coined by horror novelist Stephen King for the ability to create or to control fire with the mind that he gave to the protagonist Charlie McGee in Firestarter. Critic S.T. Joshi describes it as a “singularly unfortunate coinage”.[1]

Pyrokinesis is not accepted as a paranormal phenomenon. It is, however, a trope in fiction, with numerous examples in films, books, and television series. These include the episode “Fire” from The X-Files, the Beyond Reality episode “Enemy in Our Midst”, the One Step Beyond episode “The Burning Girl” and the Fringe episode “The Road Not Taken”. Several such works, such as “The Burning Girl” pre-date Firestarter, and have direct parallels with King’s work. (King himself wrote that “Firestarter has numerous science fiction antecedents”.) It is King, however, that first named the idea “pyrokinesis”, this name not occurring in prior works.[2][3]

Parapsychologists explain pyrokinetic powers as being the ability to excite an object’s atoms, increasing their thermal energy until they ignite. Gresh and Weinberg state that this is “vaguely possible”, but characterize it as “generally the stuff of comic books”, such as Marvel Comics’ Human Torch and Pyro. Without some form of electromechanical device, such as a device to release several of the compounds that do spontaneously ignite upon contact with the oxygen in air (such as silane, a pyrophoric gas, or rubidium), or some form of triggering device located at the source of the fire, there is no scientifically known method for the brain to trigger explosions and fires at a distance.[4]

Pyrokinesis is also explored in the video game Psychonauts. In this game a boy called Raz develops a psionic power that enables him to make objects ignite.

In the case of A.W. Underwood, a 19th-century African-American who achieved minor celebrity with the purported ability to set items ablaze, scientists suggested concealed pieces of phosphorus may have instead been responsible. White phosphorus ignites in air at about 30°C; as this is slightly below body temperature, the phosphorus could be readily ignited by breath or rubbing.[5]

Duration : 0:3:9

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What would use more electricity using an electric kettle or the electric stove to boil water?

Posted by admin on May 18th, 2010 and filed under boil water electric | 3 Comments »


Stove. But that also depends on wattage.

I want to get a Electric Kettle to boil water, milk, etc. where can I get it in Hyderabad,India?

Posted by admin on May 15th, 2010 and filed under boil water electric | 3 Comments »

I want to get a Electric Kettle to boil water, milk, etc. where can I get it in Hyderabad,India

Visit Mahavir Enterprises at Boggula Kunta… U vl get it. Refer Yellow pages for telephone No.