¥ 2Ð3 large sprigs of rosemary
¥ 4 large garlic cloves cut in half lengthways
¥ 1.8 kg leg of lamb
¥ 8 good quality anchovy fillets, halved
¥ 100 ml olive oil
¥ 250 ml dry red wine
¥ Maldon salt and freshly ground black pepper
METHOD
1. Preheat the oven to 220 ¡C (for a conventional oven), 200 ¡C
(for a fan oven) or gas mark 7.
2. Pull the small sprigs off the rosemary branches and set aside
with the garlic.
2. Using the tip of a paring knife, make up to 20 well-spaced
cuts into the flesh of the lamb, about 2.5 cm inch deep.
Divide the rosemary sprigs, garlic and anchovies and push
down into the cuts. Place the leg on a large roasting tin and
pour over the oil, massaging it all over the joint. Season well
with salt and pepper and pour the wine and 250 ml water
into the tin.
3. Put into the oven and sear for 15 minutes, then turn the
temperature right down to 130 ¡C (conventional oven),
110 ¡C (fan oven) or gas mark 1 and roast for 4Ð5 hours,
basting every 30 minutes or so. Basting frequently helps
to keep the meat moist and encourages the build up of a
good glaze on the outside. Add more liquid (wine or water)
if the tin looks dry Ð there should always be liquid in the tin
throughout this cooking process.
4. The meat is ready when it is starts to fall off the bone, at
which point it should have a core temperature of 90 ¡C.
Remove from the oven, transfer to a warmed carving dish,
cover loosely with foil and leave to rest in a warm place for
30Ð45 minutes before carving.
5. Pour the juices from the tin into a tall hi-ball glass and allow
to settle. Spoon the fat from the top of the glass. There
should be enough sticky, reduced juices for an intense gravy
hit Ð if not, pour the juices you have back into the roasting
tin and put it over the heat, pour in a splash of water or wine
and deglaze the tin scraping up all the sticky bits from the
base. Boil fast until syrupy, taste and correct the seasoning.
RASPBERRY SOUFFLă
INGREDIENTS
¥ 400 g raspberries
¥ 1 tbsp lemon juice
¥ 100 g caster sugar
¥ 2 tsp cr�me de framboise
¥ 1 tsp cornflour
¥ 180 g egg whites (about 6)
¥ Pinch of cream of tartar or a squeeze of lemon juice
¥ Icing sugar for dusting
METHOD
1. For the soufflŽ, press the raspberries through a fine
sieve to produce 180 g of purŽe. Put this into a heavybottomed pan, add the lemon juice and reduce down to
a thick jam, stirring from time to time and being careful
not let it catch and burn.
2. Put 45 g of the sugar in a separate pan. Melt it and then
boil until it becomes a thick syrup (121 ¡C on a sugar
thermometer). To test without a thermometer, dip a
teaspoon into the syrup and then dip quickly into cold
water. You should be able to roll the cooling syrup into
a ball between your fingers. Be careful as the syrup is
extremely hot. When it has reached the right point, stir
the hot syrup into the raspberry jam.
3. Mix the framboise and cornflour together and stir into
the jam over the heat. Turn the jam into a small bowl,
sprinkle the surface with icing sugar and cover with cling
film.
4. Preheat the oven (not grill) to 180 ¡C shelf level 2
(conventional oven), 160 ¡C (fan oven) or gas mark 4
centre shelf.
5. Whisk the egg whites with the cream of tartar until you
can form soft peaks, then fold in the remaining caster
sugar. Lightly fold the whites into the jam, leaving thin
traces of white visible in the mixture.
6. Spoon into four large buttered and sugared ramekins,
place these on a baking tray and bake for 10 minutes.
