Guest guest Posted October 14, 2003 Report Share Posted October 14, 2003 I, too, was involved in a fire. I will not stay in a hotel room that doesn't have a flashing smoke alarm. There was one in my room in Arizona, and it started flashing around 6 A.M. Woke me up, reached for my glasses and once I realized it was a FIRE alarm, I grabbed my 3G, put on some clothes, grabbed my purse and headed for the door. Put my hand on the door - as they remind us to do to make sure it's not hot, and thus fire outside it. Door was fine. Looked both ways, and WALKED down 7 flights of stairs. Got to the desk and it was a false alarm. Well I was more than po'd about this. So I told the clerk that since they got me out of bed at the ungodly hour of 6 A.M., caused my heart to race in fright, and made me walk down 7 flights of stairs, the very LEAST they could do is to give me breakfast. They did. A certificate for the breakfast buffet. $25 value. When I went to Michigan they didn't have the ADA compliant kit for deaf, although I'd asked when I made reservations. They did have a room with the flashing alarm. Moral of the story is, NEVER stay in a hotel that doesn't have the flashing smoke alarm. Because as Ralph said, you'd be toast. Nucleus Volunteer Message: 5 Date: Mon, 13 Oct 2003 08:26:53 -0400 From: " Ralph Chiaradia " <ralph.chiaradia@...> Subject: Noise? Saturday was my last night in London, and my companion turned on the lights at 1am which wakes me up. She motioned about a sound & goes over & puts her ear next to my battery charger, then walks over to my luggage. I said I had no idea what it was & tried to go back to sleep. She shakes me to get my attention again, so I put on my BTE. Fire alarm! We dressed in a hurry and followed others down the fire escape route & ended up outside. A lot of people were barefoot & had on only robes. Turned out to be a false fire activation. If I were alone & it were a fire, I would have been toast! Ralph HiRes 2/03 ________________________________________________________________ The best thing to hit the internet in years - Juno SpeedBand! Surf the web up to FIVE TIMES FASTER! Only $14.95/ month - visit www.juno.com to sign up today! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 16, 2003 Report Share Posted October 16, 2003 I actually was in a dorm fire when I was deaf, before ADA and visual fire alarms. The smell of the smoke and room mates woke me. Fortunately everyone got out okay, but we were told we were very close not leaving alive. Now my problem is that even if I am visually aware of a fire alarm, elevators shut down with the alarms and I am mobility impaired. Handicapped rooms aren't always on the first floor. I have a CI friend that was in a room where there was no visual alarm. The fire alarm went off and she was asleep and totally unaware. The alarm in her room stuck and wouldn't shut down when the alarm was deactivated. She had the security lock on the door and was the only one in the room. That alarm blasted all night long...they had to move people out of the area of her room......serves them right. Just glad it was a false alarm and she didn't turn to toast! Ruth Noise? Saturday was my last night in London, and my companion turned on the lights at 1am which wakes me up. She motioned about a sound & goes over & puts her ear next to my battery charger, then walks over to my luggage. I said I had no idea what it was & tried to go back to sleep. She shakes me to get my attention again, so I put on my BTE. Fire alarm! We dressed in a hurry and followed others down the fire escape route & ended up outside. A lot of people were barefoot & had on only robes. Turned out to be a false fire activation. If I were alone & it were a fire, I would have been toast! Ralph HiRes 2/03 ________________________________________________________________ The best thing to hit the internet in years - Juno SpeedBand! Surf the web up to FIVE TIMES FASTER! Only $14.95/ month - visit www.juno.com to sign up today! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 21, 2004 Report Share Posted November 21, 2004 Fire > Then I was remembering how when I'v head the chance to cook food > outdoors on a fire - a grill or a campfire - it tastes SO GOOD. Better > than on a gas stove. I beleive, if it tastes good, it's healthier. I don't know that it's healthier (the carcinigens you mentioned later), but maybe the flavor comes from the flames searing the outside of the meat, sealing in the juices, rather than letting them all leak out. One of the things I do to " savor the juice " (and a *big* caveat here - I have a very weak sense of smell, so what tastes ok to me is really icky to somebody else - anybody else here nibble on a crunchy snack of dried kelp? <lol>): I stir fry steak bits or slices in a little seseme oil (or other oil that's good for higher temperatures) along with garlic, onion, sea salt and raisins (or other dried fruit). At the last minute (while the meat is still pretty rare) I throw in brocolli, cherry tomatoes, carrots, or whatever raw veggie I happen to have and toss it around just enough get them wet and then pour the whole mess on top of romaine or spinach, using the oil and stuff from the pan as my salad dressing. Last summer my kids and I went camping for a month and about the only time we pulled out the camp stove was for 1) heating water for dishes and 2) when we were in a drought area that didn't allow open fires. My favorite campfire dessert (and allowed!) is a banana, still in the skin and sliced halfway through lengthwise, stuffed