Jubilee8269
Well-Known Member
I know a lot of recipes for bath and body products tell you to heat the distilled water to a certain temperature and hold it there for twenty minutes. I'm not arguing to skip that step because it does make sense. I just have a question about pulling it off. I'm in a regular apartment right now. The thing is I'm possibly going to be moving into an assisted living one in a couple years, and I haven't practiced making any recipes at all yet. I'm still doing my research before I even start. Watching videos on how to make stuff. Looking for basic recipes to try. Sourcing places to buy from. Learning what the ingredients even are so I know how they work.
I won't have a stove when I move into that place. It comes with a microwave, and I can buy an electric kettle, and I believe use a crockpot. So would I be able to use any of those methods to heat and hold the water to the right temp for the twenty minutes? I know with microwaving you have to worry about super heating, and I only have a 6 quart crockpot right now, but I could get a smaller one for smaller batches of water to put in silicone containers to heat and hold. I can't hold glass ones. I have bad tremors and spasms in my arms, but I could possibly do metal ones, but those would get really hot. Or plastic if it can go to high heat.
I won't have a stove when I move into that place. It comes with a microwave, and I can buy an electric kettle, and I believe use a crockpot. So would I be able to use any of those methods to heat and hold the water to the right temp for the twenty minutes? I know with microwaving you have to worry about super heating, and I only have a 6 quart crockpot right now, but I could get a smaller one for smaller batches of water to put in silicone containers to heat and hold. I can't hold glass ones. I have bad tremors and spasms in my arms, but I could possibly do metal ones, but those would get really hot. Or plastic if it can go to high heat.