7. Dust with icing sugar.
Contents
1. Before You Start... 1
Important! 1
Installation and Maintenance 1
Peculiar Smells 1
If You Smell Gas 1
Ventilation 1
Personal Safety 1
Cooker Care 2
Cleaning 2
2. Cooker Overview 3
Hotplate Burners 3
Wok Burner 4
The Wok Cradle 5
The Glide-out Grill 5
The Ovens 6
Accessories 9
3. Cooking Tips 10
Cooking with a Multi-function Oven 10
General Oven Tips 10
6. Troubleshooting 16
7. Installation 18
Dear Installer 18
Safety Requirements and Regulations 18
Provision of Ventilation 18
Location of Cooker 19
Conversion 19
Positioning the Cooker 20
Moving the Cooker 21
Completing the Move 21
Fitting the Stability Bracket or Chain 22
Repositioning the Cooker Following
Connection
Conversion to Another Gas 22
Levelling 22
Gas Connection 23
Electrical Connection 24
Final Checks 24
Fitting the Plinth 24
Customer Care 24
22
4. Cooking Table 11
5. Cleaning Your Cooker 12
Essential Information 12
Daily Care 12
Cleaning for Spills 12
Cooktop Burners 12
Stainless Steel Hotplate 13
Glide-out Grill 13
Control Panel and Oven Doors 14
Ovens 14
The Tall Oven 14
Cleaning Table 15
8. Conversion to LP Gas 25
Injectors 25
Tap Adjustment 25
Reassembling to Liquid Propane Gas 26
Stick on Label 26
Pressure Testing 26
9. Circuit Diagram 27
10. Technical Data 28
i
U110172-03Falcon 1000 Deluxe Dual Fuel
ii
1. Before You Start...
Your cooker should give you many years of trouble-free
cooking if installed and operated correctly. It is important
that you read this section before you start, particularly if you
have not used a dual fuel cooker before.
Important!
This appliance is designed for domestic cooking
only. Using it for any other purpose could invalidate
any warranty or liability claim. In particular, the
oven should NOT be used for heating the kitchen –
besides invalidating claims this wastes fuel and may
overheat the control knobs.
This appliance is for use in Great Britain and the
Republic of Ireland. It is a Cat II
set for G20 at 20mbar. (A conversion kit for LPG is
supplied with the cooker.)
cooker and is
2H3+
Installation and Maintenance
In the UK, the cooker must be installed by a Gas Safe
registered engineer. The electrical installation should be in
accordance with BS 7671. Otherwise, all installations must be
in accordance with the relevant instructions in this booklet,
with the relevant national and local regulations, and with the
local gas and electricity supply companies’ requirements.
Make sure that the gas supply is turned on and that the
cooker is wired in and switched on (the cooker needs
electricity).
Only a qualied service engineer should service the cooker,
and only approved spare parts should be used.
Always allow the cooker to cool and then switch it o at the
mains before cleaning or carrying out any maintenance work,
unless specied otherwise in this guide.
Peculiar Smells
When you rst use your cooker it may give o an odour. This
should stop after use.
Before using for the rst time, make sure that all packing
materials have been removed and then, to dispel
manufacturing odours, turn all the ovens to 200 °C and run
for at least an hour.
Before using the grill for the rst time you should also turn on
the grill and run for 30 minutes with the grill pan in position,
pushed fully back, and the grill door open.
Make sure the room is well ventilated to the outside air
(see ‘Ventilation’ below). People with respiratory or allergy
problems should vacate the area for this brief period.
If You Smell Gas
•DO NOT turn electric switches on or off
•DO NOT smoke
•DO NOT use naked flames
•DO turn off the gas at the meter or cylinder
•DO open doors and windows to get rid of the gas
•DO keep people away from the area affected
•Call your gas supplier
If you are using natural gas in the UK, ring the National Grid
on: 0800 111 999.
Ventilation
CAUTION: The use of a gas cooking appliance results
in the production of heat and moisture in the room
in which it is installed. Therefore, make sure that the
kitchen is well ventilated: keep natural ventilation
holes open or install a powered cookerhood that
vents outside. If you have several burners on, or use
the cooker for a long time, open a window or turn on
an extractor fan.
Personal Safety
DO NOT modify this appliance.
This appliance can be used by children aged from 8
years and above and persons with reduced physical,
sensory or mental capabilities or lack of experience
and knowledge if they have been given supervision
or instruction concerning use of the appliance in
a safe way and understand the hazards involved.
Children shall not play with the appliance. Cleaning
and user maintenance shall not be made by children
without supervision.
WARNING: The appliance and its accessible parts
become hot during use and will retain heat even
after you have stopped cooking. Care should be
taken to avoid touching heating elements. Children
less than 8 years of age shall be kept away unless
continuously supervised.
CAUTION: A long term cooking process has to be
supervised from time to time. A short term cooking
process has to be supervised continuously.
Danger of re: DO NOT store items on the cooking
surfaces.
To avoid overheating, DO NOT install the cooker
behind a decorative door.
Accessible parts will become hot during use and will
retain heat even after you have stopped cooking.
Keep babies and children away from the cooker and
never wear loose-tting or hanging clothes when
using the appliance.
DO NOT use a steam cleaner on your cooker.
