Dacor HGR30PSNGH 30 Inch Freestanding Professional Gas Range

User Manual - Page 13

For HGR30PSNGH.

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11
Operating the Range
Tips: Broiling
Broiling is a quick, flavorful way to cook such foods as steak,
chicken, chops, hamburgers, and fish. It is normal and necessary
for some smoke to be present to give the food a broiled flavor.
Always set a timer when broiling.
Use a room-temperature broiler pan for even cooking.
Use tongs or a spatula to handle meat. (Piercing meat with a
fork lets natural juices escape.)
Broil food slightly over half the recommended time, then season
and turn. Season the second side just before removing the food.
To prevent sticking, lightly oil the broiler grill. For easier clean-
ing, remove the broiler pan and grill when you remove the food.
Tips: Roasting
Dacors optional roasting pan works very well, and two fit side
by side in the oven.
Dacors optional V-shaped rack and broil/roast pan allow excel-
lent air circulation all around the food.
If using a cooking bag, foil tent, or other cover, use Convection
Bake mode; adjust recipe time and temperature accordingly.
If using a meat thermometer:
- insert the probe halfway into the center of the meat’s thick-
est portion; (for poultry, insert the probe between the body
and leg into the thickest part of the inner thigh)
- keep the probe tip away from bone, fat, and gristle
- check the temperature with  of the time remaining, then
insert the probe ½” farther into the meat, and take another
reading. If the second reading is lower, keep cooking.
Let roasts sit 15 – 20 minutes after roasting to ease carving.
Roast times vary with the size, shape, and quality of the meat/
poultry. Tougher cuts are best prepared in Bake mode and may
need moist cooking techniques. Follow recipe directions.
Tips: Multi-Rack Baking
Standard Bake mode is best for multi-rack baking.
Pizza, cake, cookies, biscuits, muffins, rolls, and frozen conve-
nience foods) can be prepared on two or three racks at once.
Typically, rack Levels 2, 4, and 6 are best for multi-rack baking.
When adapting a single-rack recipe to multi-rack baking, you
may need to lengthen the bake time due to the greater amount
of food in the oven.
Tips: Bakeware
Dacors optional full-sized cookie sheets maximize use of rack
space. (Contact Customer Assurance to order.)
For best results, use the pan size/type specified in the recipe.
Bake cake, quick bread, muffins, and cookies in shiny, reflective
pans for light-golden surfaces. (Do not use old, darkened pans.)
Bake cookies, biscuits, and cream puffs on medium-gauge
aluminum sheets with low sides.
Bake most frozen food in the original foil package on a cookie
sheet. (Follow package directions.)
For glass bakeware, reduce the recipe temperature by 25°F,
except for pie or yeast bread.
Follow the standard recipe baking time for pie and yeast bread.
Warped, dented, stainless-steel, and tin-coated pans heat
unevenly, giving inconsistent results.
About High-Altitude Cooking
At higher altitudes (3000 feet/914 meters and above), foods tend
to take longer to cook due to lower atmospheric pressure, so some
recipes need adjusting.
Usually, no adjustment is needed for yeast-risen goods, though let-
ting the dough rise twice before the final pan-rise improves flavor.
Try the adjustments below; note the changes that work best for
you. Consulting a cookbook on high-altitude baking is also useful.
Reduction Amounts for Some Popular Ingredients:
Low- to High-Altitude Conversion
Altitude
(feet)
Baking powder
(for each tsp,
decrease by)
Sugar
(for each tsp,
decrease by)
Liquid
(for each cup,
add)
3000 5-10% 10-25% 5-10%
5000 10% 10% 20%
7000 25% 20% 20-25%
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