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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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On Sun 16 Jan 2005 12:39:58p, Steve Calvin tittered and giggled, and
giggled and tittered, and finally blurted out... > sf wrote: >> On Sun, 16 Jan 2005 16:33:41 GMT, Dog3 > wrote: >> >> >>> I was not allowed to use the stove yet so it was all microwaved. >> >> <snip> >> >>>this was like 40 years ago. How time flies. >> >> >> Boy, your family was rich and on the cutting edge - I didn't >> buy my first microwave until 1975 and paid something like >> $500 or $600 for it (1000 watts). That was way too much $ >> in today's terms, but it was worth it at the time. >> >> sf > > Agreed. The first microwave (radarrange actually) hit the consumer > market in '67 so you guys must have had one of the first ones! > Tappan actually introduced one a few years earlier, but it only found its way into a small number of custom home kitchens. At that time they were installed like a wall oven. Wayne |
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Wayne Boatwright wrote:
> On Sun 16 Jan 2005 12:39:58p, Steve Calvin tittered and giggled, and > giggled and tittered, and finally blurted out... > > >>sf wrote: >> >>>On Sun, 16 Jan 2005 16:33:41 GMT, Dog3 > wrote: >>> >>> >>> >>>> I was not allowed to use the stove yet so it was all microwaved. >>> >>><snip> >>> >>>>this was like 40 years ago. How time flies. >>> >>> >>>Boy, your family was rich and on the cutting edge - I didn't >>>buy my first microwave until 1975 and paid something like >>>$500 or $600 for it (1000 watts). That was way too much $ >>>in today's terms, but it was worth it at the time. >>> >>>sf >> >>Agreed. The first microwave (radarrange actually) hit the consumer >>market in '67 so you guys must have had one of the first ones! >> > > > Tappan actually introduced one a few years earlier, but it only found its > way into a small number of custom home kitchens. At that time they were > installed like a wall oven. > > Wayne hm, didn't know that. I thought that the Amana was the first one out for the general consumer. -- Steve If at first you don't succeed, then skydiving isn't for you. |
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On Sun 16 Jan 2005 01:47:30p, Steve Calvin tittered and giggled, and
giggled and tittered, and finally blurted out... > Wayne Boatwright wrote: >> On Sun 16 Jan 2005 12:39:58p, Steve Calvin tittered and giggled, and >> giggled and tittered, and finally blurted out... >> >> >>>sf wrote: >>> >>>>On Sun, 16 Jan 2005 16:33:41 GMT, Dog3 > wrote: >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>>> I was not allowed to use the stove yet so it was all microwaved. >>>> >>>><snip> >>>> >>>>>this was like 40 years ago. How time flies. >>>> >>>> >>>>Boy, your family was rich and on the cutting edge - I didn't >>>>buy my first microwave until 1975 and paid something like >>>>$500 or $600 for it (1000 watts). That was way too much $ >>>>in today's terms, but it was worth it at the time. >>>> >>>>sf >>> >>>Agreed. The first microwave (radarrange actually) hit the consumer >>>market in '67 so you guys must have had one of the first ones! >>> >> >> >> Tappan actually introduced one a few years earlier, but it only found >> its way into a small number of custom home kitchens. At that time they >> were installed like a wall oven. >> >> Wayne > > hm, didn't know that. I thought that the Amana was the first one out for > the general consumer. > Amana was the first to offer a countertop model. The tappan operated on 220 VAC and was always installed as a built-in. I had a client in the early 1960s who had a custom Tappan kitchen that included the microwave. She had a couple of friends who also had them. Wayne |
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On Sun 16 Jan 2005 01:47:30p, Steve Calvin tittered and giggled, and
giggled and tittered, and finally blurted out... > Wayne Boatwright wrote: >> On Sun 16 Jan 2005 12:39:58p, Steve Calvin tittered and giggled, and >> giggled and tittered, and finally blurted out... >> >> >>>sf wrote: >>> >>>>On Sun, 16 Jan 2005 16:33:41 GMT, Dog3 > wrote: >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>>> I was not allowed to use the stove yet so it was all microwaved. >>>> >>>><snip> >>>> >>>>>this was like 40 years ago. How time flies. >>>> >>>> >>>>Boy, your family was rich and on the cutting edge - I didn't >>>>buy my first microwave until 1975 and paid something like >>>>$500 or $600 for it (1000 watts). That was way too much $ >>>>in today's terms, but it was worth it at the time. >>>> >>>>sf >>> >>>Agreed. The first microwave (radarrange actually) hit the consumer >>>market in '67 so you guys must have had one of the first ones! >>> >> >> >> Tappan actually introduced one a few years earlier, but it only found >> its way into a small number of custom home kitchens. At that time they >> were installed like a wall oven. >> >> Wayne > > hm, didn't know that. I thought that the Amana was the first one out for > the general consumer. > Amana was the first to offer a countertop model. The tappan operated on 220 VAC and was always installed as a built-in. I had a client in the early 1960s who had a custom Tappan kitchen that included the microwave. She had a couple of friends who also had them. Wayne |
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Wayne Boatwright wrote:
> On Sun 16 Jan 2005 12:39:58p, Steve Calvin tittered and giggled, and > giggled and tittered, and finally blurted out... > > >>sf wrote: >> >>>On Sun, 16 Jan 2005 16:33:41 GMT, Dog3 > wrote: >>> >>> >>> >>>> I was not allowed to use the stove yet so it was all microwaved. >>> >>><snip> >>> >>>>this was like 40 years ago. How time flies. >>> >>> >>>Boy, your family was rich and on the cutting edge - I didn't >>>buy my first microwave until 1975 and paid something like >>>$500 or $600 for it (1000 watts). That was way too much $ >>>in today's terms, but it was worth it at the time. >>> >>>sf >> >>Agreed. The first microwave (radarrange actually) hit the consumer >>market in '67 so you guys must have had one of the first ones! >> > > > Tappan actually introduced one a few years earlier, but it only found its > way into a small number of custom home kitchens. At that time they were > installed like a wall oven. > > Wayne hm, didn't know that. I thought that the Amana was the first one out for the general consumer. -- Steve If at first you don't succeed, then skydiving isn't for you. |
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