The History of the Microwave Oven

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  • Опубликовано: 31 дек 2022
  • Weird History Food is going to radiate you with the history of the Microwave Oven.The microwave was invented accidentally by an engineer named Percy Spencer, who was leading a defense radar project. His invention would change the way Americans would eat forever. Peel off the plastic lid and set it on high for 14 minutes, and let's get micro-wavin'
    #microwave #foodhistory #weirdhistoryfood
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Комментарии • 486

  • @ztl2505
    @ztl2505 Год назад +96

    Not owning a microwave feels right up there with not owning a TV in terms of things people like to get weirdly smug about. It’s just a tool, you can use it to make crappy frozen dinners or help in preparing healthy meals.

    • @inyrui
      @inyrui Год назад +4

      I use mine to reheat my coffee more than anything haha

    • @alukuhito
      @alukuhito Год назад +6

      Yes. My family was slow to get one. I felt jealous of all my friends and classmates. When we finally got one, it was so fun.

    • @MildMisanthropeMaybeMassive
      @MildMisanthropeMaybeMassive Год назад +3

      Or not being on social media.

    • @scottdoesntmatter4409
      @scottdoesntmatter4409 9 месяцев назад +4

      actually, frozen meals tend to have more nutrients due to how vegetables are prepared. Also, a microwave oven is a great way to save on food, since you don't need to toss anything out, you can just heat it up later.

  • @MeowO_O
    @MeowO_O Год назад +173

    Sales slowly going into decline since 2006 doesn't mean its popularity is going anywhere.
    It's just simply because these appliances literally don't break that easily and people just keep their old ones for longer.

    • @matthew6414
      @matthew6414 Год назад +11

      Oh yeah at my work they have a 1984 and a 1998 Kenmore microwave and the light still works!

    • @arthas640
      @arthas640 Год назад +6

      True. People used to be pretty rough on them, we didnt used to have microwave safe plastics, many things that looked non metallic like some mugs and cups sometimes used to have a little metal in them and it could wear out the magnotron, and many microwave meals used to leak or splatter and that all meant that old microwaves would get nasty pretty fast. Age 3-15 we went through 3 microwaves but we got a new good quality microwave at age 15 and my dad still has it more than a decade later, so that's roughly 1 microwave every 5 years to one every 10-15 years just since the 90s.

    • @neoasura
      @neoasura Год назад +3

      THis is true, I bought my first microwave in 2006 actually when I got my own place, and it's still going strong today 16 years later.

    • @Mrshoujo
      @Mrshoujo Год назад

      My mom's Emerson microwave would blow a fuse every few years. It finally burned up while microwaving popcorn one day.

    • @dickmelsonlupot7697
      @dickmelsonlupot7697 Год назад

      my family's first microwave was bought 16 years ago when I was 12.
      Hell, it's even still running to this day but my parents replaced it with a new one simply because it has gotten dirty and some rust are visible in some metal parts but the thing still works and the light also still shines like it was nothing.

  • @samwill7259
    @samwill7259 Год назад +97

    A microwave can't exactly do you any harm unless you're sitting in it
    In which case you sorta brought that on yourself.

    • @BakedRBeans
      @BakedRBeans Год назад +4

      Remember the TV show TAXI? Louie (Danny DeVito) said," I heard about a guy who got sterilized by one of these, but he must have done this..." Louie jumped up on the counter, and put the microwave between his legs! so funny!

    • @josephgaviota
      @josephgaviota Год назад

      Speaking of which, my mom always told us boys to face _away_ from the microwave while in use.

    • @samwill7259
      @samwill7259 Год назад +3

      @@josephgaviota Remember life back before we could just google things?
      Yea...didn't it kinda suck in a lot of ways?

    • @neoasura
      @neoasura Год назад

      @@josephgaviota I still do that out of habit.

    • @dickmelsonlupot7697
      @dickmelsonlupot7697 Год назад

      my question would be......how the fckkk do you fit inside a tabletop microwave?
      Hell, even if somehow you got inside of it like say you shrank to the size of an ant or something, as long as you're running around and not just standing in place, you'd actually be just fine.
      You can prove this by placing an ant inside the microwave. The little fckkkrrr won't explode and just be running around wondering what's happening.

  • @adamtschmidt4303
    @adamtschmidt4303 Год назад +44

    Ladies and gentlemen this man was self taught. With only a fifth grade education he has touched everyone's lives. I think a case study on his learning process would help our education system.

    • @giraffesinc.2193
      @giraffesinc.2193 Год назад +2

      Absolutely!

    • @robstanley903
      @robstanley903 Год назад +7

      Americans have spent Billions educating the mind and body, but not educating the Spirit of man.

    • @OriginalBongoliath
      @OriginalBongoliath Год назад +10

      This isn't something you can learn. You either have the drive to grind and innovate or you don't regardless of class or circumstance.

    • @Neb_Raska
      @Neb_Raska Год назад +1

      @@robstanley903 Amen, brother.

