@@SubieTrei thanks. I do it for my wife when she isn't feeling well. I use the airfryer because it's faster than the oven, but when it's wrapped in foil you can cook it at 300-400 degrees. If you use a air fryer as well, just do it in 5min increments until you are happy with it and then next time you can do it for the full length. Also, you may want to flip it halfway through using the air fryer. Just make sure you keep an eye on it.
You can also use a loaf tin and grease proof paper to heat lavender/wheat/lava bag I the oven. Wrap the bag in grease proof paper fold in half or to fit the tin. The paper protects against scorching and the ceramic or metal loaf tin conducts the heat so only it takes 7or 8 minutes to heat the bag evenly. Putting the tin in the oven before putting the bag in the oven would probably be hotter and/or quicker
A student used an air fryer to heat a heating pad at the University where I work, and caused a fire. Security intervened and put it out within 2 to 3 minutes, otherwise it would have been a very serious incident.
Tip! When you're talking degrees. Please don't assume that we know whether you're talking about celsius or farenheit. I don't know where you live, despite your accent. Thanks.
Love your information, but some false info... With rice it does not mold or smell of you are heating correctly and using the correct Rice... I only use jasime rice and I never apply moisture directly to the bags so they don't mold lol They also should all have removable covers, rice absorbs moisture and dries out again does not stay wet so unless you are soaking it in water it will never mold.. It's rice.. However I have seen sand mold... So this is interesting with lava sand.. Totally appreciate where you are coming from but don't add moisture to your rice heating pad, but in the microwave you should have a cup of water inside so you don't burn or catch fire to whatever bag you use, doesn't matter what you are heating heating because there is a risk of the fabric catching fire.. Next question is where can we buy this lava sand so we can make our own for us diy people haha
Thanks for your comment. There is moisture in the air and all food can spoil so it can mold eventually. In some of my upcoming videos, I am going to be showing this with a microscope. Rice does work but even if it is new rice it still smells funny. You can buy lava sand here: lavasand.com. Lava sand is an amazing natural filler for heating pads that gives a fantastic heating pad experience.
this could also be affected by how arid your climate is. I moved from a humid area to an arid area, and I noticed my food stays good several days longer sitting out! Gotta water them houseplants more often though lol
For the oven and the airfryer you can wrap the hot pad in aluminum foil and use much higher temperatures to heat it faster.
Do you reuse the tin foil?
@@SubieTrei Yes
@@OneRedRoad that's a great idea, i have some of that thicker bbq foil from Dollarama I'll give it a try 😊
@@SubieTrei thanks. I do it for my wife when she isn't feeling well. I use the airfryer because it's faster than the oven, but when it's wrapped in foil you can cook it at 300-400 degrees. If you use a air fryer as well, just do it in 5min increments until you are happy with it and then next time you can do it for the full length. Also, you may want to flip it halfway through using the air fryer. Just make sure you keep an eye on it.
Hi from the UK 🇬🇧 You have saved our conundrum of how to heat our microwave beanie now we've got rid of our microwave 😊
You can also use a loaf tin and grease proof paper to heat lavender/wheat/lava bag I the oven. Wrap the bag in grease proof paper fold in half or to fit the tin.
The paper protects against scorching and the ceramic or metal loaf tin conducts the heat so only it takes 7or 8 minutes to heat the bag evenly.
Putting the tin in the oven before putting the bag in the oven would probably be hotter and/or quicker
Love these ideas!!
A student used an air fryer to heat a heating pad at the University where I work, and caused a fire. Security intervened and put it out within 2 to 3 minutes, otherwise it would have been a very serious incident.
Obviously use caution and common sense.
Common sense would be don’t do it. Like ffs lol
For the instant pot, do you set it for "steam" and the pressure released?
I just heated it for 5 min on a normal cook setting
Tip! When you're talking degrees. Please don't assume that we know whether you're talking about celsius or farenheit. I don't know where you live, despite your accent. Thanks.
He said Fahrenheit in the beginning
Thats awesome! Where do you find lava sand? I made one from sand that I think is lava sand.
Lava sand is pretty rare. You can only find it on black sand beaches. We mine ours on an ancient dried up lava sand beach that is now a desert.
lavahq.com/collections/lava-sand
Love your information, but some false info... With rice it does not mold or smell of you are heating correctly and using the correct Rice... I only use jasime rice and I never apply moisture directly to the bags so they don't mold lol
They also should all have removable covers, rice absorbs moisture and dries out again does not stay wet so unless you are soaking it in water it will never mold.. It's rice.. However I have seen sand mold... So this is interesting with lava sand..
Totally appreciate where you are coming from but don't add moisture to your rice heating pad,
but in the microwave you should have a cup of water inside so you don't burn or catch fire to whatever bag you use, doesn't matter what you are heating heating because there is a risk of the fabric catching fire..
Next question is
where can we buy this lava sand so we can make our own for us diy people haha
Thanks for your comment. There is moisture in the air and all food can spoil so it can mold eventually. In some of my upcoming videos, I am going to be showing this with a microscope. Rice does work but even if it is new rice it still smells funny. You can buy lava sand here: lavasand.com. Lava sand is an amazing natural filler for heating pads that gives a fantastic heating pad experience.
@@lavayoo thank you 😊 can't wait for your uploads
this could also be affected by how arid your climate is. I moved from a humid area to an arid area, and I noticed my food stays good several days longer sitting out! Gotta water them houseplants more often though lol