The minimum wattage needed to only reheat leftovers and microwave popcorn would 400 Watts. If a bag of popcorn is put into a 400 Watt microwave, it should take approximately five minutes to be finished popping. As for the leftovers, it would take a little bit more time than the usual 500-800 Watt microwave, but it will still get the job done.
i'd say stove
by putting a small amount of popcorn in a small brow paper bag and folding the end of it and cooking it like you do microwaveable popcorn. it really works and it cuts out the fat.
No, there is not the same amount of popcorn in every bag of name brand popcorn.
i think that the controlled group would be the microwave because it is what stays the same each time. Another controlled variable would be the amount of popcorn curnels that you start with.
means that is amount of ampere
Most equate wattage with the amount of light a bulb will put out. But, the wattage is the result of the resistance of the element and the voltage and is the amount of heat. the frequency is unrelated.
Popcorn pops because of the water content in the kernels. Heating the kernels, whether by microwave or by some other means, turns the water into steam, which expands and breaks the kernels. Admittedly, this is a small amount of water, but it doesn't take much steam, to pop a kernel.
You eat them.
Popcorn pops in a microwave because there is a tiny amount of water trapped inside the kernels When that water is heated it turns to steam. Pressure builds and then the kernels pop!
Yes, wattage is wattage, is wattage, is wattage. "Power" is calculated in wattage. It equals the voltage times the current in amps. In a light bulb, the resistive filament will cause a certain amount if current to flow making the filament hot and producing light.
No, a fluorescent bulb does not emit the same amount of heat as a metal halide bulb of the same wattage.
Wattage is the amount of sound a speaker can pump out. More wattage means the speaker will be louder, but won't necessarily sound better.