    • @jasondashney
      @jasondashney Год назад +6

      Our education system specifically this from happening again. The campaign, to make sure that people associate degrees with intelligence and competence was very effective. These days many jobs require you to have a bachelors degree even if it's unrelated to the job. Employers, don't care if you are an intelligent person who is capable. They care that you took off the boxes as far as education goes. It's sad. You can't get any job these days without some form of formal education. Advertising, construction, all kinds of different jobs now require you to kiss up to gatekeepers.

  • @josephgaviota
    @josephgaviota Год назад +96

    I think it was in the late '70s my mom (always an early adopter) got a microwave.
    After she passed, I inherited it, and took it to my apartment. That thing weighed a TON (well, not a ton, but amazingly HEAVY).
    Modern microwaves are extremely light, easily carried by one person. Mom's was so heavy, I almost had to call a friend for help moving it.
    That microwave lasted into the mid 1990s, when it finally gave way.

    • @brammachu725
      @brammachu725 Год назад +3

      Kudos for keeping the thing for so long

    • @charlierichardson352
      @charlierichardson352 Год назад +5

      I just bought a new over the range microwave. When the guy was installing it, he needed my help to lift it up and hook it onto the mounts. They’re not all that light these days.

    • @arthas640
      @arthas640 Год назад +7

      Same with my dads stepmom. She had the same microwave from the late 60s/early 70s until she died around 2016 and the thing was the same size and weight as one of those in-wall ovens. I once joked with my dad that it was probably made from old Sherman tanks with the heavy steel construction of the thing.

    • @_will795
      @_will795 Год назад +7

      For sure. My grandma had one for well over 30 years. Thing lasted forever. Back when they used to make stuff to last

    • @josephgaviota
      @josephgaviota Год назад +4

      @@_will795 _Back when they used to make stuff to last_
      💯 🎯

  • @Jakek200
    @Jakek200 Год назад +11

    Not sure if a decline in sales necessarily can be blamed on 'healthier eating', it could be down to most everyone who wants one already having one and the sales are just for replacement models when old ones break.

    • @bruceh4180
      @bruceh4180 6 месяцев назад

      👍was looking for this comment.
      That would be like saying nobody buys cell phones anymore.

  • @DPSFSU
    @DPSFSU Год назад +61

    The exact reason why you should always add a little water to whatever you're reheating in the microwave.

    • @KaneshaDi
      @KaneshaDi Год назад +3

      Exactly! I do this very thing when I reheat anything in the microwave, especially leftover meats.

    • @CraftyZanTub
      @CraftyZanTub Год назад +5

      I set a glass of water in the microwave along with whatever I'm nuking, if it isn't coffee. Keeps bread nice and soft.

    • @jamesfry8983
      @jamesfry8983 Год назад +3

      Depends what it is some foods still have enough water left in them, in general it always helps

    • @CraftyZanTub
      @CraftyZanTub Год назад +2

      @@jamesfry8983 Nods

    • @frank234561
      @frank234561 Год назад +5

      Especially leftover takeout fried rice.

  • @bluecrownvic
    @bluecrownvic Год назад +16

    Slight correction at 10:53
    The microwaves barely penetrate into the food. So thick items do not cook from the inside out, they still cook from the outside inward.
    The outside of the food gets hot from the microwaves, but then that heat travels inward like a traditional oven.
    Setting your microwave too high on thicker foods will evaporate the water in the outer layer and leave it with at classic rubbery texture.

    • @lemmonsinmyeyes
      @lemmonsinmyeyes 9 месяцев назад

      THIS! Microwave is a different type of heat. Oven, impingment oven, microwave, deepfry, boil, steam, direct heat etc, are all different methods of transfering energy to food, but they all have different results

  • @rollout1984
    @rollout1984 Год назад +44

    My mom bought a GE microwave sometime in the 80's (it was huge and had wood paneling on the outside). That lasted for about 16 years. We've probably bought ten since then.

    • @crp5591
      @crp5591 Год назад +3

      I still have my Panasonic that I bought in 1994 chugging along! *and it is now Jan '23. Gotta love the black plastic and wood paneling!!

    • @BakedRBeans
      @BakedRBeans Год назад

      @@crp5591 I had one with wood paneling exterior, but don't remember what brand- Sharp, maybe? My Amana was battleship gray, which I hated. I repainted it light almond,and it looked great. But it never worked right.

    • @neoasura
      @neoasura Год назад

      You must be buying cheap brands, I bought mine in 2006 and it's still going strong today 16 years later.

    • @BakedRBeans
      @BakedRBeans Год назад

      @@neoasura The one I am using now is Daewoo, bought it in 2005 and it still works. I think Daewoo (the company) is gone now.

    • @julscatten2640
      @julscatten2640 Год назад +2

      Haha, my mother got her first microwave in 1985, and I distinctly recall getting our first new mike in 1999 to replace it.

  • @NewMessage
    @NewMessage Год назад +11

    I dunno.. someone 'breaking into the Navy' sounds like the plot to a Steven Seagal movie to me.

