Accessible parts will become hot in use. To avoid burns
and scalds children should be kept away.
You need clean fresh air - so does your cooker. Burner fl ames
produce exhaust gases, heat and moisture. Make sure that the
kitchen is well ventilated: keep natural ventilation holes open or
install a powered cooker hood 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. For more detail see the
Installation Instructions.
We recommend you read the ‘General Safety Instructions’
section if you have not used a gas cooker before. We describe
some basic guidelines on how to use a gas cooker safely.
Gas and Electricity on
Make sure that the gas supply is turned on and that the cooker
pluged in to the electricity supply and switched on. The cooker
needs electricity.
Peculiar smells
When you fi rst use your cooker it may give off a slight odour.
This should stop after a little use.
Before using for the fi rst time, make sure that all
packing materials have been removed and then to dispel
manufacturing odours, turn the ovens to Mark 7 and run for
an hour.
Make sure the room is well ventilated to the outside air, by
opening windows or turning on a cooker hood for example.
We recommend that people with respiratory or allergy
problems should vacate the area for this brief period.
Before using the grill for the fi 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.
Installation
In the UK the cooker must be installed by a CORGI
registered engineer. Failure to install the appliance correctly
could invalidate any warranty or liability claims and lead to
prosecution
This appliance shall be installed in accordance with the
regulations in force and only in a well ventilated space. Read
the instructions before installing or using this appliance.
This appliance should not be installed in a boat or caravan.
2
Contents
Hotplate burners Page 4
The Griddle Page 5
Warmer Page 5
The Grill Page 6
The Ovens Page 7
The Clock Page 7
Cooking using the timer Page 9
Oven cooking Page 10
‘S’ (Slow) cooking Page 10
Oven shelves Page 11
The Handyrack Page 12
Oven light Page 12
Storage Page 12
Oven cooking guide Page 13
Cleaning your cooker Page 14
Moving your cooker Page 17
Troubleshooting Page 18
General Safety Instructions Page 20
Installation Page 22
Servicing Notes Page 29
Circuit Diagram Page 34
Technical Data Page 35
3
Hotplate burners
5
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. The minimum
pan diameter recommended is 120mm.
1
The drawing by each knob indicates which burner
that knob controls.
Press the igniter button, and push in and turn a knob
to the large fl ame symbol (
a match.
). Alternatively light with
2
Adjust the fl ame height to suit by turning the knob.
On this cooker the low position is beyond high, not
between high and off. The small fl ame marks the ‘low
position’. Turn the knob towards it after the contents
of a pan have boiled.
Pans and kettles with down turned base rims should
not be used.
6
The Wok burner is designed to provide even heat
over a large area. It is ideal for large pans and stir
frying. For heating smaller pans the smaller burners
may be more effi cient.
If a burner fl ame goes out, turn the control knob
off and leave it for one minute before relighting it.
You can remove the burner parts for
cleaning, see the ‘Cleaning your cooker’
section of these instructions.
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 off
while the enamel is still warm.
3
Make sure fl ames are under the pans. Using a lid
will help the contents boil more quickly.
Pans and kettles with concave bases or down turned
base rims should not be used.
4
Simmering aids, such as asbestos or mesh mats,
are NOT recommended. They will reduce burner
performance and could damage the pan supports.
4
The Griddle
1
The griddle fi ts a single pan support, front to back.
It is designed for cooking food on directly. Don’t use
pans of any kind on it. The griddle surface is nonstick and metal cooking utensils (e.g. spatulas) will
damage the surface. Use heat resistant plastic or
wooden utensils.
2
Don’t put it crossways - it will not fi t properly and will
be unstable.
5
Always leave space around the griddle for the
gases to escape. Never fi t two griddles side by side.
Large pans should also be spaced well apart. The
maximum pan base diameter is 250mm.
Use the following heat settings as a guide for
griddle cooking.
High/medium:
Drop scones, Bacon, Chops, Steak, Burgers.
Medium/low:
Potato cakes, Eggs, Fish cakes.
Don’t put it on the Wok burner - it is not designed to
fi t the Wok burner pan support.
3
Position the griddle over the hotplate burners
resting on the pan support. The griddle can be
lightly brushed with cooking oil before use. Light the
hotplate burners. Adjust the fl ame heights to suit.
