and form a nice crust. Foods in covered dishes
(casseroles, pot roast) or delicate custards are
not suitable for convection cooking.
CONVECTION
CONVECTION BAKE
TURBO
Time can be saved by baking an entire batch of
cookies at the same time. The cookies will bake
evenly and be done all at once. The baking time
may be shorter due to the warm circulating air.
For small items such as cookies, check to see if
they are done one to two minutes before the
recipe time. For larger baked items such as cakes,
check five to six minutes before the time
indicated on the recipe
Convection cooking of meat and poultry will
result in foods that are brown and crispy on the
outside and moist and juicy on the inside. Large
meat or poultry items may cook up to 30 minutes
less than the suggested time so check them so
they will not be over baked. A meat thermometer
or an instant read thermometer will provide
more accurate results than the "minute per
pound" method. The larger the piece of meat or
poultry, the more time you will save.
Converting Conventional Baking to Convection
To convert most recipes for baked
Cooking -
items (cookies, cakes, pies, etc.), reduce the oven
temperature by 25°F. For meats and poultry, use
the temperature recommended in recipes and
cooking charts.
CONVECTION BAKE
Full power heat is radiated from the bake
element in the bottom of the oven cavity and
partial power is radiated from the broil element.
Air is circulated by the fan in the rear of the oven.
It provides more even heat distribution
throughout the oven cavity for all uses. Multiple
rack use is possible for baking large amounts of
food. When roasting, cool air is quickly replaced ‐
searing meats on the outside and retaining more
juices and natural flavour on the inside with less
shrinkage
CONVECTION
The rear element operates at full power. Air is
circulated by the fan for even heating. Use this
setting for food which requires gentle cooking
such as pastries, soufflés or cakes.
TURBO
The rear and bottom elements operate at full
power. Air is circulated by the fan for even
heating. Use this setting to reduce pre‐heating
time of the oven or for recipes which require
uniform cooking with strong heat from bottom
such as pizza, focaccia, bread
.
.
TIPS FOR CONVECTION and
BAKE/CONVECTION/TURBO
Preheating the Oven
Preheat the oven before baking. The oven does
not need to be preheated for large pieces of
meat or poultry. See your recipe for preheating
recommendation. Preheating time depends on
the temperature setting and the number of racks
in the oven.
Temperature Setting
When using Convection Bake, reduce the
temperature recommended in the recipe by 25°F.
When
roasting
temperature prior to time recommended by
recipe to prevent over cooking. When roasting
meats in convection mode, do not reduce
temperature setting.
Condensation
It is normal for a certain amount of moisture to
evaporate from the food during any cooking
process The amount depends on the moisture
content of the food. The moisture will condense
on any surface cooler than. the inside of the
oven, such as the control panel.
RACK POSITIONS
Large Main Oven One Rack Baking
When baking on one rack, best results are
obtained in the bake mode (see Bake).
When roasting a turkey or a large piece of meat,
convection bake may be used. Rack 4 is the most
appropriate rack.
Two Rack Baking
Racks 4 and 2 are most appropriate when using
the convection bake mode. Round cake pans
should be staggered on racks 4 and 2.
Rectangular (9 x 13) cake pans and cookie sheets
should be placed on rack 4 directly under the one
on rack 2.
This may be used for cakes, cookies, biscuits and
other foods for which two rack baking is
desirable.
When several casseroles, frozen pies or cakes are
to be baked, use racks 4 and 2.
These two racks can also be used for a large oven
meal.
Bake ware Type
Aluminium bake ware gives the best browning
results.
Cookie sheets with only two sides give the best
results. Aluminium commercial half‐sheets or
professional cooking utensils may be used but
baking times may be increased.
Placement
For better browning, utensils such as cookie
sheets. Rectangular baking pans should be placed
crosswise on the rack with the shorter side facing
right and left to allow better air flow.
30
meats,
check
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