  • @TacoBellMukbangRequested
    @TacoBellMukbangRequested Год назад +12

    Weird History: Bringer of Histortainment

  • @shalom8858
    @shalom8858 Год назад +12

    Just sitting down to eat my breakfast of microwaved oatmeal and see this in my feed. Thanks Percy! 😂

  • @mattblom3990
    @mattblom3990 Год назад +10

    From a historical perspective, the cavity magnetron used in all small radar systems was the single most important piece of technology in World War II. It was brought to the United States by Britain in a last ditch attempt to give a semi-friendly (at the time) power a technological edge in cases they needed to continue the fight against Germany. The Cavity Magnetron allowed for radar to be smaller and more powerful and then the Americans started making them for everything...Battleship gun rangefinding, anti-aircraft gun aimers, on bombers and night fighters, etc.

  • @PlanktonWhisperer
    @PlanktonWhisperer Год назад +636

    Please never leave us again Mr. Narrator

    • @lolilmu
      @lolilmu Год назад +94

      I prefer Mr. Narrator over Ms. Narrator

    • @shalom8858
      @shalom8858 Год назад +60

      He steps away so we miss and appreciate his glory.

    • @SevenHunnid
      @SevenHunnid Год назад +5

      I’m a regular hood dude doing food reviews on my RUclips channel 😤

    • @sambeck8010
      @sambeck8010 Год назад +49

      For real, she is fine. This guy make the content different.

    • @OhSoNasty
      @OhSoNasty Год назад +16

      @@SevenHunnid that sht lame ASL bro

  • @markmcdonald6039
    @markmcdonald6039 Год назад +25

    One of the greatest inventions of all time in my opinion! It made life a lot more convenient 💯

  • @MarkMeadows90
    @MarkMeadows90 Год назад +43

    My parents bought their first microwave oven in 1988. It was a sturdy Sharp model that we used until the late 90s. My dad kept it in his garage and used it occasionally. They bought a newer Sharp microwave in 1999 and they still use it to this day.

  • @jessicaweaver6728
    @jessicaweaver6728 9 месяцев назад +31

    My GE microwave from 2005 finally crapped out. At first ruclips.net/user/postUgkxO_Bc204MGjxDl87cOKcdgaRhzSqGmv_g I was unsure because I was looking for something with the exact same features. Found it with this one. Interior space cavity was large, but the outside was smaller than my old one. I love the one-button push for 1-6 minutes, and the 30 second add or 30 second start. and MOST IMPORTANTLY, I love how you can adjust the power level during cooking. The reviews said it could not be done, but this marked all the other boxes. and happy to say, it does. I can hit 1 minute start, and change the power level from 10 to 5, 30 seconds in, without interruption. my favorite feature!

  • @markfleser
    @markfleser Год назад +11

    Microwaves DO NOT heat from the inside out. How else you explain that hot pocket with a frozen center?

    • @767corp
      @767corp Год назад +1

      ur microwave sucks , thats how !

    • @m.k.8158
      @m.k.8158 Год назад

      actually, they DO, BUT since the microwaves don't necessarily penetrate the food all the way to the center, this can result in a cold(or even frozen) center.
      The easiest way to solve it:use a lower power setting-this gives the heat(the microwaves may not penetrate, but the heat WILL, eventually) to travel through the food completely.
      Of course, it WILL take longer to heat.

    • @markfleser
      @markfleser Год назад +1

      @@m.k.8158 you literally just proved my point. Show me a reliable source that shows that they cook from the inside out.

    • @m.k.8158
      @m.k.8158 Год назад

      @@markfleser Inside does not necessarily mean the center

    • @markfleser
      @markfleser Год назад +1

      @@m.k.8158 🤣😂🤣 why don’t you google it before you say anything else.

  • @FriscoFlame
    @FriscoFlame Год назад +16

    I LOVE the fact that when they explain how the microwave works, they use a brief clip from Pinky and the Brain where Brain claims that Nobody knows how Microwaves work and the opposing counsel explains the tech. SMALL blink if you miss it, but this 90s kid appreciated it

  • @elizabethramsey9295
    @elizabethramsey9295 Год назад +27

    My parents used to have an Amana Radar range that lasted years. In the late 70s we had a Litton microwave that was big enough to cook a turkey. Our next microwave was a Panasonic that lasted less than two years. Then we bought a cheap off label brand from Home Depot that lasted over 10 years. Sometimes I use our microwave to reheat coffee cake.

    • @josephgaviota
      @josephgaviota Год назад +2

      Mmmmm ... Coffee Cake ...

    • @MarianneKat
      @MarianneKat Год назад +2

      We had that Amana too, revolutionized our after school snacking options. (GenX wasn't allowed to use oven unless parents home.)

    • @bruceh4180
      @bruceh4180 6 месяцев назад

      Yes! Our Radar range had the pull down door like a regular oven. Then the trick was to get the food out without spilling all over the inside of the door. Good times.

  • @justayoutuber1906
    @justayoutuber1906 Год назад +6

    My aunt and uncle had one in the 70s. It was like owning a Tesla in 2012

    • @josephgaviota
      @josephgaviota Год назад

      That's almost true ... they were expensive, and very few people had one.
      My "rich" aunt had a color TV in the mid-'60s, and we kids got a charge out of going to her house to watch cartoons IN COLOR !!

  • @NewMessage
    @NewMessage Год назад +7

    So.. we're just glossing over the zombie hamster, then? A'ight.