4
Preheat the griddle for a maximum of 5 minutes
before adding food. Leaving it longer may cause
damage. You can reduce the heat by turning the
control knobs towards the lower position (marked
with the small fl ame symbol).
Experience will soon familiarise you with the
correct setting to use for cooking.
After cooking allow the griddle to cool before
cleaning.
War mer
Use the warmer for keeping food warm while the
fi nal touches are put to a meal. Turn the control
knob anti-clockwise to the on position. The ‘HOT’
indicator lights up. For best results, pre-heat
a covered serving dish for 10 minutes before
adding food to it.
CAUTION:- If a crack in the Warmer surface
becomes visible, due to accidental damage etc.,
isolate the appliance from the electricity supply
immediately by turning it off at the wall and
arrange for its repair.
DONOTRECONNECTTHECOOKERTOTHE
ELECTRICITYSUPPLYUNTILAFTERREPAIR!
5
The Grill
CAUTION: Accessible parts may be hot when
the grill is in use. Young children should be
kept away.
1
The burner does not glow red - food cooks from
the heat of the fl ame. The fi rst time you light the
grill there may be a little smoke given off - this is
perfectly normal.
2
Remove the pan from the bottom of the grill
compartment.
LP Gas
The grill has a special
5
safety device with
stops the fl ow of gas to
the grill if the fl ame goes
out. Turn the knob to the
large fl ame symbol (
Press the igniter button.
Press in the grill knob
- this lets gas through to
the burner. Keep holding
the grill knob pressed for
about 10 seconds.
If when you let go of the control knob the burner
goes out, the safety device has not held in. Turn off
the grill and wait one minute then try again this time
holding in the button for slightly longer.
). .
6
The low position, marked with the small fl ame
symbol, is beyond high, not between high and off.
3
After placing your food on the grill tray pan, slide
the grill pan onto the side supports just below the
burners. Make sure it is pushed right in and touches
the back stop.
4
Make sure the grill pan is pushed right in and
touches the back stop. Never close the grill door
while the grill is on.
Natural gas
Press the igniter
5
button and press
in and turn the grill
knob to the large
fl ame symbol ( ).
When the fl ame lights
release the igniter
button.
7
The grill pan grid can be turned over to give two
grilling positions.
For best results, especially on toast, preheat the
grill with the grill pan in the cooking position for
two minutes before use. The grill trivet can be
removed and the food placed on it while you are
waiting for the grill to preheat. After placing your
food on the grill pan grid, slide the grill pan onto
the side supports just below the burners. Adjust
the fl ame height to suit by turning the knob.
Don’t leave the grill on for more than a few
moments, without the grill pan underneath it.
You can brown the top of dishes cooked in the
oven, under the grill. Remove the grill trivet and
place the dish onto the base of the grill pan.
Slide the grill pan along the fl oor of the grill
6
cavity.
The Ovens
The clock must be set to the time of day before
the ovens will work. See ‘The Clock’ section of
these instructions for how to set the clock.
Before using for the fi rst time, to dispel
manufacturing odours turn the ovens to
Mark 7 and run for an hour. Make sure the
room is well ventilated to the outside air, by
opening windows or turning on a cooker
hood for example. We recommend that
people with respiratory or allergy problems
should vacate the area for this brief period.
1
Push in and turn the knob controlling the oven to
Gas Mark 9. The oven will light automatically.
4
Dishes cooking on the central shelf will cook at the
gas mark indicated on the knob.
5
Dishes placed above the central position will be
cooked at approx. one gas Mark higher, dishes
cooked below approx. one gas Mark lower. You can
therefore cook dishes requiring different gas Marks
at the same time.
2
Turn the control knob back to the Mark you wish to
cook on and for best results pre-heat for 15 minutes
before placing your dishes in the oven.
3
The ovens use our special ‘Heatfl ow’ system.
Because the oven burner is not hidden under the
oven base you will see the burner fl ames at the back
of the oven - this is perfectly normal.
The oven is protected by a safety cut off, which
reduces the supply of gas to the oven if the fl ames
go out, e.g. an interruption to the mains supply.
Initially the gas will burn with a small fl ame but after
approximately one minute the fl ame will become
larger indicating that the oven is full on.
6
The ‘S’ setting is a very low temperature for slow
cooking, overnight or while you are out or at work.
