• @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      108 months ago

      Bite me, I don’t have the counter space for a toaster oven and I’m not heating up the actual oven every time I want a leftover slice.

      If the pizza is made from quality ingredients to begin with, it survives microwaving decently well. Mushrooms just refuse to play ball.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        428 months ago

        If you have a stove I can definitely recommend heating your pizza in a dry (with no oil) frying pan. Set the temperature medium-low and heat a slice or two at a time for a few minutes. It comes out like it was freshly cooked.

        • @ByteJunk
          link
          178 months ago

          This is why the internet is worth saving.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          18 months ago

          I finally got around to trying this. I don’t see the point. By the time the cheese was re-melted, the crust turned into a hard cracker and it took ten times longer than the microwave. It’s quite possible I had the stove up too high (it’s an electric stove and I had it on 4/10), but I’d still say the point goes to the microwave for being quicker and having greater margin for error.

          • @[email protected]
            link
            fedilink
            18 months ago

            Hmmm, it’s hard to debug pizza remotely, but maybe the heat wasn’t high enough, it normally only takes a minute or two to heat through and cooking it for longer probably would make the base go hard.

            Thanks for reporting bavk though, and I’m sorry you had a suboptimal pizza result.

      • @systemglitch
        link
        48 months ago

        Here’s a hint for you. Lower the power of the microwave to 4/10 and cook about 50% longer. Once you get the timing down you leftover pizza will be much better and less rubbery.

        Most people are clueless about how to properly use a microwave, because no one teaches us, but max all the time is not how it should be used.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          08 months ago

          That’s effectively what I do, I don’t just blast it for a minute and a half.

          I normally don’t futz with the power settings but I’ll do 30s at a time and check if it’s heated, then move it around so the hotspots in the microwave hit different parts of it (the turntable only does so much).

      • gimpchrist
        link
        38 months ago

        If the pizza is made from real quality ingredients to begin with you should be comfortable with eating it cold judgement eyes

        • @systemglitch
          link
          28 months ago

          I think it’s perfect part cold and part warm… Best of both worlds.