  • @RedShiftMusic
    @RedShiftMusic Год назад +10

    10:51 Microwaves do not heat from inside out. They heat from outside in, with a little bit of the inside at the same time. The microwaves are able to penetrate the food slightly, however the outside will always absorb more microwaves than the inside which is why food can be cold in the middle while the outside is hot. The inside gets hot primarily from conductive Heating and not microwaves.

    • @jasondashney
      @jasondashney Год назад

      Yeah that comment he made was insane. Has he used a microwave before? It's like that meme "Beep, beep, beep, here's that hot-ass bowl of cold food you wanted".

  • @forfluf
    @forfluf Год назад +5

    I just made the tastiest microwave cheese omelet, I can't imagine living without a microwave in my kitchen.

  • @giraffesinc.2193
    @giraffesinc.2193 Год назад +9

    I remember my parents buying a 'state of the art' microwave in the early eighties. I remember Dad being so proud that it had a rotating function. Nowadays, every single apartment in SoCal comes equipped with a microwave, even though I use mine to heat water (and that's about it). My parents still use theirs very regularly.

    • @emaarredondo-librarian
      @emaarredondo-librarian Год назад

      Greetings. There's a recent short from the SciShow channel explaining the dangers of heating/boiling water in a microwave. It isn't its best use, the water can overheat without showing it is hotter than boiling, and when you put a spoon or teabag inside, it can explode of sorts.
      Please be careful - and explore other ways to better use that fabulous contraption. Mug cake, maybe? ✌

  • @bethclark9319
    @bethclark9319 Год назад +6

    In the '70s, we had the Arrmana microwave. That thing was heavy, different from what they make today.

  • @zeta_8646
    @zeta_8646 Год назад +3

    The birth of chef Mike

  • @nerd26373
    @nerd26373 Год назад +6

    Happy New Year. God bless you all.

  • @sarawarren673
    @sarawarren673 Год назад +6

    As an X-ray technologist, I absolutely love this! The EM scale is fun to look at

  • @MisterOcclusion
    @MisterOcclusion Год назад +10

    I remember Radio Shack selling microwave leak detectors, and how you were not supposed to stand in front of them. We had one of the Amana countertop models. Built like a tank..

    • @BakedRBeans
      @BakedRBeans Год назад +1

      I still have my Realistic leak detector! My parents bought two of the Amana RadarRange units like the one shown at 9:08.
      Somehow, I wound up owning one of them, and my brother was given the other. Very problematic units.

    • @bakende1103
      @bakende1103 Год назад

      I find that funny. Microwaves have a faraday cage that protects people from the waves.

    • @kevinfreeman3837
      @kevinfreeman3837 11 месяцев назад

      microwaves don't produce ionizing radiation, the cage is prevent other interference in other electronic devices and to keep the heat waves contained

  • @jarekstorm6331
    @jarekstorm6331 Год назад +7

    If your microwave gets dirty inside, boil some water in it and the steam will make it easy to clean. Better yet, if you cover everything you microwave with a paper towel or paper plate, you’ll never have to clean it in the first place!

    • @frank234561
      @frank234561 Год назад +1

      I bought a microwavable plate cover from Amazon. Works wonders.

    • @BakedRBeans
      @BakedRBeans Год назад +1

      @@frank234561 you are correct- the cover has prevented so many messes for me. Exception: A piece of potato, or a bean can explode with such force, it still blows the cover up a little, but the mess is less. It sounds like a firecracker going off.

    • @Animanarchy
      @Animanarchy Год назад +1

      You can microwave vinegar and then wipe down the interior easier than with just water.

  • @amysanchealarz3794
    @amysanchealarz3794 Год назад +5

    Happy New year weird history

  • @aldibargainhaulsandthrifty6393
    @aldibargainhaulsandthrifty6393 Год назад +7

    I love Totino's pizza rolls and Tina's XXL Big Burritos. The microwave has literally saved me hours of meal prep.

    • @anti-canon9277
      @anti-canon9277 Год назад +1

      Sounds just like my roommate, lol. He loves on those things some weeks.

    • @neoasura
      @neoasura Год назад +2

      I always keep a bag of pizza rolls in the freezer just in case I get the munchies. I always spread shredded cheese on them as well and turn them into a melted cheese pizza roll nacho platter.

    • @aldibargainhaulsandthrifty6393
      @aldibargainhaulsandthrifty6393 Год назад

      @@neoasura Yum!! I've got to try that.

  • @jonsmith6496
    @jonsmith6496 Год назад +19

    He’s back!! 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻

  • @BrianM_3rd
    @BrianM_3rd Год назад +36

    Ladies and gentlemen, he's back. The return of the king!

  • @HisVirusness
    @HisVirusness Год назад +2

    Whoever reheats pizza in a microwave either must hate food, or must hate life.

  • @SimuLord
    @SimuLord Год назад +6

    This guy taught himself trigonometry and calculus.
    I barely passed those two subjects in high school and college respectively despite a teacher, a tutor, and a peer group.
    Bona fide genius, indeed.

  • @vertigq5126
    @vertigq5126 Год назад +4

    The history I never knew I needed!