The ‘S’ setting can also be used for keeping food
warm.
The Clock
You can use the timer to turn the ovens on and
off. The clock must be set to the time of day
before the ovens will work.
To set the time of day
Press and hold as shown.
At the same time, press
(-) or (+) until the correct
time shows.
Don’t forget it’s a 24 hour
clock.
If you make a mistake or press the wrong button,
turn off the power supply for a minute or two and
start again.
If the key symbol
display you have accidentally turned on the
key lock feature. See the section ‘Clock Special
7
Features’.
( ) appears on the left of the
To time something that’s cooking
(minute minder)
Press and hold the
Minute Minder (
).
To start and stop the oven
automatically
Before you set the clock, you must have two
numbers clearly in mind.
The ‘cook period’, which is the period of time
you want the oven to cook.
The ‘stop time’, which is the time of day you
want the oven to stop cooking.
At the same time
press (-) or (+) until
the time you want to
cook for is shown.
You can check time remaining by pressing
and cancel the beeper by pressing
To stop automatically
Use when you have started the oven manually.
Press and hold the
Stop Time (
button.
At the same time press (-) or (+) until your
required ‘Stop Time’ shows. AUTO will show in
the display. When your cooking is fi nished the
beeper sounds. TURN THE OVEN KNOB TO
0 FIRST, then press
press
again to return to manual cooking.
)
once to stop the beep,
You cannot set a start time directly - this is set
automatically by setting the cooking period and
stop time.
Press and hold the
Cook Time (
button. At the same
time press (-) or (+)
until your required
‘cook period’ shows.
Press and hold the
Stop Time ()
button.
At the same time
press (-) or (+) until
your required ‘stop
time’ shows.
AUTO will show in the
display.
Set the oven to the required temperature. When
your cooking is fi nished the beeper sounds.
TURN THE OVEN KNOB TO 0 FIRST, then
press
return to manual cooking.
If you are out, don’t worry about the beeper
going off, it stops after a while. When you return,
TURN THE OVEN KNOB TO 0 FIRST, then
press
once to stop the beep, press again to
twice, to return to manual cooking.
)
AUTO is showing, you want to
reset to manual cooking.
When cancelling an automatic setting, any
cooking time already set must be returned
to 0.00 before you can return to manual, by
pressing the
button.
8
Clock Special Features
Key Lock
When the key lock is activated, the clock can be
operated as usual but the oven is locked and will
not come on. This means that your child could
select a cook program but the program will not
be activated and oven will not be switched on.
To activate the key lock
Make sure that the clock is in manual mode and
cancel any active programs.
Hold the
Minute Minder (
and Cooktime ()
buttons for about 8
seconds.
‘On’ will appear on the
display.
Press the ‘+’ button
once.
‘Of’ will appear on the
display.
)
Cooking using the timer
The timer can be used to turn just one oven
or both on and off automatically. The start and
stop time must be the same for both ovens but
different cooking temperatures can be set.
If you want to turn one of the ovens on
at the same time as the timer is set for
automatic cooking, you must wait until
the timer has turned on the oven/ ovens
fi rst. Then you can adjust either of them
manually in the normal way.
You can set the oven to turn on any time over
the following 24 hour period
If you want to cook more than one dish,
choose dishes that require approximately
the same time. However, dishes can be
‘slowed down’ slightly by using small
containers and covering them with
aluminium foil, or ‘speeded up’ slightly by
cooking smaller quantities or placing in
larger containers.
Very perishable foods such as pork or fi sh
should be avoided if a long delay period is
planned, especially in hot weather.
The clock oven
control functions are
now locked.
After a few seconds
the display will revert
to show the time
of day and the key
symbol (
To turn off the key lock
Hold the
Minute Minder (
and Cooktime ()
buttons for about 8
seconds.
‘Of’ will appear on the
display.
Press the ‘+’ button
once. ‘On’ will appear
on the display.
).
)
Don’t place warm food in the oven.
Don’t use an oven already warm.
Don’t use if an adjoining oven is warm.
Avoid using wine or beer if there is a delay
period, as fermentation may take place.
To avoid curdling, cream should be added to
dishes just before serving.
Fresh vegetables, which may discolour during a
delay period, should be coated in melted fat or
immersed in a water and lemon juice solution.
Many frozen foods are ideal for delayed
cooking and can be placed in the oven while
still frozen.
