• SoJB@lemmy.ml
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    2 年前

    That’s literally a temperature you would cook meat with

    What do you think people are made of?

    • ulterno@lemmy.kde.socialBanned
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      2 年前

      TIL, videos saying “cook meat at 180°” actually meant 180°F and not 180°C.

      Now I have to check what my induction stove means when it reads 180 in deep frying mode.

      • lad@programming.dev
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        2 年前

        Afaik it means °C usually, but when boiling meat it will be cooked at 100°C give or take.

        But since well done steak is supposed to be 71°C, everything hotter than that would sooner or later cook the meat.

        • ulterno@lemmy.kde.socialBanned
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          2 年前

          Considering that Google says 350°F - 375°F for deep frying and that I am in a °C country, I would lean more this way.

          Of course, I have never cooked meat and have no idea what deep frying meat at 180°C would do.

          • lad@programming.dev
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            2 年前

            Ah, I don’t know about deep frying, I was speaking about boiling, baking, and air frying, rather. Maybe my point is not valid in that case

      • Telex@sopuli.xyz
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        2 年前

        Hot air/gas, hot water/liquid, and a hot solid behaved very differently. The numbers depend a lot on what’s being measured. There’s also a big variable of time.

        • ulterno@lemmy.kde.socialBanned
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          2 年前

          The cheap induction stove is not really measuring anything.

          Its PWM has been tuned to get to the temperature the user selects, under whatever testing conditions they had while R&D. The displayed temperature is just the user selected temperature.

          But setting it to 120(whatever unit) manages to make good enough french fries, so that’s fine by me.