  • @cazzadeathgirl
    @cazzadeathgirl Год назад +7

    I have always liked having a microwave. I reheat food a lot (I often cook too much & have leftovers) since I don't have much kitchen space a microwave oven really let's me be creative in the kitchen. (Oven, microwave, grill & convection oven + microwaves & microwaves +grill)

    • @jerryn.wesner8128
      @jerryn.wesner8128 Год назад

      We got our first when we moved into a new house in 1977. Our son found out what it could and couldn't do, and shouldn't be tried doing, over a week or so before we got home from work. After all that I managed to get my wife to try it, cautiously. She was always a "circle and sniff" learner

  • @lakrids-pibe
    @lakrids-pibe Год назад +5

    Can Squirrels Eat Chocolate?
    Squirrels are another animal that *can* eat chocolate. In fact, they love it, if you carry chocolate around in front of a squirrel there is even a chance that they may steal it. However, you should still be vigilant.
    The chocolate that a squirrel eats should have no more than .5 of a milligram of theobromine. So, if you have dark chocolate, it is best to keep it away from your local squirrel population, as a small 36 grams of dark chocolate with 70% cocoa can actually result in the death of the squirrel.
    So, much like rabbits, it is wise to consider their weight and size before you allow them to indulge in a chocolaty treat.

  • @maryaltshuller885
    @maryaltshuller885 Год назад +5

    Not food-related but please give us a background on the air conditioner - in my humble opinion, the best invention ever! My mom worked in an office from the late 1940s - 1961 and she said their office had air conditioning, which she hated.

    • @josephgaviota
      @josephgaviota Год назад

      Willis Carrier, Printing Industry.

    • @SimuLord
      @SimuLord Год назад +2

      Alec over at Technology Connections has more than you'd ever want to know about air conditioners. Well worth checking out if you're interested in things that move heat places.

  • @justayoutuber1906
    @justayoutuber1906 Год назад +2

    I wish they could reverse the technology for a quick flash freezer.

  • @PasleyAviationPhotography
    @PasleyAviationPhotography Год назад +4

    How can sales decline? I don't know anyone who doesn't own one. When one dies you buy another.

    • @CraftyZanTub
      @CraftyZanTub Год назад +2

      They don't die fast enough.

    • @ztl2505
      @ztl2505 Год назад

      Microwaves don’t die that often in my experience. Sales are probably down because we’ve hit the point where every household has one and there’s no “new customers” anymore , just replacements.

    • @CraftyZanTub
      @CraftyZanTub Год назад

      @@ztl2505 I'm a replacer, but I had a microwave die after just one year, but you're right, they usually last at least 10 years.

  • @ImperialEarthEmpire
    @ImperialEarthEmpire Год назад +2

    Yeah, microwave is here to stay...

  • @lerneanlion
    @lerneanlion Год назад +3

    Happy New Year to both Weird History and Weird History Food!

  • @bryanparkhurst17
    @bryanparkhurst17 Год назад +5

    When I was a kid in the 1980s my parents got a microwave and I thought that we were on top of the world. As time's gone by and I'm now approaching 50, I have reverted in my Technologies to the point where I have actually built an Earthen oven in my backyard. Talk about going full circle on cooking.

    • @gx8841
      @gx8841 Год назад +1

      Going through something similar myself. Haven't used my microwave in months, been using my grandmother's Crock Pot and trying to learn to prepare meals. Darn, I wished I'd paid more attention while she was cooking.

    • @mamiemonrovia7654
      @mamiemonrovia7654 Год назад

      i have several rec as gifts. how abt some tips or recipe sites?

  • @patrickdurham8393
    @patrickdurham8393 6 месяцев назад +1

    I don't eat many store bought frozen foods but I use my microwave to steam veggies and reheat things. It's a handy tool.

  • @CaptainRScott
    @CaptainRScott 11 месяцев назад

    Informative + humorous.
    Thank you!

  • @ruipacheco2939
    @ruipacheco2939 Год назад +3

    Being from Portugal, microwave ovens was something you could only dreamed of in the late 80's/early 90's. Fortunatelly my mom was able to buy one in the early 90's (after I begged time and time again for one)!

    • @neoasura
      @neoasura Год назад

      We were poor in the U.S. and couldn't get one until the early 90s ourselves. Not all of the U.S. is rich.

  • @pamelamays4186
    @pamelamays4186 Год назад +3

    My favorite microwave treat? Well, popcorn of course!🍿☢️

  • @joykoski7111
    @joykoski7111 Год назад +2

    Does anyone remember when the big microwave endorsement was in full swing? Probably about mid 80s. Tupperware had stackable microwave cookware that allowed you to cook an entire meal at the same time. There were dozens of tricks and tips to "brown " your meat. Recipes for quick microwave meals. There was even a cake mix that the box served as a microwave safe pan. I think the manufacturers thought or hoped that someday the microwave would replace a regular stove appliance. Years later I have a microwave but still mostly use it for reheating and popcorn.

