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  • There are resonate standing waves inside the microwave. A microwave works at 2.4 GHz. The wave length of 2.4 GHz is 4.92 inches or just under 12.6 centimeters. This is a sinusoidal wave, so half of that wavelength distance is in the trough and half is in the hump of the waveform. These high frequency photons are bouncing around in a Faraday cage made of metal. Their pattern inside the metal box is fixed. The magnetron is off to one side and emitting the radio light from a fix position. As the waves of light bounce around inside, they tend to align into standing wave patterns. Some of the waves cancel out while others work together to amplify little extra energetic spots.

    If part of your food is effectively stationary, like at the turntable center of rotation, there is a chance that a dead spot in the radio light wave pattern will form in that region and will not transfer energy to the food. The more the food is offset, the more it should cross points of radio light. So it is always more effective to offset the dish as much as possible.

    • If the bowl you are heating is smaller than the radius of the microwave's glass-platter, then no problem, you can offset it to touch the outside of the platter and miss the centrepoint.

      If the bowl is larger than the radius, I usually heat for half the time with one side of the bowl touching the outside of the platter, then slide the bowl to touch the opposite side of the platter, and then heat for the other half the cook time.

      Even heat dispersion generally.

  • My guess is that the edge or center is relative to the design of individual units, but after starting using the edge it seems to be more even so I've kept with it because the level of effort is basically zero.

    Doing lower power for longer has far more impact on even heating if you aren't making something that needs max power like popcorn.

    • Doing lower power for longer has far more impact on even heating

      This! It took me forever to suppress my impatience enough to learn that, but it's been life changing.

  • This varies by microwave as not all microwaves perform the same way, but in my case, for more even heating there are benefits to placing the food just off-center. When the food is placed in the center it doesn't heat as evenly, which is to do with standing waves forming inside the microwave, which leads to hot and cold spots.

  • I've seen the best results when I stack or pile food around in a doughnut shape, and center the hole of the donut shape on the turntable.

  • The cold spots are kinda dependent on the internals of the microwave, so the only real way to know what works for you is to experiment, since even microwaves of the same make and model can have different cold spots.

  • In my newish place there is a built in microwave without rotating plate. Do modern microwave ovens use technological innovations to spread out the waves somehow clever or is it just a stupid modern microwave?

    • Those are actually the better microwaves. They use a rotating piece of metal to scatter the microwaves across the chamber, offering a better saturation than the regular turn table variants.

26 comments