with unsweetened chocolate chips (only about 10) and black walnuts. Wrap it in tin foil and throw in on the fire just long enough to melt the chocolate. It's a really nice treat when everybody else is eating smores (good with apples, also). My favorite " real meal " is sirloin kabobs, with all kinds of veggies. ;-) Ellen ;-) Ellen Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 21, 2004 Report Share Posted November 21, 2004 Tamara wrote: > > I was thinking more about how the macrobiotics don't cook with > electric stoves, and how they put so much emphasis on cooking with > fire, as being most natural.... > > Then I was remembering how when I'v head the chance to cook food > outdoors on a fire - a grill or a campfire - it tastes SO GOOD. Better > than on a gas stove. I beleive, if it tastes good, it's healthier. > Microwaved food tastes funny, has a weird texture... Tamara, Heat is heat. You have to watch and control what it does, not where it comes from :-) I like what you can do with heat on an open fire too - because that makes it easier to burn the outside and undercook the inside, and that tastes good. The burned outside creates carcinogens from the fat, which will form carcinogens if overheated - no matter what heat you use to overheat them. Microwaved food has whatever texture you cause it to have by the amount of heat you develop. The texture can be anywhere from raw meat to leather depending how much heat you apply. I don't know what you are doing to your microwave food to make it " taste funny " or " have a weird texture " unless you are greatly overcooking it. I presume that you are, and of course if you overcooked something on a fire it would also " taste funny and have a weird texture " . This difference is because an open fire with too much heat tends to make charcoal and with a microwave too much heat tends to make leather. The difference is because microwaves cook the inside first and fire cooks the outside first. Either way will make it taste good if *not* overcooked. Open fire will " brown " (burn?) the outside of meat which surely appeals to many people, and also it picks up the flavour of the wood you use to cook with. There's less risk of overheating fat in the microwave for proper cooking time and hence less risk of making carcinogens than on an open fire where it is harder to control the heat of the fat. Carcinogens will happen whether the fire touches the meat or not - it's the heat that does it, not the fact that is comes from a flame or microwave. (Foil in-between is to try to reduce the surface heat, and reflect it into the meat more.) Either way - you are looking at what the heat does not where it comes from, it is immaterial where the heat comes from, only where it is applied and how much is applied. The *right* amount of heat in either case will get you the right amount of total cooking of the item. > A long time ago, I made baked potatoes by sticking them in the coals > of a firplace, they had such good flavor; I'm sure it would work with > sweet potatoes... Yes it does. You can put a whole lot of veg into one nicely sealed foil in the coals and make a wonderful stew type veg mix. It tastes the same as microwaved food because of the sealed nature of the foil and the microwave cooking bag sealed nature of the veg in there. In a microwave you also need to seal in the food you cook. You can't cook anything in a microwave by just dumping a lid on it, it will dry out and you are using your heat to dry it not cook it. You need to use proper microwave that seals in the flavour and moisture or proper microwave cooking bags to do likewise. Then you get the delicious effect you get with cooking in the coals. I get it at least three times a day from my microwave :-)) > On the other hand, I've heard that there is evidence that cooking meat > on an open fire will cause carcinogens to form. Overheating of fats, whether on a fire or in a frying pan, will cause carcinogens to form yes, and overheating of plastic releases carcinogens too. Another reason to use microware designed for a microwave to *cook* in. If you are just heating up something you can get away with plastic in a microwave as it is not hot enough for long enough to cause release of dangerous chemicals, but for cooking you need to use the proper equipment same as any other system. > That if you cook on a > grill, you should cover the meat with foil, so the flame doesn't touch > it. It's not whether the flame touches - it's whether you can reduce the heat to prevent fat overheating - the foil will help to spread the heat and you will get less " browning " of the surface by spreading the heat with foil. To brown it has to be much hotter. So again - it is what you do with the heat, not where it comes from. Heat is heat :-) > Sally Fallon makes note of this. She says that while tradtional > peoples have cooked on an open flame with no ill effect, she > guesses that there is something in their lifestyle which must protect > against the carcingens, that we lack. No, it's that they simmer patiently over the fire, taking their time, and know how to do it without overheating the fat :-)) It tastes much better if you do that as it retains more moisture - more like the way you retain moisture in microwave heating in properly sealed stuff. You only need a pinprick of hole in a microwave to release steam, the rest needs to stay trapped. On an open fire, the oldies know how to heat just enough to seal in moisture without losing it all, then slow-cook it. Most people I see doing a barbecue