    • @davidpar2
      @davidpar2 Год назад

      Yes. Starting in the 50s, manufacturers and companies like Monsanto predicted that microwaves would actually replace regular ovens. And those pushes reached a peak in the 80s, with microwave everything. But the quality of food prepared in them is just not on par with that of food cooked with heat sources, so that was never going to happen.

    • @EeveelutionStorm
      @EeveelutionStorm 11 месяцев назад +1

      And now we have air fryers being as popular and as much of a boom as microwaves.

  • @zach7193
    @zach7193 Год назад

    I like this. Happy New Year, Weird History Food.

  • @ArcherSuh4721
    @ArcherSuh4721 Год назад +4

    I've gone a few years without a microwave. The only thing I really miss is being able to bake a potato in a short amount of time.

    • @SimuLord
      @SimuLord Год назад +1

      The microwave was obsolete for me when I got a countertop convection oven (aka an "air fryer"-I share Adam Ragusea's snobbishness about the terminology), since it's better for leftovers than a science oven is and can actually cook things in its own right.

  • @skyden24195
    @skyden24195 Год назад +20

    My cooking abilities are pretty much limited to boiling water and microwaving! I've even developed a few special microwaving "tricks" to help the nuked food turn out better. For instance, if microwaving any leftover meat-stuff, (steaks, chicken, pork-chops, etc.) pour about a tablespoon of water over the meat. This keeps the meat from drying out while cooking as well as adding extra molecules to speed up and even out the heating process.

    • @elliottdodson4912
      @elliottdodson4912 Год назад +2

      Is that not incredibly embarrassing? To admit one’s uselessness

    • @josephgaviota
      @josephgaviota Год назад +5

      That trick just shows you're a THINKING person! That's good.

    • @skixian
      @skixian Год назад +6

      two types of people in the world above me

    • @skyden24195
      @skyden24195 Год назад

      @@elliottdodson4912 I would think so, yet here you are doing it. Trolls can be so stupid.

    • @skyden24195
      @skyden24195 Год назад +1

      @@josephgaviota thanks much. Being born a military brat, throughout my childhood my opportunities to learn how to cook conventionally was limited so I had to depend on the microwave to keep me going and that knowledge came in handy when it was time to do things on my own. lol. A creative and intelligent person does what they can with what they know and have to work with. 😄

  • @markfigueroa1681
    @markfigueroa1681 Год назад +6

    Yeeeeeeeessssssss he's back

  • @FeedMeSalt
    @FeedMeSalt Год назад +2

    Friendly reminder electromagnetic radiation and nuclear radiation are different things.
    Once is energy waves, no radiation sickness. Only possibility is burns when exposed directly. It works by making water molecules basically vibrate.
    The other is the bad kind, you know poison an area for centuries.

  • @williamwhite2113
    @williamwhite2113 Год назад +4

    My parents bought an Amana Radarange in the mid 70s and that was a heavy mother but it lasted a good long time til they decided to give it to one of my brothers and they replaced it with another microwave. I have a built in microwave in my apartment and it gets a lot of use from heating sandwiches to dinners. It's the one item I really cannot live without because it makes life so much easier plus I really am lazy about cooking.

    • @jasondashney
      @jasondashney Год назад +1

      My parents bout an Amana to cook my baby food in the last 70's. It ran like a charm into the 2000's. Ours had the touchpad. So simple, but it worked. I was actually sad when it finally crapped out.

  • @aaronwoodard1749
    @aaronwoodard1749 Год назад +1

    Remember getting one in the mid 1980's as a kid. There still was yet to be a big market for microvable junk food so it was mostly used for heating up left overs.

  • @ferociousgumby
    @ferociousgumby Год назад +1

    I remember when infrared cooking was "the thing" and the big innovation that would make conventional ovens obsolete. That didn't happen, and you never hear of it now. I also remember when microwaves first came in, there was a flood of cookbooks for things like baked goods, casseroles and meat dishes. There were all sorts of evening classes for microwave cookery. For a while, the "thing" was to cook your Christmas turkey in the microwave, which basically boiled it. Baked things were like sponge rubber. Most people now use the micro for reheating their coffee.

    • @SimuLord
      @SimuLord Год назад

      My mother made meatloaf in the microwave. It was every bit as bad as that sounds, especially considering the manager's special 73/27 "beef" our poor family could afford.

  • @Sticky_Ricky
    @Sticky_Ricky Год назад +2

    I think I'm starting to enjoy Weird History Food more than OG Weird History. That is when Mr.Og Weird History Voice is narrating. Don't get me wrong, I appreciate the Watch Mojo lady helping out and she's got a great voice, but yours is just so unique and mainly what I think about when I think of these channels.

  • @biancagerade4229
    @biancagerade4229 Год назад +7

    I've had the same microwave for 20 years now it is a white one every time I use it I wipe it out I wipe it down to say it's spotless is it under exaggeration it looks brand new like the day I bought it that's the way I've kept it, it's an Emerson I love it since I live in a studio apartment I couldn't live without it ☺️

  • @odinvolk6973
    @odinvolk6973 Год назад +3

    I'm not even a full minute into the video and I had to comment. Percy Spencer? there's an old cartoon here in Canada (one my dad shouldn't have let me watch when I was 6) called Kevin Spencer and his father's named Percy Spencer. long and short: he's an alcoholic and drug addict whose more proud to be on welfare than as he quotes "having a stupid fucking job" best example is in the 1st season where he hears about a blood bank that pays for donations and says "all I got's to do is lie about the herpies, and I got money for smokes"

  • @RockSplitter
    @RockSplitter Год назад +5

    Yes! The proper Dude.

