Yoghurt; Acrylamide In Foodstuffs; Preserving - Bosch HXA158L50S Instruction Manual

Free standing cooker
Table of Contents

Advertisement

Tested for you in our cooking studio
en

Yoghurt

You can use your appliance to make your own yoghurt.
Remove accessories and shelf supports from the
cooking compartment. The cooking compartment must
be empty.
Heat 1 litre of milk (3.5% fat) to 90 °C on the hob
1.
and then leave it to cool down to 40 °C.
Dish
Yoghurt

Acrylamide in foodstuffs

Acrylamide is mainly produced in grain and potato
products prepared at high temperatures, such as potato
Tips for keeping acrylamide to a minimum
General
Baking
Biscuits
Oven chips

Preserving

For preserving, the jars and rubber seals must be clean
and intact. If possible, use jars of the same size. The
information in the table is for round, one-litre jars.
Caution!
Do not use jars that are larger or taller than this. The
lids could crack.
Only use fruit and vegetables in good condition. Wash
them thoroughly.
The times given in the tables are a guide only. The time
will depend on the room temperature, number of jars,
and the quantity and temperature of the contents.
Before you switch off the appliance or change the
cooking mode, check whether the contents of the jars
are bubbling as they should.
Preparation
Fill the jars, but not to the top.
1.
Wipe the rims of the jars, as they must be clean.
2.
Place a damp rubber seal and a lid on each jar.
3.
Fruit in one-litre jars
Apples, redcurrants, strawberries
Cherries, apricots, peaches, gooseberries
Apple purée, pears, plums
36
Accessories/cookware
Cup/jar
Keep cooking times as short as possible.
Cook food until it is golden brown, but not too dark.
Large, thick pieces of food contain less acrylamide.
With top/bottom heating at max. 200 °C.
With hot air at max. 180 °C.
With top/bottom heating at max. 190 °C.
With hot air at max. 170 °C.
Egg or egg yolk reduces the production of acrylamide.
Spread out a single layer evenly on the baking tray. Cook approx. 400-600 g at once on a baking tray so
that the chips do not dry out and become crunchy.
It is sufficient to heat UHT milk to 40 °C.
Stir in 30 g (approx. 1 tbsp) (chilled) yoghurt.
2.
Pour into cups or small jars with lids and cover.
3.
Place the cups or jars onto the cooking
4.
compartment floor and use the settings indicated in
the table.
After making the yoghurt, leave it to cool in the
5.
refrigerator.
Shelf position
Heating
function
Cooking compart-
^
ment floor
crisps, chips, sliced bread, bread rolls, bread or fine
baked goods (biscuits, gingerbread, spiced biscuit).
Seal the jars with the clips.
4.
Place no more than six jars in the cooking
compartment.
Settings
Insert the universal pan at level 2. Arrange the
1.
preserving jars so that they do not touch each other.
Pour ½ litre of water (approx. 80 °C) into the
2.
universal pan.
Close the oven door.
3.
Set Bottom heat
.
$
4.
Set the temperature to 170 - 180 °C.
5.
Preserving
Fruit
After approx. 40 to 50 minutes, small bubbles begin to
form at short intervals. Switch off the oven.
After 25 to 35 minutes of residual heat, remove the
preserving jars from the cooking compartment. If they
are allowed to cool for longer in the cooking
compartment, germs could multiply, promoting
acidification of the preserved fruit.
When it starts to bubble
Switch off
Switch off
Switch off
Tempera-
Cooking time
ture in °C
-
4-5h
Residual heat
approx. 25 minutes
approx. 30 minutes
approx. 35 minutes

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents