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Description
Whirlpool 惠而浦 MWP329TSS 32公升 2100瓦 8-Ace 全能微波蒸焗爐 (可可啡)81 5+ 32 800 30C 230C 2100 13A 1000 (xx)382 x 487 x 493 (xx)382 x 487 x 533 (xx)240 x 410 x 301. 5 1 (9) (5)+++++ DIY (2) 21 LED 3
主要特點
- 8合1多功能烹調:集微波、氣炸、蒸氣、烤焗等多種模式於一身,一機滿足您的多元烹飪需求。
- 氣炸功能:利用熱空氣循環,以更少油量烹調出酥脆美味的炸物,享受健康美食。
- 無刷式變頻摩打:先進技術確保熱能均勻分佈,實現更有效率的烹飪,食物受熱更均衡。
- 精準煮食:可設定單獨的燒烤溫度,實現客製化的完美烹飪,每道菜餚都恰到好處。
- 快煮功能:特設5種快煮模式,結合不同烹調方式(如蒸氣+微波),助您快速完成菜餚。
- 微波爐兼容安全配件:確保使用安全,方便搭配多種烹飪工具。
技術規格
- 容量:32公升
- 水箱容量:800毫升
- 溫度調較:30°C - 230°C
- 最大火力:2100瓦
- 電源接頭:13A
- 電線長度:1000毫米
- 產品尺寸 (高x闊x深):382 x 487 x 493 毫米
- 產品尺寸連把手 (高x闊x深):382 x 487 x 533 毫米
- 爐腔尺寸(高x闊x深):240 x 410 x 301.5 毫米
- 爐腔材質:不銹鋼
- 顏色:可可啡
- 產地:中國
- 保養:1 年
多功能烹調模式
- 煮食模式 (9種):微波、氣炸、蒸氣、頂部燒烤、底部燒烤、上下燒烤、熱風對流、加强熱風對流、全功能蒸焗。
- 快煮功能 (5種):蒸氣+微波、頂部燒烤+微波、上下燒烤+微波、加强熱風對流+微波、全功能蒸焗+微波。
- 特別模式:保溫、乾果、慢煮、發酵、翻熱麵包、解凍、預熱-蒸氣、預熱-烤焗、DIY煮食。
- 清洗功能 (2種):烘乾爐腔、除垢。
- 預設食譜:21款內置食譜,輕鬆製作多樣美食。
貼心設計與安全
- 控制面板:觸控介面,操作直觀簡便。
- 電子溫度控制:精準控溫,確保烹飪效果。
- 顯示屏:LED顯示屏,實時顯示爐腔實際溫度。
- 爐燈:方便監控烹飪過程。
- 層架數目:3層設計,提供靈活的烹飪空間。
- 預約功能:提前設定,省時省力。
- 追加時間:彈性調整烹飪時長。
- 時鐘功能:實用時間顯示。
- 餘溫高溫顯示:提示爐腔溫度,增加安全性。
- 兒童安全鎖:防止兒童誤觸,居家使用更安心。
- 靜音功能:烹飪過程更寧靜。
- 配件:配備微波安全燒烤架、微波安全蒸盤、微波安全焗盤、氣炸籃、隔熱手套、清潔海綿。
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4.4 ★★★★★
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Product Reviews
★★★★★ 3
Excelente
Size: 60 Count (Pack of 1)
Buena
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Reviewed in the United States on April 7, 2026
★★★★★ 5
Good quality
Size: 60 Count (Pack of 1)
Excellent product good smell and size stomach upset
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Reviewed in the United States on November 10, 2025
★★★★★ 5
Great value, quality ingredients, absolute MUST-HAVE!
Size: 60 Count (Pack of 1)
Can’t believe how cheap these are! I’m on my second bottle and i can tell when I’ve forgotten to take them as I feel a bit sluggish. These help with energy, my skin looks more ‘glowy’ and I tend to be in a more chipper mood. Another awesome plus to these are the extra Ingredients specifically for women’s health; cranberry being one less supplement To worry about.
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Reviewed in the United States on August 17, 2019
★★★★★ 5
Defining Christian Education
What distinguishes a truly Christian education from what a student might receive from a secular university or college, or one that is merely "church-related"? Renewing Minds by David S. Dockery is an attempt at defining Christian higher education. Dockery is a noted scholar and President of Union University (TN), a liberal arts college which is fast becoming one of the premier Christian universities in America.
As defined by Dockery, Christian education is all about instilling in students a Christian world and life view that prepares them "to think Christianly, to think critically, to think imaginatively," thus "preparing them for leadership and preparing them for life" (26-27). The goal is not to brainwash or program students in a particular doctrinal or theological point of view. The one who has a Christian liberal arts education need not fear the challenges of secular scholarship. Rather, the educated Christian is able to appreciate the culture in which be or she lives while being "able to bring truth to bear on the prevailing zeitgeist of that culture" (111). Armed with a Christian worldview firmly rooted in biblical revelation, the Christian is able to challenge "the presuppositions of our contemporary culture, both secular and Christian [emphasis added], which in their current forms seems to be pragmatic, disjointed, and unconnected" (113).