  • @princesabonita79
    @princesabonita79 Год назад +1

    "Here's hot ass plate of cold ass food" - the microwave

  • @jons.6216
    @jons.6216 Год назад +1

    Ahh, the Amana Radar Range! One of the crown jewels of 70s game show prizes! The very first time I tried to make microwave popcorn I set it for four minutes and you can guess the rest! Hahaha!

  • @terrrybull
    @terrrybull Год назад +1

    my air fryer has replaced my microwave for many things now 😂

  • @ignskeletons
    @ignskeletons 5 месяцев назад

    One of the truly great inventions that felt like a significant leap forward in innovation and convenience. The microwave moved us a step closer to the Sci-Fi Jetsons world.

  • @davidpar2
    @davidpar2 Год назад +1

    I’ve never used a microwave, because I don’t like the way they “cook” food. In fact, I wouldn’t even know how to turn one on. But I’ve always been fascinated with the tech and history of them, particularly after learning that they’ve been around since the 40s

  • @nixboox
    @nixboox Год назад

    Oh my god...seeing that microwaved "Lunch Bucket" brought back a core memory that I didn't remember I had!

  • @jasondashney
    @jasondashney Год назад +1

    We had one of those AmanaRadarange OG models from about 1980. My parents bought it to heat my baby food. It lasted until about 2005.

  • @captainyossarian388
    @captainyossarian388 Год назад

    I love it. The addition of the inverter made the microwave nearly perfect.

  • @TheOtherBill
    @TheOtherBill 7 месяцев назад

    In my kitchen is a Sharp Carousel II, a vinyl woodgrain wrapped behemoth I purchased in the 80's. It was one of the first to have both a carousel and a convection oven with the ability to mix convection + microwave. The only thing on earth capable of properly reheating pizza. The interior light burned out about 10 years ago and I haven't replaced it for fear of jinxing it.

  • @1nkf4ng57
    @1nkf4ng57 Год назад +1

    I'm curious about the history of the Quaker Oats company! Love your content~

  • @btetschner
    @btetschner 7 месяцев назад

    A+ video!
    LOVE IT! What a culturally significant video!

  • @TheGelasiaBlythe
    @TheGelasiaBlythe Год назад +3

    You could do a video about the GE Advantium ovens, which seem like a cool idea, but also never seem to be in anyone's home (at least, I've never seen one). I still remember the commercials for them in the 1990s (or possibly early 2000s, but I really think it was the late 1990s). Those were innovative, odd, had a lot of parts that could go wrong, and seemed like a smarter alternative to both an oven and a microwave.

  • @AndrewUtz3
    @AndrewUtz3 10 месяцев назад

    One of my college roommates told me his dad who was a radar telecom technician would occasionally swing across the front of the dish in the winter to get a little warmup. Sounds like madness to me!

  • @lesbw356
    @lesbw356 Год назад +10

    Missed your voice!!!!

  • @mindykanitz6255
    @mindykanitz6255 Год назад +1

    I already knew that at the microwave was an accidental invention.

  • @energydude005
    @energydude005 Год назад +1

    Thanks!

  • @interwebtubes
    @interwebtubes 5 месяцев назад

    OK then,
    Back when I was a kid my mother wheeling and dealing in antiques and I was able to see a vintage microwave oven. It was blue all over with white dots. Definitely something very interesting plus I was able to see an industrial bread slicer. Which I will explain, in the factory where loaves of bread were baked, the slicer could be adjusted so that the cutting blades were adjusted to make whatever size of bread slices you wanted. The microwave oven was definitely something that caught my interest. When I got older my parents took me inside a Sears Department store and they were selling these very expensive microwave ovens which had a heating element inside in order to brown food. This also reminded me of they used to run commercials on television where you could stick a temperature probe into your food like a roast and the cord plugged into a jack inside the oven and the temperature probe would report the cooking temperature of your food item and display it on the screen. Some pretty cool stuff I think. And my grandmother had bought an Amana brand microwave oven and it was heavy but movable. Later on when I was an adult, the lady at work bought an extremely cheap microwave oven and inside the microwave oven was manually wind tray or stand. What you had to do was remove the stand from the oven and wind it up properly and replace it into the microwave oven and turn it on to cook your food. Of course since it was at work, there was dried food goop all over it. It was totally nasty. So it really wasn’t worth the price. That was just my observation of days gone by. Be sure to keep your hands clean and washed up at all times. Peace out and enjoy your meal!

  • @justinharvie8126
    @justinharvie8126 Год назад +8

    Yay! The original narrator is back. I'll be watching this one. Please keep him for every video.

    • @RedRoseSeptember22
      @RedRoseSeptember22 Год назад +2

      *rolls eyes*

    • @ferociousgumby
      @ferociousgumby Год назад

      @@RedRoseSeptember22 Just don't use females with vocal fry. I am SO tired of hearing an extended CROAK at the end of each sentence.

