I bought half of the stuff for potstickers (they didn't have green onion or reasonable-sized wonton wrappers at the first store I went to). Cooking potstickers is fun and delicious, and with only a moderate chance of splattering or burning yourself.
Ground pork (or turkey, or whatever), chopped veggies (cabbage, green onion, water chestnut, ginger root, whatever), toss it in a wonton. Make sure your pan is real hot, so browning takes a few seconds. Use whatever setting you use on your stove to (barely) boil water, because you'll want the water to boil when it hits the oil without the oil itself burning. Put a few (half full or less) in the pan with hot oil until they brown, put the cover half over it, very quickly toss some water in as you're closing the lid, and let them steam. Seriously, be ready to have the cover on as soon as the water hits the oil. It will steam and splatter. Serve with a combination of soy sauce and chili oil.
It's fun to watch the lid rattle around while the steam tries to escape. Makes a good show for guests.
Update on poached eggs. The first microwave I tried it with is 700 watts. My wife's microwave is 1000 watts. Two more eggs were exploded before I got the timing down.
I'm starting to just hate eggs.
They take pretty exact timing, and it happens somewhat quickly. Cooking it on the stove is slower, so that window of "cooked correctly" is longer. I'd advise doing that, and also not leaving the kitchen or trying to do anything else while it's cooking. Also, you don't want the water to boil at any point.
Also, they sell eggs by the dozen so you can cook 4-6 of them correctly every time. More, if your standards are low.