Hotpoint RGB744GEN, RGB745GEN Use, Care & Installation Manual

Howtoget thebestfrom
conbnK
Anti-TipDevice 3,29,30 Self-CleaningInstructions 14,15
useandcare
ApplianceRegistration 2
8,9, 17,19
Careand Cleaning 14-19 ThermostatA.djustment 20
& Instigation
-94
Clock and Timer- 9
PowerOutage? -
8
of models
I
Consumer Services Features
35
6
Problem Solver
21
SafetyInstructions 2-5
I
Flooring under ~nge InstallationInstructions
23,24
22-32
Setthe Clock
9
Setthe Timer 9
I
Leveling 29 Surface Cooking 7
~Modeland Serial Numbers 2, 6,24 Burner Grates
16,19
I
oven 8,9
Burners 17,19
Air Adjustment 20 Control Settings
7
I
Baking,BakingGuide
10,~~
Cookware Tips
7
Broiler Pan and Rack 13,17,19 Flame Size
7,21
I
Broiling,BroilingGuide
13
LightingInstructions 7
Control Settings 8,9 Warranty
Back Cover
Door Removal
17
Light; Bulb Replacement
8, 18
oven BottomRemoval 18 Instillation
22-32
Ove(lVents
4,9, 17
RGB744GE RGB745GE
1
Preheating 10,11
GE Answer center@
Roasting,RoastingGuide 12
800.626.2000
Readthk bookcareful~y.
If youneedservice,..
It is intendedtohelpyouoperate
and maintainyournewrange
properly. Keepit handy for answerstoyour
questions.
Ifyou don’tunderstandsomething or need more help, write (include
yourphonenumber):
ConsumerAffairs Hotpoint AppliancePark Louisville,KY40225
writedownthemodeI
andserialnumbers.
You’llfind them on a labellocated either on the front frame when you open the ovendoor or behindthe storagedrawer or kick panel.
These numbers are also on the Consumer Product Ownership
RegistrationCard that came with
your range. Beforesendingin this card, please write these numbers here:
Model Num—ber
Toobtainservice,see the ConsumerServicespage in the backofthisbook.
Toobtainreplacementparts, contactGE/Hotpoint Appliance PartsMarts or FactoryService Centers.
We’reproudofour service and wantyouto be pleased. If for some reasonyouare nothappy with the serviceyou receive,here are three stepsto followforfurther help.
FIRST,contactthe people who servicedyourappliance.Explain whyyouare notpleased. In most cases, this will solvetie problem.
NEXT, if youare stillno-tpleased, writeall the details-including yourphone number-to:
Manager, ConsumerRelations Hotpoint AppliancePark Louisville,Kentucky40225
FINALLY,if yourproblemis still notresolved, write:
Major Appliance Consumer ActionPanel 20 North WackerDrive Chicago,Illinois 60606
Serial Number
Usethese numbers in any correspondence or service calls concerning your range.
Immediately contact the dealer (or builder) that sold you the range.
/-‘
/’
,/../
I]wPQRTmT
SAFETY NmIcE
TheCalifornia SafeDrinking
%Vaterand ToxicEnforcement ActrequirestheGovernor
CaliforniatopubIishalistof substancesknowntothestate
tocausecancer,bifi defectsor otherreproductiveharm, and
requiresbusinessestowarn customersofpotentialexposure 10suchsubstances.
Gasappliancescancause
minorexposureto fourofthese substances,namelybenzene, carbonmonoxide,formaldehyde
andsoot,causedprimarilybythe incompletecombustionofnatural
gasor LP fuels.Properlyadjusted burners,indicatedbyabluish ratherthan ayellowflame,wili
minimizeincompletecombustion. Exposuretothesesubstancescan
beminimizedbyventingwith anopenwindowor usinga ventilationfanor hood.
\vheH You&t Your Raage QHave the instiller showyou
thelocation of the range gas
of
system,itis yourpersonal
responsibilityandobligationto haveanungroundedoutletreplaced witha properly-grounded,three-
prongoutletin accordancewith theNationalElectricalCode.Do notuse an extensioncord witl~ thisappliance.
@Besure all pattingmaterials
are removedfromthe range
beforeoperatingit, to preventfire or smokedamageshouldthe
packingmaterialignite.
e Besure your range iscorrectly
adjusted by
technician or insbller forthe
type ofgas (natural or LP) on
wtich it is to be used. Your rangecan beconvertedforuse on eithertype ofgas. See
Instigation Instructions.
@After prolonged use ofa
range9
may result and ImaRy floor
a qualified service
high floor temperatures
coveringsWilinotWithsbnd
this kind of use. Neverinstallthe
rangeovervinyltileor linoleum thatcannotwithstandsuchtypeof use. Never installitdirectlyover interiorkitchencarpeting.
@CAUTION:ITEMS OF
mTEmsT sHomD Nm BE cABxmTs ABQW A WGE
mcHILDmN
smmDDJ
o~ON TmBaCkSplaSh
OF A RANGB-cHILDmN cl.IMBING ONTHE MNGE
mmAcH ITEMSCOULDBE
SEWOUSLYINJUMD.
wmNNG–Allranges
Can tip injury Could
result. To
prevent
aceidentil
tippingofthe
rmge~ attach
thesupplied Anti-Tipdevice
I
tothewall.
(SeeInstallationInstructions.) Tocheckif thedeviceis installed andengagedproperly,carefully tiptherangeforward.The Anti-Tip deviceshouldengageabracketon thebackwallofthe rangethat willpreventit fromtippingover.
If youpull therangeoutfrom thewallfor anyreason, malce surethe.Anti-’ipdeviceisengagd withthebracketwhenyoupush the rangeback’againstthewall.
and
e ~seod~ d~ pt holden—moist
or damppotholdersonhotsurfaces
mayresultinburnsfromsteam. Donotletpotholderscomenear openflameswhenfifiingcookware. Do notusea towelorotherbulky clotl~in placeofapotholder.
@Tominimizethe possibility ofburns9ignitionofflammable materials,and spillage,turn cookwarehandlestowardtheside orbackoftherangewithout extendingoveradjacentburners.
@Mwaysturn sunrfaeeburner
controltoOFFbeforeremoving cookware.
ecarefully watchfoofi being fried atahighflamesetting.
e~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~fi(a~~
opetings)oftherange.They
providethe air inletandoutlet whichis necessaryfor therange to operateproperlywithcorrect combustion.Air openingsare locatedat therear ofthecooktop,
atthetopoftheovendoor and underthekickpanelor storage drawer.
@~~ ~~~~$~~~~~ ~~~~~ tooting surfaceif thewokhasa
roundme@lring
that is placed
overthe burner gratetosupport thewok.This ring actsas a heat
trap thatmaydamagetheburner grateandburner head. Also, it maycausethe burner to work improperly.This maycausea carbonmonoxidelevelabovethat allowedbycurrent standards,
resultingin ahealth hazard.
~Foods for frying should he
dry as possible. Frost
on frozen
as
foodsor moist~]reon fresl~foods ca~~causehotfatlo bubbieup and OVer
sides ofpan.
faR
will be used infrying, stir -
togetherbeforeheating,or asfats meltslowly.
@Mways heat fatslowly9and
watchasit heats.
~$e a deep-fat thermometer
@
wheneverpossibleto prevent overheatingfatbeyondthe smokingpoint.
o USeproper pan size—Avoid
pansthatare unstableor easily tipped.Selectcookwarewith.flat bottomslargeenoughtocover burnergrates.Toavoidspillovers, makesurecookwareislarge enoughto containfoodproperly. Thiswillboth savecleaning and. preventhazardousaccumulations R~‘ offood,sinceheavy spattering or spilloverslefton rangecan ignite. Usepanswithhandles that canbe ~: easilygrasp~ andwiflremaincool.
@Use only glasscookwarethat
isrecommendedfortop-of-range
cooking.
Keepall plastics away from
@
@~~ not]eaveplastic itemson
the coolitop–they maymeltif ‘:’, lefttoocloseto tl~event.
eDo notleaveany itemsonthe ‘“:;:;
cooktop.Thehotair from the ventmayigniteflammableitems and willincreasepressure in closed containers,whic]~may causethem.to burst.
ol~$&~$~s~~~s~~~leamolgntof
. fat for effeci:il~eSlla!lov+or dee~3” :~$f~’jy~1?G-
fl.iaolqillingtilepan too till
off~~~~nQauseSpilioverswhen .f~:
~~~~~(j,{~~.~.,
e IJseoniyglasscookware
that is reeom~llended
in gas ovens.
