Preheating, Regular baking, Oven shelves – GE 164D2966P030 User Manual

Page 18: Baking pans, Pan placement

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Oven Shelves

Arrange the oven
shelf or shelves in
the desired locations
while the oven is

cool. The correct
shelf position
depends on the kind
of food and the
browning desired.
As a general rule,

REGULAR BAKING

(continued)

place-most foods in the middle of the oven, on either

shelf positions B or C. See the chart for suggested
shelf positions.

Type of Food

Shelf Position

Angel food cake

Biscuits or muffins

B or C

Cookies or cupcakes

B or C

Brownies

C

Layer cakes

BorC

Bundtorpound cakes

AorB

Pies or pie shells

B or C

Frozen pies

A (on cookie sheet)

Casseroles

BorC

Roasting

A or B

Preheating

Preheat the oven if the recipe calls for it. Preheat
means bringing the oven up to the specified
temperature before putting in the food. To preheat,
set the oven at the correct temperature—selecting
a higher temperature does not shorten preheat time.

Preheating is necessary for good results when baking
cakes, cookies, pastry and breads. For most casseroles
and roasts, preheating is not necessary. For ovens

without a preheat indicator light or tone, preheat

10 minutes. After the oven is preheated, place the

food in the oven as quickly as possible to prevent
heat from escaping.

Baking Pans

Use the proper baking pan. The type of finish on the
pan determines the amount of browning that will occur.

Dark, rough or dull pans absorb heat resulting in a

browner, crisper crust. Use this type for pies.

Shiny, bright and smooth pans reflect heat, resulting

in a lighter, more delicate browning. Cakes and
cookies require this type of pan.

Glass baking dishes also absorb heat. When baking

in glass baking dishes, reduce the temperature by
25°F.

Pan Placement

For even cooking and proper browning, there must be
enough room for air circulation in the oven. Baking
results will be better if baking pans are centered as
much as possible rather than being placed to the front
or to the back of the oven.
Pans should not touch each other or the walls of the
oven. Allow 1- to 1X-inch space between pans as well
as from the back of the oven, the door and the sides.
If you use two shelves, stagger the pans so one is not
directly above the other.

18

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