Christian higher education must take place in a university setting that "is not a church" but "a faith-informed, faith-affirming, and grace-filled community. . ."(141). It is a community of believers seeking truth within an atmosphere of academic freedom operating within the limits set by the historic orthodox faith. It is an academic community in which the faculty are active scholars and teachers, and where the students are pursuing an intellectual understanding of their faith and not merely pursuing the skills and knowledge necessary for employment.
Whether you are a parent seeking a Christian college or university for a child, or simply one who desires a better understanding of what Christian higher education really is, Renewing Minds is must reading.
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Reviewed in the United States on March 25, 2008
★★★★★ 5
Best Book on the Integration of Faith and Learning
Format: Paperback
A problem area in Christian ministry is the area of Christian higher education. As we continue to progress through the 21st century we continue to see the decline of the Christian higher education movement. What was once a strong area in the Christian ministry, Christian higher education is failing. The Bible College movement has been in decline for sometime. Schools are folding without the students or the funds to stay open. Most people are going to secular colleges and universities over Christian schools. One of the major problems with Christian higher education has been the failure to critically interact with the movement and offer an approach to dealing with this decline. David Dockery has helped fill this void with his recent volume, Renewing Minds. Dockery, President of Union University in Jackson, TN, is extremely qualified to write in this capacity. A clear and thoughtful theologian, he has extensive experience in the areas of leading and administrating a Christian higher education institution. Not only has he lead Union University he also serves as chairman of the board of the Council for Christian Colleges and Universities. With recommendations from J. I. Packer, R. Albert Mohler, Chuck Colson, and a foreword by Robert P. George of Princeton University, this is a volume that should be seriously considered by all who love Christian education.
In Chapter 1, Dockery highlights the problem in America. He writes,
"I believe that the integration of faith and learning is the essence of authentic Christian higher education and should be wholeheartedly implemented across the campus and across the curriculum. This was once the goal of almost every college in America. This is no longer the case.... What happened was a loss of an integrated worldview in the academy. There was a failure to see that every discipline and every specialization could be and should be approached from the vantage point of faith, the foundational building block for a Christian worldview" (pp. 5-6).
Tracing the history of the departure of American schools into secularism and surveying the kinds of Christian higher education institutions in North America leads to a defense of the system derived from Matthew 22:36-40 and the Great Commandment to love the Lord your God with your mind! The rest of the book explains how to go about obeying the Great Commandment in Christian higher education. Chapter 2 builds on this by explaining from the Scriptures the role of the Christian higher education institution and deals especially with the role of the Church, and therefore the Christian higher education institution in society. Chapter 3 explains the process of shaping a Christian worldview and the impact on this on Christian higher education. Chapter 4 is about reclaiming the Christian intellectual tradition. Dockery writes here after tracing the history of the Christian intellectual tradition
"Certainly we all learn apart from the great Christian intellectual tradition, apart from the vantage point of faith. But we cannot connect these things into a unified whole, we cannot fully understand the grand metanarrative; we cannot truly grasp how to explore and engage the issues in history and science, business and health care, apart from this approach to learning. Thus we must seek to sanctify the secular because Jesus Christ has come to earth" (p. 84).
Chapter 5 addresses the issues of integrating faith and learning. Chapter 6 addresses the necessary concept of developing a place of belonging and community where scholars, educators, staff, and students live together, share, serve, and learn. Chapter 7 begins to offer practical ways of establishing this grace-filled academic community. Chapter 8 articulates how to develop a theology of Christian higher education. Developing this theology would have positive implications for the academic community and the individual. Chapter 9 serves as the culmination of the book with thinking globally about the future. With the changes in communication we must embrace the new in order to communicate the orthodoxy of the past into a new global world. This means listening as much as talking especially as global Christianity begins to reflect non-Western images, positions, and principles. Christian higher education does not just simply say the West is best but listens to all Christian voices in order to best communicate the timeless truth in new ways. This is then concluded by an extensive bibliography on the integration of faith and learning.
Dockery's book fills a great need in the area of Christian higher education. He states the issues and the problems, traces the history of Christian higher education, articulates a biblical defense of the integration of faith and learning as well as a comprehensive theological defense. Not only does he articulate this at an academic level but he does not neglect the spiritual aspect of things, emphasizing not just "smart" Christians but "spiritual" Christians. The movement from "theory" to "practice" in Dockery's book is exceptional. I hardly find anything in it that I would disagree with or anything I wish I say that I did not see in the book. It is an even handed treatment that should be read by those who care about Christian higher education and especially those involved in Christian higher education. May we see a renewal of a close integration of faith and learning on our campuses as we emphasize the great truth that all truth is God's truth. May we raise up godly men and women who are passionate about the truth and about serving Christ in the world around them through the Great Commission. And may those of us involved in Christian higher education lead the way through authentic spirituality grounded in the truth. Highly recommended!
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Reviewed in the United States on October 10, 2009