@.AIwa’ysremove broiler pan from Ovenas soon as you fltish brailimg. Grease lefi in
cancatchfireif ovenis used withoutremovingthegreasefrom thebrofierpan.
e When broiling, if meat istoo
closeto the flame9the fat may igfite. Trimexcessfattoprevent excessiveflare-ups.
@Make sure broiler pan is in pIaeecorrectly to reducethe possibilityofgreasefires.
@If youshould have agrease fire in thebroiler pan,turnoff
oven,andkeepdoorclosedto containfire untilitburns out.
@Donot Cleandoor gasket, Thedoorgasketis essential for a goodseal. Care shouldbetaken nottorub, damageor movethe gasket.
for use
thepan
@Read ‘tTheProblem sQlver99
on page21ofthis book.
eDon9tattempttorepair
or replace anypartofyour range unlessit recommended otherservicingshouldbe referred toaqualifiedtechnician.
is specifically
inthis book. All
SAW TmsE msTRucTIoNs
@Do not use ovenCleaners.No
commercialovencleaneror oven linerprotectivecoatingofany kindshouldbe used in or around
anypartof the oven.
@Beforeself-cleaning the oven9 removebroiler pan and other cookware.
e clean only parb listed in this use and care BQQIL.
@Iifeeprange clean nnd free of accumulations of ‘greaseor
Spi]loverswhich may igdtee
..—..
——
——
@
@@@@
I
RGB7@GEN
I Feature hdex
1 surfaceBurners, Grates and
Drip mm
I
2 OVEN SET Knob
I
/ 30 Ven “on9’Indicator
6 OVEN TEMP Knob
I
ISeepage I
16,17,19
II
8
I
8
I
-
U4<N
13 Broiler Hn axld~ek (Do not clean in 13,17,19
tie self-cleaningoven)
I I
14 Removable
removedfor oven cleaning) -
16 Removable=ek Mnel
(Model RGW44GEN)
17 Storage Dmwer (Model RGW45GEN) \ 18,28
19 Removableoven Bottom
20 ovenLight I 8,18
21 oven Light on/off switch 8
(Model RG~45GEN)
OvenDoor(easily 1171
I I@
I
I
17
II
I
18,19
I
I
I
.,--
....
L=
22
Anti-rep De=dee (seeInstallationInstmctions) ~~;~~
Right
3,29,3
II
...
.,=-,,
{(
ti ,
,,
.._.,
Sllrfa.cecooKng
&g$.
v$# ~IectrieIgtition
~\:g’:-
Yoursurfaceburnersare lighted
~%~byelectricignition,eliminatingthe
3
needforstandingpilot lights with constantlyburningflames.
In case of a power outage, youcan
lightthe surfaceburners onyour rangewith a match. Hold a lighted
matchto theburner, thenturn the knobtothe LITE position.Use extreme caution
burnem thisway.
Surfaceburners in use whenan electricalpower failure occurswi~ continueto operatenormally.
surface Burner Controk
Knobsthatturn the surfaceburners onand off are marked as to which burners they control. The two
knobson the leficontrol the left frontand leftrear burners. The two knobson theright controltheright frontand rightrear burners.
;
-!
when lighting
sizeassooilas theburnerlighfi, andtheblowingor hissingsound willbemuchlessno~iceable.
After Li@tiW a Bwner
~Checkto be suretheburner you
turnedonisthe oneyouwanttouse.
@Do notoperatea burner for an extendedperiod oftimewithout cookwareon the grate.The finish on the grate maychipwithout cookwareto absorb the heat.
@Be sure the burnersand gratesare coolbeforeyouplaceyourhand, a
potholder,cleaningclothsor other materialson them.
How to select mame she
Watchthe flame, nottheknob, as youreduceheat.
The flame sizeon a gas burner shouldmatch the cookwareyou are using.
FOR SAFE HANDLING OF COOKWARENEVER LET THE FLAME EXTEND UPTHE S~ES
OF THE COOKWARE. Any flame larger than the bottomof the cookwareis wasted and ordy serves to heat the handle.
when using aluminum or aiuminum-clad sminless steel
potsand pans9adjusttheflameso
the circle it makes is about 1/2inch smaller than the bottom of the cookware.
kI~~]enboiling, usethis same flame size—-l/2inch smaller than the bottomof the cookware—nomatter
WJ~~a~the~~o}{wareisinadeof. Foods cook jtlst as q~licldyat a gentie boil
as fijey do at a.~furiousrolling boil. A Ydghbod creates steammd cooks ~;~;~Ti]~oist~~re.fl~avorand n~~trition.