  • @greenbroccolistudios1275
    @greenbroccolistudios1275 Год назад +1

    Aaaaaah i miss my microwave when i was young
    Where my pops Tries to cook popcorn and pizza
    But i wanna try to put tv dinners at the microwave :(

  • @tentoe5431
    @tentoe5431 Год назад

    I live in Massachusetts and my jobs building is owned by Spencer. He also developed the patent for thermal radar.

  • @blackfirefox666
    @blackfirefox666 Год назад +2

    My family home had a Tappan microwave for almost 30 years until one of the sensors inside went off and the microwave started to turn on and run when the door opened. Sadly the company that made it went out of business so we couldn't get a replacement part and had to get a new microwave, because they felt it wasn't safe anymore. But the thing still heated food just fine. Still sad I couldn't find a replacement part online.

  • @zone47
    @zone47 Год назад

    I just sold my 1982 pure chrome Amana Radar range that my grandparents bought brand new. It still worked fine. Two dials; Time and Temperature! That's it, and built like a tank. Heavy as a tank too! I actually replaced it 5 years ago with a new fangled Panasonic Inverter microwave but it died after only 3 months and luckily I didn't haul the Amana to Good Will just yet. I had to apologize to it and then fish it back out of the basement to use for another 5 years. Sadly I did sell it in a recent estate sale and it only brought $5. How sad... it was a faithful M-wave and I hope my new one lasts longer than the last one did. Good story, I didn't know the microwave was around as long as it was.

  • @sallycormier1383
    @sallycormier1383 2 месяца назад

    The Easy Bake Oven was one of the few toys I always wanted as a kid but never received. It was the late 1960’s model which I only got to experience at my bff’s house(she was the only girl in a smaller family so had quite a few things I coveted, like her own pink princess phone). Whenever her mom was baking a cake we would whip out the EBO and scrape out the bowl for enough batter to make our own miniature cake. ❤

  • @TaraMolohon-lb1zn
    @TaraMolohon-lb1zn 7 месяцев назад

    If not for the microwave oven I don't think we would have such a fantastic gift from the universe. Seriously, it really saved the day!!! What a great invention for all of us!!! ❣️🤓

  • @jamesmoss3424
    @jamesmoss3424 Год назад +2

    Microwave are the best .😀👍

  • @karenchristinewise7833
    @karenchristinewise7833 Год назад +1

    My favourite use of a microwave was when I was pregnant with my third child. I perfected heating up custard from pre-made custard and added cinnamon. It was perfection over cake, fruits, Swiss rolls and rice pudding. The only time I used the microwave daily.

  • @lanacampbell-moore6686
    @lanacampbell-moore6686 Год назад +2

    Happy New Year WHF🍾🥂🎉

  • @pawfan
    @pawfan Год назад

    Well done!

  • @stuffz1757
    @stuffz1757 Год назад +1

    I basically survive out of microwaves, fuck cooking.

  • @leslietarkin5705
    @leslietarkin5705 Год назад +1

    I only use it to reheat leftovers. Growing up, however, my favorite microwave meal was Hot Pockets. Not sure if they make them still.

  • @coderspy
    @coderspy Год назад

    I've owned 3 of these in the past 20+ years. I never had one breakdown, but have only ever replaced one to get a more powerful/larger unit.

  • @greyrifterrellik5837
    @greyrifterrellik5837 Год назад +2

    I feel like the decline in microwave sales is at least partially due to their lifespan; once you have a microwave, you're pretty much set for several years.
    So as soon as everyone has a microwave, nobody needs to buy a microwave.

    • @FuzzballRenakitty
      @FuzzballRenakitty Год назад +1

      Except Amazon don't seem to get the message and suggest you buy things again... What's that? You bought a shower mat a week ago? Hey you should buy... ANOTHER ONE! .... No Amazon... I don't need another one :T

  • @Coolcarting
    @Coolcarting Год назад +1

    Microwave ovens do not “cook from the inside out”, as many people say. Microwaves actually heat from the outside in, very similar to other heating methods. it would be impossible for microwaves to somehow be emitted from the magnetron and be able to reach the center of the food substance without first going through the outer portions of the food.

  • @angeldeb82
    @angeldeb82 Год назад

    I still have a small Black & Decker microwave oven, which we got in late 2019. Before that, we had an old 1980s microwave oven that could heat up food at more wattage, but the paint would peel as time went on.

  • @hex00ffff
    @hex00ffff Год назад +4

    If the microwave heats from the inside out then why are the mash potatoes cold in the middle?

    • @craigmurphy6135
      @craigmurphy6135 Год назад +3

      Despite what the video claims, microwaves do not heat food from the inside out. That's one of those "facts" that surprisingly still gets repeated.

  • @AndrewUtz3
    @AndrewUtz3 10 месяцев назад

    Those early RadaRanges were crazy powerful compared to what we have now. One of my friend’s mom had one of those, from sometime in the 60’s I think.

  • @davebodi
    @davebodi Год назад

    I cook absolutely everything in my microwave, since 1989.