Fruit pies, custard tarts or similar wet mixtures
on top of uncooked pastry are only satisfactory if
there is a short delay period. Dishes containing
leftover cooked meat or poultry should not be
cooked automatically if there is a delay period.
Whole poultry must be thoroughly defrosted
before placing in the oven.
Check that meat and poultry are fully
cooked before serving.
After a few seconds the display will revert to
show the time of day.
The oven and the clock oven control functions
can now be used normally.
9
Oven cooking
The wire shelves should always be pushed
fi rmly to the back of the oven.
Baking trays with food cooking on them should
be placed level with the front edge of the oven’s
wire shelves. Other containers should be placed
centrally. Keep all trays and containers away
from the back of the oven, as overbrowning of
the food may occur.
For even browning, the maximum recommended
size of a baking tray is 325mm (12
305mm (12”).
When the oven is on, don’t leave the door open
for longer than necessary, otherwise the knobs
may get very hot.
3
/4”) by
‘S’ (Slow) cooking
The ‘S’ setting is a very low temperature for
slow cooking, overnight or while you are out
or at work. The ‘S’ setting can also be used for
keeping food warm.
You can cook on ‘S’ throughout, or use a 30
minute ‘boost’ period at gas Mark 6 and then ‘S’
cook.
When roasting joints, poultry or pot
roasting, always cook at Mark 6 for 30
minutes at the beginning of the cooking
period.
• Always leave a ‘fi ngers width’ between dishes
on the same shelf. This allows the heat to
circulate freely around them.
• To reduce fat splashing when you add
vegetables to hot fat around a roast, dry them
thoroughly or brush lightly with cooking oil.
• Where dishes may boil and spill over during
cooking, place them on a baking tray.
The oven is protected by a safety cut off, which
reduces the supply of gas to the oven if the
fl ames go out, e.g. an interruption to the mains
supply.
• Plates can be warmed in the oven on the ‘S’
setting. The ‘S’ setting can be used to keep
foods hot for 3-4 hours after ‘normal’ cooking,
without drying out or overbrowning.
• The Cook & Clean oven liners (see Cleaning
your cooker) work better when fat splashes
are avoided. Cover meat when cooking.
• Suffi cient heat rises out of the oven
while cooking to warm plates in the grill
compartment.
• If you want to brown the base of a pastry dish,
preheat the baking tray for 15 minutes before
placing the dish in the centre of the tray.
You can ‘S’ cook for periods of 6 to 12 hours.
This technique is particularly useful if you want
to cook a dish overnight or while you are out at
work during the day.
Frozen foods must be thoroughly
thawed out before ‘S’ cooking.
Whole poultry should not be cooked on ‘S’.
Chicken casseroles are fi ne.
Casseroles must be brought to boiling
point on the hotplate immediately before
‘S’ cooking.
Poultry and rolled joints should not be stuffed
before cooking. The stuffi ng should be cooked
separately. Poultry and pork should be cooked
in the top half of the oven, and other meats not
lower than shelf position 4.
A roasting joint should be covered with
cooking foil, or with a roasting bag to
reduce shrinkage and retain juices.
Should further browning be necessary, uncover
the meat and increase the temperature to Mark
4 for a short period.
Cut root vegetables into small pieces
unless cooking whole, e.g. jacket
potatoes.
10
Cover dishes tightly with a lid or foil to prevent
evaporation and transfer of fl avour.
Once the oven has been loaded and
the ‘S’ setting is in operation resist
the temptation to open the oven door.
Heat will be lost and the cooking time
extended.
A meat thermometer is recommended for
checking that a joint or poultry is suffi ciently
cooked. Insert the probe through the thickest
part of the meat. The temperatures to be
expected are as follows.-
the shelf guard should be at the back pointing upwards
The oven shelves can be easily removed and
refi tted.
Pull the shelf forward
until the back of the
shelf is stopped by the
shelf stop bumps in the
oven sides.
Lift up the front of the
shelf so the back of the
shelf will pass under
the shelf stop and then
pull the shelf forward.
To refi t the shelf, line up the shelf with a groove
in the oven side and push the shelf back until
the ends hit the shelf stop. Lift up the front so the
shelf ends clear the shelf stops, and then lower
the front so that the shelf is level and push it fully
back..
11
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