[Electronics-Talk] rice cookers
geodom at optonline.net
geodom at optonline.net
Thu Nov 10 19:26:12 UTC 2016
Okay, you've lost me. What's the difference in a liquid measuring cup and a
dry measuring cup? I know that I have plastic ones I use for dry stuff that
came from Tupperware a long time ago, and I have metal ones I use for
liquid. But I figured that was just me. The thing I like about my plastic
set is that it is a complete, six-piece set; not just a quarter a third, a
half and a whole. It also has the two-thirds and three quarters. Pam.
-----Original Message-----
From: Jim Barbour via Electronics-Talk
Sent: Thursday, November 10, 2016 2:05 PM
To: Jude DaShiell via Electronics-Talk
Cc: Jim Barbour
Subject: Re: [Electronics-Talk] rice cookers
This is mostly a big deal when baking.
It's not that a cup of a liquid is a different quantity than a cup of dry,
it's that the measuring techniques are somewhat different.
For example, It can be hard to accurately measure a cup of liquid in a dry
measuring cup without spilling liquid out the top, and it's hard to measure
a cup of flower without being able to use a knife to scrape the measuring
cup.
Jim
On Thu, Nov 10, 2016 at 01:57:13PM -0500, Jude DaShiell via Electronics-Talk
wrote:
> One caution about measuring many people fail to account for and it gets
> them
> into trouble sooner or later is that you need to have two different sets
> of
> measuring cups for a kitchen. One for liquid and the other for dry
> measuring. The reason is liquid and dry measures are different. This is
> why
> when I read stuff on the internet about measuring cups and it doesn't
> specifically state liquid or dry measuring I won't buy it.
>
> On Thu, 10 Nov 2016, a chew via Electronics-Talk wrote:
>
> > Date: Thu, 10 Nov 2016 11:44:48
> > From: a chew via Electronics-Talk <electronics-talk at nfbnet.org>
> > To: Discussion of accessible home electronics and appliances
> > <electronics-talk at nfbnet.org>
> > Cc: a chew <a1chew at hotmail.com>
> > Subject: Re: [Electronics-Talk] rice cookers
> >
> > most rice cookers are a few buttons... ON, keep warm and off
> >
> > the critical part of rice cooking is the ration of liquid to rice.
> >
> > if you have the skills to measure well... you should be able to make
> > good rice in almost any rice cooker
> >
> >
> > On 11/10/2016 8:39 AM, George Dominguez via Electronics-Talk wrote:
> > > Every once-in-a-while, the subject of rice cookers has come up on
> > > lists. I am wondering if anybody can suggest a rice cooker that a
> > > blind person can use that is available? So many times, people tell of
> > > appliances that are usable that they purchased a long time ago. Has
> > > anybody gone searching recently and found one that they have been able
> > > to use? I?m considering buying one, and I might be able to go
> > > shopping this weekend. Thanks for any information from anybody. Pam.
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> >
> >
>
> --
>
>
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