Article: Before you begin to prepare your recipe, make sure that the baking dish or baking tray you transfer the food to will fit inside of the halogen oven.  Any ovenproof dish or tray should be fine, including most metal, silicon, and Pyrex dishes. The halogen oven is smaller than a standard oven, so you will need smaller bakeware. Make sure that the bakeware you choose is smaller than the oven itself to make removal easier. Regardless of whether you use a halogen-specific recipe or a standard baking recipe, the preparation instructions can be followed exactly as written.  A halogen-specific recipe can be followed straight through, from start to finish. For a non-halogen recipe, follow the preparation instructions but alter the baking temperature and bake time as needed. You can wrap foil over your baking dish if the recipe calls for it, but only do so if you can wrap the edges of the foil securely around the sides of the dish.  Aluminum foil can help prevent food from browning too quickly. The fan inside of the halogen oven is very strong, however, and loose foil will be easily blown off. If the foil becomes loose, it could float around the inside of the machine and could damage the heating element. Set the temperature dial to the correct cooking temperature three to five minutes before placing the dish inside your halogen oven.  Many recipes will not mention a preheating step since the halogen oven takes such a short amount of time to reach a high temperature. Nonetheless, preheating your oven will still produce the best results. Some machines have a preheat button. Pressing it will preheat the oven to 500 degrees Fahrenheit (260 degrees Celsius) for six minutes. Other machines will require you to set your desired temperature to preheat them. Carefully place the baking dish onto the lower rack of the halogen oven. Once the dish is securely inside, close the oven lid.  Halogen ovens usually have a top rack and a bottom rack. Use the bottom rack for baking, roasting, defrosting, steaming, re-heating, and most other forms of cooking. Use the top rack for grilling, browning, or toasting.  Leave at least 1/2 inch (1 cm) gap in between the bakeware and the sides, bottom, and top of the machine. Doing so will provide better air circulation and ensure proper heating. Turn the timer clockwise until you reach the desired time. Push down on the safety handle after setting the time. A red power light should turn on.  Most halogen oven timers can be programmed for times up to 60 minutes. Note that the oven will turn off as soon as the timer setting has been reached. As a result, a halogen oven is less likely to overbake or burn food than a normal oven if that food is left inside a little longer than intended. Turn the temperature dial clockwise until you reach the desired temperature. If the timer is already set, the power light should turn green and the oven should automatically turn on.  Make sure that the lid is in position before turning on the machine. Usually, the machine will not work unless the safety handle is set in its down position. Removing the lid in the middle of the cooking process will usually stop the heater and the fan. To resume cooking, place the lid back on the machine and set the handle in the down position again. Most halogen ovens are sold with a tool designed to help you lift food out when done. If you do not have this tool or if you cannot use it to get a good grip on your bakeware, use a set of long-handled tongs.  As with conventional ovens, the baking dish will be hot when you remove it. Wear oven mitts to protect your hands and wrists. Place the hot dish on a towel, cooling rack or other heat-resistant base after removing it from the halogen oven.
Question: What is a summary of what this article is about?
Choose a baking dish that fits inside the machine. Follow your chosen recipe. Be careful when using foil. Consider preheating the halogen oven. Put the dish in your halogen oven. Set the time. Set the temperature to start the machine. Remove the finished dish carefully.
Article: This will open the Windows Start screen. You can also press the ⊞ Win key or button.      Restore points are created when changes to the hardware are made or programs are installed. They can also be created manually. You may only have one or two restore points to choose from.  Select a restore point from before your computer started having issues. You may have an option to check a box to display additional restore points. This will display the programs that will be removed or added by the system restore. Click "Close" when you're finished. Programs that are restored may still need to be reinstalled after the restore.   Your computer will reboot and your system will be rolled back to the restore point you selected. See if you are encountering the same errors or issues that you were before. If the system restore doesn't work or makes things worse, you can roll back to the state you started in:  Open the System Restore utility in the Control Panel. Click Undo System Restore. Wait for your computer to reboot and apply the changes.
Question: What is a summary of what this article is about?
Click or tap the Windows button. Type recovery on the Start screen. Click or tap Recovery in the results. Click or tap Open System Restore. Click or tap Choose a different restore point. Click or tap Next. Select the restore point you want to use. Click Scan for affected programs. Click Next. Click Finish. Click Yes to start the restore. Test out your system. Undo a system restore.
Article: Take a piece of foil that is large enough to easily cover a given section of hair. Slide it underneath the section you just secured. Let the hair rest on top of the foil. The foil should create a barrier between the strand you pulled out using the comb and the rest of the hair in the section you're working with. You will apply your highlights and lowlights in a consistent pattern throughout your head. You can start with one highlight, and then move to two lowlights, and repeat this pattern throughout the section, for example. Choose whatever pattern you prefer depending on the ratio of highlights to lowlights you want. Highlighting means coloring strands lighter than your natural hair color while low lighting means coloring strands darker than your natural color. Use the brush that came with your dye kit. Dip your brush in a small amount of the highlight dye. Then, brush the dye into the section of hair above the foil so it's evenly saturated from root to tip. As you brush, the hair should become plastered to your foil. You can leave the hair for now as you continue to apply foils/dye. You will fold up the foils when you're done with the section. Repeat the same process you did with the tail comb before, moving downward through the section of hair. Just below the hair you just died, slip the end of the comb under a small strand of hair. Place a piece of foil under that strand to create a barrier between this new strand and the remaining hair in the section. You should add your lowlight dye to this section to create variation. This is the exact same process as before. Gently paint the dye on the hair using the brush that came with your kit, moving from root to tip. Again, the hair will become plastered to the foil. Keep moving from your highlight and lowlight shades, using the ratio you want. Continue the pattern until the entire section is dyed and separated by foils. Gently fold the pieces of foil around each section of hair. Do not press too hard to avoid getting a folded crease in your dye. The ends of the foil should be near the roots of your hair when you're done. Folding the foil helps it stay in place while you dye the remaining sections. For every section, repeat the exact same pattern to highlight or lowlight your hair. Separate your hair into small strands, using the foil as a barrier, and then paint dye on each strand. Vary between your highlight and lowlight shade.  Once every strand is dyed, wrap the foil around the strands. Remember, you may have to bleach your hair first in the sections you're highlighting. This is usually best done at a salon and should be done before you start the highlight/lowlight process.
Question: What is a summary of what this article is about?
Apply your foil underneath the hair. Decide on the pattern you're following. Coat the hair above the foil in the highlight dye. Section off another layer of hair. Apply your lowlight dye. Repeat this pattern until all the hair is dyed. Fold your foil. Repeat this pattern to dye the remaining sections.