1
Always be certain that the controls are in the OFF position
when the oven is not in use, and before attempting to clean
the cooker.
Do not use the top of the ue (the slots along the back of
the cooker) for warming plates, dishes, drying tea towels or
softening butter.
When the oven is on, DO NOT leave the oven door
open for longer than necessary, otherwise the
control knobs may become very hot.
When using the grill, make sure that the grill pan
is in position and pushed fully in, otherwise the
control knobs may become very hot.
Always keep combustible materials, e.g. curtains, and
ammable liquids a safe distance away from your cooker.
DO NOT spray aerosols in the vicinity of the cooker
while it is on.
Use dry oven gloves when applicable – using damp gloves
might result in steam burns when you touch a hot surface.
Do not use a towel or other bulky cloth in place of a glove – it
might catch re if brought into contact with a hot surface.
NEVER operate the cooker with wet hands.
DO NOT use aluminium foil to cover shelves, linings
or the oven roof.
DO NOT use hotplate protectors, foil or hotplate
covers of any description. These may aect the safe
use of your hotplate burners and are potentially
hazardous to health.
NEVER heat unopened food containers. Pressure
build up may make the containers burst and cause
injury.
DO NOT use unstable saucepans. Always make sure
that you position the handles away from the edge of
the hotplate.
DO NOT use cooking vessels on the hotplate that
overlap the edges.
Never leave the hotplate unattended at high heat settings.
Pans boiling over can cause smoking, and greasy spills may
catch on re. Use a deep fat thermometer whenever possible
to prevent fat overheating beyond the smoking point.
DO NOT use water on grease res and never pick
up a aming pan. Turn the controls o and then
smother a aming pan on a surface unit by covering
the pan completely with a well tting lid or baking
tray. If available, use a multi-purpose dry chemical
or foam-type re extinguisher.
Cooking high moisture content foods can
create a ‘steam burst’ when the oven door
is opened. When opening the oven stand
well back and allow any steam to disperse.
Take care that no water seeps into the
appliance.
This appliance is heavy so take care when moving it.
ArtNo.324-0001 Steam burst
Cooker Care
As steam can condense to water droplets on the cool outer
trim of the oven, it may be necessary during cooking to wipe
away any moisture with a soft cloth. This will also help to
prevent soiling and discolouration of the oven exterior by
cooking vapours.
Cleaning
In the interests of hygiene and safety, the cooker should be
kept clean at all times as a build up in fats and other food
stu could result in a re.
Clean only the parts listed in this guide.
Clean with caution. If a wet sponge or cloth is used to wipe
spills on a hot surface, be careful to avoid steam burns. Some
cleaners can produce noxious fumes if applied to a hot
surface.
WARNING!
Unattended cooking on a hob with fat or oil can be
dangerous and may result in re.
NEVER leave a chip pan unattended. Always heat fat
slowly, and watch as it heats. Deep fry pans should
be only one third full of fat. Filling the pan too full
of fat can cause spill over when food is added. If you
use a combination of oils or fats in frying, stir them
together before heating, or as the fats melt.
Foods for frying should be as dry as possible. Frost on frozen
foods or moisture on fresh foods can cause hot fat to bubble
up and over the sides of the pan. Carefully watch for spills or
overheating of foods when frying at high or medium high
temperatures. Never try to move a pan of hot fat, especially a
deep fat fryer. Wait until the fat is cool.
2
2. Cooker Overview
A
B
C
D
Fig.2-1
E
The 1000 dual fuel cooker (Fig.2-1) has the following
features:
A. 5 hotplate burners including a wok burner
B. A control panel
C. A glide-out grill
D. Main multi-function oven
E. Tall fan oven
Hotplate Burners
The drawing by each of the central knobs indicates which
burner that knob controls.
Each burner has a Flame Supervision Device (FSD) that
prevents the ow of gas if the ame goes out.
When a hotplate control knob is pressed in, sparks will be
made at every burner – this is normal. Do not attempt to
disassemble or clean around any burner while another
burner is on, otherwise an electric shock could result.
To light a burner, push in and turn the associated control
knob to the high position as indicated by the large ame
symbol (), (Fig.2-2).
Fig.2-2
ArtNo.192-0002 1092 Falcon
control knob
3
Fig.2-3
ArtNo.192-0002 1092 Falcon
control knob
The igniter should spark and light the gas. Keep holding the
knob pressed in to let the gas through to the burner for about
ten seconds.
If, when you let go of the control knob, the burner goes out,
then the FSD has not been bypassed. Turn the control knob
to the OFF position and wait for one minute before you try
again, this time making sure to hold in the control knob for
slightly longer.
