The problem is basically the physics of microwaves. :nerd: :doctor:
They don't work by heating things other than water (it emits, you've guessed it, microwaves at a set frequency to hea up water), so that's why when you microwave those powder soups (that are always skanky other than the mushroom flavour) the mug is only heated by conduction and convection from the soup.
So, be careful when using microwaves!
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I can't say I have got 2nd degree burns of cheese, but I have nearly blown stuff up. And fats and oils (same thing actually - it depend only on the temperature). The fatty acids are long chains of carbon surrounded by hydrogen, except that some times the carbon atoms screw two hydrogens and form a double bond. Saturated fats are where the whole thing has no double bonds. Unsaturated fats are when there are double bonds, and transfats are when there double bonds on each side. What makes the difference between the fatty acids the lard used in your pastry and hydrocarbons is that there is an oxygen at one end. Hydrocarbons (natural gas, bitumen, naptha etc) are not formed in the presence of oxygen. If they were, there would be a damn good chance of having a load of vegetable oil under the sea
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