Avoiditexceptforthe fewcooking
I
processesthatneeda vigorousboil. men f~ing or Wmhg fook
h SWMWSSki, cast tioll or enmelware~ keepthe flamedown lower—--toabout1/2thediameter ofthepan.
men f~ng h glassor Cemic c~-~ lowerthe flameevenmore.
Top-of-Range Coohare Muminm: Medium-weight
cookwareis recommendedbecause itheatsquicUy andevenly.Most
foodsbrownevenlyin an aluminum skillet.Minerals in foodand water willstainbut willnot harm aluminum. A quick scour with a soap-filledsteelwoolpad after eachuse keeps aluminumcookware lookingshinyand new. Use saucepanswith tight-fittinglids when cookingwith minimum amountsof water.
Cmt Iron: If heated S1OW1Y,most skilletswill give satisfacto”~results.
Enamelware: Under some conditions, the enamel of some cookwaremaymelt.Followcookware manufacturer’srecommendations for cooking methods.
Glass: There aretwo types ofglass cookware—thatfor oven use only and that for top-of-riingecooking
(saucepans, coffee and teapots). Glass conducts heat very slowly.
Heatproof Glass Ceramic: Can be used for either surface or oven
cooking. It conducts heat very
slowlyand cools very slow~y.
Check cookware manu~~cturer’s directions to be sure it can be used
on gas ranges.
StainlessSteel:This metal alone
has poor heating properties, and is
usually combined with copper,
aluminum or other metals for
improved heat distribution.
Combination me~l skillets usually
woxksatisfactorily if they are
used with mediun] heat as tl~e
manufacturer recom~lleilds.
},
,’
!f
~~~~~y~~~g~~~~~~
The{)ven !bMrnerandbroil
burneronyourrangeare !ighted
e~ectricignition.Theovenand
by
broiler
cannotbeoperatedinthe
eventofa power failure.
Tolighteitherburner,
OVENSETknobto thedesiredoven operationand the OVENTEMP knobto the desired temperature. The burner shouldignitewithin
60 seconds.
CAUTION:DO NOT MA= ANY
ATTEMPTTO OPERATE THE ELE~~C IGNITION OVEN DUR.TNGAN ELE~RICAL
POWEROUTAGE.Theovencamot befit duringa poweroutage.Gaswdl
notflow unless the glowbar is hot.
If the ovenis in use when a power outageoccurs,theovenburnershuts offand cannot be re-lit untilpower
is restored.
Before using Your oven
Be sure you understandhow to set the controlsproperly. Practice removingand replacing the shelves
while the oven is cool. Readthe information and tips on the followingpages. Keep this book
handy where you can referto it— especiallyduringthe firstfewweeks.
oven Controk
The controjs for your ovenare marked OVEN SET and OVEN TEMP.
turn the
BAm—Use thissettingfor all normalovenoperations—for example,for cookingroasts or casseroles.Only the bottomoven burner operatesduringbaking.
BROI&Use thissettingfor broiling,Only thetop (broil) burnerwill operate.
Tm BAK&When you use this setting,the ovenwillturn on and offat the timesyouselect. See AutomaticOvenTimeronnextpage.
CLEM—Use this settingfor the self-cleaningfunctiononly.
The OWN TEMP Control maintainsthe temperatureyou set fornormal ovenoperationas well
as for broiling.Push and turn clockwiseto settemperaturesor to set into CLEAN position.
0~—Shuts off powerto the oven
controls. Oven will not operate. The OVEN TEMP knob shouldbe turned to OFF wheneverthe oven is not in use.
For normal o~’enoperation, push and turn the knob clockwiseto the desired temperature which is marked in normally take 30 to 60 seconds beforethe flame comeson.
Afier the ovenreaches the selected temperature, the ovenburner cycles —offcompletely,then on with a full flame-to keeuthe oven
temperature contr~lled.