Adjust the ame height to suit by turning the knob counterclockwise (Fig.2-3). On this cooker the low position is beyond
high, NOT between high and o.
Fig.2-4
Fig.2-5
Fig.2-6
ArtNo.311-0001 Right pans gas
ArtNo.311-0002 Pan with rim
If a burner ame goes out, turn o the control knob and
leave it for one minute before relighting it.
Make sure that the ames are under the pans. Using a lid will
help the contents boil more quickly (Fig.2-4).
Large pans should be spaced well apart.
Pans and kettles with concave bases or down-turned base
rims should not be used (Fig.2-5).
Simmering aids, such as asbestos or mesh mats, are
NOT recommended (Fig.2-6). They will reduce burner
performance and could damage the pan supports.
You should also avoid using unstable and misshapen pans
that may tilt easily, and pans with a very small base diameter,
e.g. milk pans, single egg poachers (Fig.2-7).
The minimum recommended pan diameter is 120 mm. The
maximum allowable pan base diameter is 260 mm.
DO NOT use cooking vessels on the hotplate that overlap the
edges.
Wok Burner
The wok burner is designed to provide even heat over a large
area. It is ideal for large pans and stir-frying (Fig.2-8).
Fig.2-7
Fig.2-8
Art No. 311-0003 Simmer aids
ArtNo.311-0004 T ipping wok
For heating smaller pans, the aforementioned hotplate
burners may be more ecient.
You should wipe the enamel top surface of the cooker around
the hotplate burners as soon as possible after spills occur. Try
to wipe them o while the enamel is still warm.
Note:
The use of aluminium pans may cause metallic marking
of the pan supports. This does not aect the durability of the
enamel and may be cleaned o with an appropriate metal
cleaner.
4
The Wok Cradle
The cradle should be used on the centre wok burner only.
Woks vary very widely in size and shape. It is important that
the wok sits down on the pan support – however, if the wok is
too small, the cradle will not support it properly (Fig.2-9).
When you t the cradle, make sure that it is supported
properly on a pan support and the wok is sitting level in the
cradle (Fig.2-10).
The cradle will get very hot in use – allow plenty of time for it
to cool before you pick it up.
Fig.2-9
The Glide-out Grill
Open the door and pull the grill pan carriage forward using
the handle (Fig.2-11).
The grill has two elements that allow either the whole area of
the pan to be heated or just the right-hand half.
Adjust the heat to suit by turning the control knob. To heat
the whole grill, turn the knob clockwise (Fig.2-12).
To heat the right-hand half, turn the knob counter-clockwise.
The neon indicator light by the grill control will come on.
For best results, slide the carriage back into the grill chamber
and preheat the appropriate part(s) of the grill for two
minutes. The grill trivet can be removed and the food placed
on it while you are waiting for the grill to preheat.
DO NOT leave the grill on for more than a few
moments without the grill pan underneath it,
otherwise the knobs may become hot.
Once the grill has preheated, slide the carriage out again.
With the trivet back in place with the food on it, slide the
carriage back into the grill chamber. Make sure that it is
pushed right in.
CAUTION: Accessible parts may be hot when the grill
is in use. Young children should be kept away.
Fig.2-10
Fig.2-11
Fig.2-12
The grill pan trivet can be set to four dierent grilling heights
by a combination of turning it back to front and turning it
upside down (Fig.2-13).
Do not leave the grill on for more than a few moments,
without the grill pan underneath it.
Never close the grill door when the grill is on.
CAUTION: This applicance is for cooking purposes
only. It must not be used for other purposes, for
example room heating.
1
Fig.2-13
2
3
4
5
FunctionUse
Defrost
Fan oven
Fanned grilling
Fan assisted
Conventional oven
Browning element
Base heat
To thaw small items in the oven without
heat
A full cooking function, even heat
throughout, great for baking
Grilling meat and fish with the door
closed
A full cooking function good for roasting
and baking
A full cooking function for roasting and
baking in the lower half of the oven
To brown and crisp cheese topped
dishes
To crisp up the bases of quiche, pizza or
pastry
Table 2-1
The Ovens
The left-hand oven is a multi-function oven, while the righthand tall oven is a fan oven.
The Multi-function Oven
As well as the oven fan and fan element, they are tted
with two extra heating elements, one visible in the top of
the oven and the second under the oven base. Take care to
avoid touching the top element and element deector when
placing or removing items from the ovens.
