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Unread 08/07/2006, 08:31 AM   #1
bruffin
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Question Cooking LR (?)

What exactly is cooking Live Rock? Does this mean actually baking it in an oven . . . ? Is it only for removing Phosphate in rock that has been out of water?


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Unread 08/07/2006, 11:48 AM   #2
TekCat
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bruffin, you can turn off your stove now Cooking is just a term that describes following process:
First of all, it is designed for LR, though I don't see why this wont work for dead rocks as well.
The idea is to create bacterial environment for rocks instead of algal. Rocks placed in a total darkness for about 8 weeks (in salt water of course). Every week 100% of water changed, and rocks get dunked and swished in number of fresh saltwater buckets to remove detrius and other junk.
What this does is: algea dies off, pores get open, and bacteria as a predominant occupant of rocks will remove phosphates (there is a scientific termin of this process, but I forgot the name).

At the end of the cooking process you'll get clean rock however it is still a LR, it has bacteria thriving; pods and sponges are going to survive too. The only life lost is a photosynthetic kind - algea.

hth.



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Unread 08/07/2006, 11:56 AM   #3
bruffin
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Neat. Thanks TekCat. Can this be combined with curing/ skimming?


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Unread 08/07/2006, 12:08 PM   #4
TekCat
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In a way, you could think of LR cooking as an extending curing in total darkness.


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Unread 08/07/2006, 12:10 PM   #5
bruffin
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Cool . . . So cure first, then cook?


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Unread 08/07/2006, 12:17 PM   #6
TekCat
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yep
I am cooking my LR right now, I wish i knew this upfront, so I could cure and then cook them. There is a better explanation of cooking process somewhere here on RC. search for it... they explain pretty much everything.

Cheers


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Unread 08/07/2006, 01:27 PM   #7
outy
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most of the time the main reason for cooking is to get rid of HA

ive got 3 20g tubs rite now under the house lol


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Unread 08/08/2006, 03:57 PM   #8
djperezo
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Is temperature important in cooking LR? Reason I ask is because I plan to cook LR in my garage where it's very hot this time of year, around 90's


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Unread 08/08/2006, 04:27 PM   #9
TekCat
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Temperature is important, we don't want to kill more than we need to. Slightly raised temp IMO would help bacteria as with rising temperature their metabolic rates also increase. However at some point, I suppose, very high temp would work against them.


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