25°increments.Itwill
ovenMoistEre
Asyour oven heats up, the temperature change of the air in the oven may cause water droplets to form on the door
glass. These dropletsare harm~essand will evaporateas the oven continues to heat up.
When the door is opened, the oven lightcomes on automatically.A manualon/offswitchislocatedtothe Iefiofthe surface burner controls.
The lightcomes on automatically whenthe ovendoor is opened.
ovenshelves
t
The shelves are designedwith stop­locksso when placed correctly on the shelf supports, they will stop beforecoming completely out of the ovenand will nottilt when you are removingfoodfrom them or placing food on them.
When placing cookware on a shelf, pullthe shelf out to the “stop” position. Place the cookware on the shelf, then slide the shelf back into the oven. This will eliminate reaching into the hot oven.
I
. . ,... ___________
~G.
The oven has five.shelf supports
%* for normal bakingand roasting—
A (bottom),B, C, .Dand E (top), Italsohas a speciallow shelf position,(R) for roastingextralarge items,suchas a large turkey.Shelf
positionsfor tooting are suggested
The clock and timersonyourrange are helpfuldevicesthat serve severalpurposes.
2. SettheDELAYSTARTcontrol. Wsh in and turntheDELAYST~ dialtothetime youwanttheoven toturn itselfon. (If you wantit to startcookingimmediately,do not setDELAYSTART time.)
The ovenis ventedthroughduct openingsat the rear ofthe cooktop, (seepage 6). Do not block these
open;ngs‘whencookingin the
oven—itis importantthat the flowof
hot
airfromtheoven~d freshairto
L5eovenburnersbeuninterrupted.
@vent openings and nearby surfacesmay becomehot. Do 120ttoune~lthein.
~ HaIldlesofpo@and pansonthe
Cool{topmay becomehot if left too‘closeto thevent.
Toset the clock, push theknob in and turn the clock handsto the righttothe correct time. Then let theknobout and continueturning toOFF.
The Mnute her hasbeen combinedwith the rangeclock. Use thistimer to time cooking operations. The color ofitspointer differsfrom that ofthe clockhands.
Minutesare marked up to 60 on the
center ring of the clock. Toset the Mnute Timer, turn the
knob to the Iefi,
withoutpushingi??,
untilthe pointer reachesthe number ofminutes you want totime.
Atthe end ofthe set time, a
buzzersounds to tellyoutime is up. Turn the knob,
untilthe pointer reaches OFF
in,
and the buzzer stops.
This Timer will automatically start and stop your ovenfor you. Here’s what you do:
withoutpushirzg
3. Set the STOPTIME control. Push in and turn the S~P TIME knobtothe timeyouwanttheoven to turn itself off. Remember, foods will spoilif left in the oventoo long beforeor afier cooking.
Note: There mustbeat least a half-hourdifferencebetween the
DELAYSTARTand S~P TIME dials, and times can be set ody up to 11hours and 45 minutes in advance.
4. Setthe OVEN SET knob to TINIEBAKE.
5. Set the OVENTEMP knobto
the desired cookingtemperature.
The ovenwill turn itself on immediatelyunless you have setthe DELAYSTARTcontrol for a later startingtime. It will operate at the temperature you selected and turn itselfoffat the StopTime you selected.
Afier youtake yourfood
oven,be
sure to turn the OVEN
TEMP knob to OFF.
outoftl~e
-\
;
.,”
1. Make sure both your range clock and the DELAY STARTdial show thecorrect time of day.When
~itherthe DELAY STARTdial or
DELAYSTOP dial is pushed in
~ndt~~rned,it will “pop”intoplace ~vllelltlIe
u~ockis reached.
time show~lon tile range
.HoMrtosetYourRznge
forBaking
1. Position the shelf or shelvesin theoven.If cookingontwoshelves at the same time, staggerthe pans forbestheat circulation.
2. Closeovendoor. Turn OVEN
SETknobtoBAKEorT~E B~ and turn OVENTEMP knobto desiredtemperature.
3. Place food in ovenoncenter
ofshelf. Allow at least2 inches betweenedgeofcookwareand ovenwallor adjacentcookware.
4. Check foodfor donenessat
minimumtime given onrecipe. Cooklonger if necessary. Turn OVENTEMP knobto OFF and removefood.