The multi-function oven has 3 main cooking functions: fan,
fan assisted and conventional cooking. These functions
should be used to complete most of your cooking.
The browning element and base heat can be used in the
latter part of the cooking process to ne tune the results to
your particular requirements.
Use fanned grilling for all your grilling needs and defrost to
safely thaw small items of frozen food.
Table 2-1 gives a summary of the multi-function modes.
The multi-function ovens have many varied uses. We suggest
you keep a careful eye on your cooking until you are familiar
with each function. Remember – not all functions will be
suitable for all food types.
Please remember that all cookers vary – temperatures in your
new ovens may dier to those in your previous cooker.
Multi-function Oven Functions
Defrost
This function operates the fan to circulate cold air
only. Make sure the temperature control is at 0°C and
that no heat is applied. This enables small items such
as desserts, cream cakes and pieces of meat, sh and poultry
to be defrosted.
Defrosting in this way speeds up the process and protects
the food from ies. Pieces of meat, sh and poultry should
be placed on a shelf, over a tray to catch any drips. Be sure to
wash the shelf and tray after defrosting.
Defrost with the oven door closed.
Large items, such as whole chickens and joints should not be
defrosted in this way. We recommend this be carried out in a
refrigerator.
Defrosting should not be carried out in a warm oven or when
an adjoining oven is in use or still warm.
Make sure that dairy foods, meat and poultry are completely
defrosted before cooking.
6
Fan Oven
This function operates the fan and the heating
element around it. An even heat is produced
throughout the oven, allowing you to cook large
amounts quickly.
Fan oven cooking is particularly suitable for baking on several
shelves at one time and is a good ‘all-round’ function. It may
be necessary to reduce the temperature by approximately
10 °C for recipes previously cooked in a conventional oven.
If you wish to preheat the oven, wait until the indicator light
has gone out before inserting the food.
Fanned Grilling
This function operates the fan whilst the top element
is on. It produces a more even, less erce heat than a
conventional grill. For best results, place the food to
be grilled, on a trivet over a roasting tin, which should be
smaller than a conventional grill pan. This allows greater air
circulation. Thick pieces of meat or sh are ideal for grilling in
this way, as the circulated air reduces the erceness of the
heat from the grill.
The oven door should be kept closed while grilling is in
progress, so saving energy.
You will also nd that the food needs to be watched and
turned less than for normal grilling. Preheat this function
before cooking.
For best results we recommend that the grill pan is not
located on the uppermost shelf.
Fan Assisted Oven
This function operates the fan, circulating air heated
by the elements at the top and the base of the oven.
The combination of fan and conventional cooking
(top and base heat) makes this function ideal for cooking
large items that need thorough cooking, such as a large meat
roast.
When using this function, it is also possible to bake on two
shelves at one time, although they will need to be swapped
over during the cooking time, as the heat at the top of the
oven is greater than at the base.
This is a fast intensive form of cooking; keep an eye on the
food cooking until you have become accustomed to this
function.
Conventional Oven (Top and Base Heat)
This function combines the heat from the top and
base elements. It is particularly suitable for roasting
and baking pastry, cakes and biscuits.
Food cooked on the top shelf will brown and crisp faster than
on the lower shelf, because the heat is greater at the top of
the oven than at the base, as in ‘Fan Assisted Oven’ function.
Similar items being cooked will need to be swapped around
for even cooking. This means that foods requiring dierent
temperatures can be cooked together, using the cooler zone
in the lower half of the oven and hotter area to the top.
The exposed top element may cook some foods too quickly,
so we recommend that the food be positioned in the lower
half of the oven to cook. The oven temperature may also need
to be lowered.
Browning Element
This function uses the element in the top of the oven
only. It is a useful function for the browning or
nishing of pasta dishes, vegetables in sauce,
shepherds pie and lasagne, the item to be browned being
already hot before switching to the top element.
Base Heat
This function uses the base element only. It will crisp
up your pizza or quiche base or nish o cooking the
base of a pastry case on a lower shelf. It is also a
gentle heat, good for slow cooking of casseroles in the
middle of the oven or for plate warming.
The Browning and Base Heat functions are useful additions
to your oven, giving you exibility to nish o items to
perfection.
The Fan Oven
The right-hand tall oven is a fan oven that circulates hot air
continuously, which means faster, more even cooking.
The recommended cooking temperatures for a fan oven are
generally lower than a conventional oven.
Note: Please remember that all cookers vary so temperatures
in your new ovens may dier to those in your previous
cooker.
7
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