don't know how to do that - they are in too much of a rush. It's supposed to be done slowly while folks are all chatting and taking their time - not in a hurry up I am hungry approach :-) the latter puts too much heat on the outside and makes carcinogens - and of course the carcinogens from the artificial fuels used in modern " flame " cooking are also carcinogenic. Our cavemen ancestors were fussy what wood they cooked with because of course that was part of the seasoning :-)) Charcoal and fire starter fluid are not good condiments. > Later, I worked as a cook at a art colony. I had to cook for both > vegetarians and meat eaters. For some odd reason, whenever I made > ribs, most of the vegetarians would eat them.... I must have made good > ribs.... that was a long while ago.... Sounds from your email in general like you are using too much heat too fast whether on fire or in the microwave - and ribs being thin and bones conduct heat - are forgiving and cook well quickly :-)) For other stuff you need to go slower. There's skill and technique required whether you cook on an open fire or in the microwave. With microwave cooking part of the skill is in knowing when to stop applying heat. It cooks from the inside first so you need to stop cooking when the outside is rare, not the inside. Also the heat is applied so intensely you need to give it time to spread around a bit after you stop cooking, so you need to stop cooking before the outside is " done " in a microwave, and let it sit for a few minutes all sealed up With fire cooking you have to be concerned that the inside cooks enough where you can't see it - not that the inside cooks too much where you can't see it as in microwaving. Just different techniques. Microwave coking heat is trapped inside after you remove the heat. Fire cooking is exposed to the cooling air after you stop cooking so it will not continue to cook much. Boiled eggs continue to cook after you remove them from heat because the shell insulates and if you want to stop the cooking you need to run it under the cold tap. Otherwise you need to stop cooking sooner to allow cooking to continue from the heat already inside, after the heat is removed - as with microwave cooking. I think the reason people consider microwave food tastes funny, is that they are over-cooking it seriously, by looking for the same outside appearance as with other more familiar heating methods. You'd for sure get it overdone every time by a lot that way. You do have to remember with microwave coking that it cooks from the inside to the outside - and not backwards from the outside to the inside. If you wait till the outside looks the way it would look cooked some other way - then you went way past done a long time back and you just made yourself a new doorstopper. You need to stop microwave cooking as soon as the *inside* is done and *before* the outside is done. The outside will get done while you get out the plates to serve it. The heat is trapped in there - it will get used in the food for more cooking as it evens out betweeen inside and outside hotness - it can't disappear like heat from the fire on the outside of meat which is why you have to overheat the outside to get the inside done on a fire but it stops cooking soon as you remove the heat. In a microwave when you stop heating, the inside heat is trapped - so it is still useful heat after you stop microwaving and will heat the outside of the meat and cook it a bit more, just as eggs in shells carry on cooking after you remove them from the heat. Maybe your microwave technique needed adjustment for the way the inside is heated first and not the outside? Food can be ruined in any cooking method if it is not done correctly. It's why I am amazed how microwaves are sold without any lessons around here - or at least an instruction book that explains what's what with heating the inside and letting that spread to the outside instead of the other way round as we are used to. It's not self-evident how to use them properly and the society is not geared up for them in terms of readily available microware or microwave coking bags even. Microwave cooking bags should be as easy to find as ziploc bags, but they are not - at least not in this country. It's like offering a stove but not having any pots and pans available anywhere - doesn't make sense to me :-) I cook exclusively with a microwave - I have no interest in a stove - as done correctly the food tastes infinitely better cooked quickly from the inside and not degraded from extended heat time on the outside. I also like the seared meat off a fire with good rooikrans wood for flavour - you do not get that in a microwave - but a stove gives neither advantage. Searing in a frypan you overheat the fat and leave the meat sitting in it, ugh! Carcinogen city. At least on a fire you drip the fat off:-) Nothing retains the juiciness and original flavour of food better than a properly used microwave. Cooking with sealed food in the coals of a fire or an oven (where people usually do not seal it well enough if at all) is a similar idea - but the heat is applied for much longer in a fire or oven and destroys many more nutrients than heat applied a short while as in a microwave. Namaste, Irene -- Irene de Villiers, B.Sc; AASCA; MCSSA; D.I.Hom. P.O.Box 4703, Spokane, WA 99220-0703. http://www.angelfire.com/fl/furryboots/clickhere.html Veterinary Homeopath and Feline Information Counsellor. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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