Reheating
Preheatingis veryimportantwhen
usingtemperaturesbelow225”F. andwhen baking foodssuchas biscuits,cookies,cakesandother
pastries. Preheat theovenforat least 15minutesif preheatingis
necessary. Preheating isnotnecessary when
roastingor for long-timecookingof
wholemeals.
SheIfP9Si~~om
Most bakingisdone on the(B)
shelfposition.
Whenbakingthreeor fouritems, usctwoshelvespositionedonthe
8L D) supports.
(B
Bakeangel food cakes on the (A) shelf position.
E“’’=ne~j~~
FjakiEEkg .
~Follow:1tested recipe and me:lsurethe ingredients carefully. Ifyouarc using a package mix,
followlabel directio~ls. t’‘dk~y}~y~vcnheatsup, Ille
~em’oerai~irechan~-e(:.fthe::irintile
s
:>lJ@~)?lj;~y~;;pt~~[:~~c~{;~
,,SQ.-A
d;opleis fcf
formonthedoorglass.These dropletsare harmlessand will evaporateastheovencontinuesto heatup.
@Donotopentheovendoorduring abakingoperation—heatwillbelost andthebakingtimemightneedto beextended.Thiscould causepoor
bakingresults.If youmustopenthe door,openimpartially—only3or4 inches—andcloseit as quicklyas possible.
@Donotdisturb theheatcirculation
intheovenwiththeuseofaluminum foil.Iffoilis used, place a small sheetofit, about 10by 12inchesat
themost, on alowershelfseveral inchesbelowthe food.Do notplace foilontheovenbottom.
~o~~o~ ~~ti~~
RobRem
andPossibleSolutiom
Pm Burningaround
eEdges
oIncorrectbakingtemperature.
Bottom crust soggyand
A11ow crust and/or fi~]ingtoCOO1
@
sufficientlybeforefillingpieshell. ~Fillingmaybe toothinorjuicy.
~Fillingallowedto standinpie shell beforebaking. (Fillpie shellsand bakeimmediately.) QIngredientsand proper measuring affectthequality ofthecrust. Usea testedrecipe and goodtechnique. Makesure there areno tinyholesor
tearsin a bottomcrust. “Patching” apiecrust could cause soaking.
Pie filling runs over QTopand bottom crust notsealed
togetherwe~].
~
Edgesofpiecrustnotbuiltup highenough. QToomuchfilling. CIChecksizeofpiep~ate.
Fasiry tstough; Crlistnotflal<y 0~(>0
~ Fat too sofior cut ifltoo
Polldo~lqhlightlyandhandle
little as
ofcrust toothin.
IIILICh]l:llld]i12g.
pos~ible.
edges
unbaked
fine.
as
cAms
Cake riseshigher on one side
Batterspreadunevenlyinpan.
s
~Ovenshelvesnotlevel. ~Warpedpansused.
Cakes cracking on top
Oventemperaturetoohigh.
@
~Battertoothick, followrecipe orexactpackagedirections.
@Checkforpropershelf position. ~Checkpan’siz~calledforinrecipe.
~~nlpropermixingofcake. cake fa~ls
~Toomuchshortening,sugaror liquid. ~Checkleaveningagent,baking powderor bakingsodatoassure freshness.Makea habitof noting expirationdateson packaged ingredients. ~Cakebakedatincorrect temperatureor notbakedlong enough. ~If addingoiltoacakemix, make certainthe oilisthetypeand amountspecified.
Crust ishard
Cakehassoggylayer or strealwat :” bottom
Underminingingredients.
@
~Shorteningtoosoftfor proper
creaming.
~Toomuch liquid. Cooww & Blscmm
Doughy center;
surface
~
Checktemperature.
heavycrust om
s Checkshelfposition. ~CarefiHyfollowbakinginstructions
asgiveninreliablerecipeoron
conveniencefoodpack~ge.
Flatcookie sheetswill givemore
@
evenbakingresults.Don’tovercrowd foodson abaking sheet. ~Conveniencefoodsused beyond their expiration date.
Brownimgmore llotieeab]e on one side ~Oven door
cl~eck
gasketsead.
Q Checkshelf
notclosf:dproperly,
positio13.
13:3+1’iiERgGuide
1. ~~relleatiiigisvery inlpor~nt
;rElenusing temperatures below
225*N.and }Vhenbakislgfoods
such as biseuiti9eookies9Cakes
and otl~erpastries.Preheatthe
ovenforat least 15minutes.
Preheatingis notnecessarywhen roastingor for long-timecooking ofwholemeals.
Foot]
Bread
Biscuits(%in. Coffeecake Cornbreadormuffins
Gingerbread Muftins
Popovers Quickloafbread Yeastbread(2loaves)
thick)
Cookware Positions 1 Temperatures ShinyCookieSheet
ShinyMetalPanwith satin-finishbottom Cast-IronorGlassPan ShinyMetalPanwith satin-finishbottom ShinyMetalhluffinPans
>eepGlassor Cast-IronCups WetalorGlassLoafPans Metalor GlassLoafPans
2. Aluminumpansconductheat
3. Dark or non-shinyfinishesand quicldy.For mostconventional glasscookwaregenerallyabsorb baking,light, shinyfinishesgive
heat, whichmayresultindry,crisp
bestresultsbecausethey help crusts.Reduceovenheat 25°F.if
preventoverbrowning.For best browningresults, we recommend cakepansandpie plateswithdull
lightercrustsare desired. Rapid browningof somefoodscan be achievedbypreheatingcast-iron
bottomsurfaces. cookware.
shelf
c
B B
B B
B B B
1
400°-4500
400°-4250
350°-3750 375°-4250
Oven
400°-4750 350°-4000
350°
375°
Time,
Minutes
15-20 15-30
~o-40 45-55
20-30
45-60 45-60 30-60
Commen@
Canned,refrigeratedbiscuitstake2to 4 minuteslesstime.
Preheatcast-ironpanforcrispcrust.
D&reaseabout5minutesformuffmmix, orbakeat450”F.for25minutes,thenat 350°F.for10to 15minutes.
Darkmetalorglassgivesdeepest browning.
Plainrolls
Sweetrolls
cakes
(withoutshortening)
Angelfood Jellyroll Sponge
Cakes
Bundtcakes
Cupcakes Fruitcakes
Liiy(:r
Loiif
(;ookies 13rowI)ics Drop
I{cfrigcrilIclr
Rolled orsliced
;hinyOblongorMuffinPans ;hirwOblongor MuffinPans
~IuminumTubePan IetalJellyRollPan 4etalorCeramicPan
4etalor CeramicPan
hinyMcta[MuffinPans MetalorGlassLoafor TubePJn ShinyMetalPanwith
satin-finishbottom Mc(alorGlassLoafPans B
Met:llorGlassPans
CookieSheet
CookieSheet CookieSheet
GlassorMetalPans 510SSCUStilrdCUpSor ;asscrole(setin GlassCusulrdCupsor ~asserote
p2nof hotwater)
A,B A,B
I
B,C
B.C B,C
B.C
A,B,C
B B
A
B
A
B
B
B
B
375°-4250 350°-3750
325°-3750 375°-4000
325°-3500
325°-3500
350°-3750 275°-3000
350°-3750
350°
325°-350” 350°-4000
400°-4250
375°-4000
350°-4000 300°-3500
325°
10-25
20-30
30-55
1o-15
45-60
45-65 20-25
2-4hrs.
20-35
40-60
25-35
10-20
6-12 7-12
30-60 30-60
50-90
tie-piece panis convenient. Linepanwithwaxpaper.
Paperlinersproducemoistercrusts. Use300°F.andShelfBforsmallor individualcakes. Ifbakingfourlayers,useShelvesBandD.
Barcookiesfrommixusesametime. UseShelfCandincreasetemperature 25to 50°F.formorebrowning.
Reducetemperatureto300°F.forlarge custard. Cookbreadorricepuddingwithcustard base80to90minutes.
‘oilPar]onCookieSheet ipreadtocrustedges
;fassOrS:itirr-finishNfctal ;I;ISSorSiltin-finishNletal ;1:1SSorSiitin-fiilisflFt4e[ilI
i’an
B,
400°-4250 3~5°_350”
B B B
c
400°-4250 400°-4250
450°
~~j”-d~()” 3~5°_3750
300°-3500
40-70
15-25
40-60 40-60
10-16
60-90
30-60
30-75
Largepiesuse400”F.andincreasedtime. Toquicklybrownmeringue,use400”F.for
9to 11minutes.
Custardfillingsrequirelowertemperature, longertime.
Increasetimeforlargeamountor
size.
j_:~
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