GE 164D2966P118 User Manual

Page 13

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Placement

For even cooking and proper browning, there must be

Pans should not touch each other or the walls of the

enough room for air circulation in the oven. Baking

oven. Allow to

space between pans as well

results will be better if baking pans are centered as

as from the back of the oven, the door and the sides.

much as possible rather than being placed to the front

If you need to use two shelves, stagger the pans so

or to the back of the oven.

one is not directly above the other.

Baking Guides

When using prepared baking mixes, follow the package recipe
or instructions for the best baking results.

Cookies

When baking cookies, flat cookie sheets (without

sides) produce better-looking cookies. Cookies baked
in a jelly roll pan (short sides all around) may have

darker edges and pale or light browning may occur.

Do not use a cookie sheet so large that it touches the

or the door of the oven. Never entirely cover a

shelf with a large cookie sheet.

For best results, use only one cookie sheet in the oven

a time.

Cakes

When baking cakes, warped or bent pans will cause
uneven baking results and poorly shaped products.

A cake baked in a pan larger than the recipe
recommends will usually be crisper, thinner and drier
than it should be. If baked in a pan smaller than
recommended, it may be undercooked and batter may

overflow. Check the recipe to make sure the pan size
used is the

recommended.

Pies

For best results, bake pies in dark, rough or dull pans to produce a browner,
crisper crust. Frozen pies in foil pans should be placed on an aluminum
cookie sheet for baking since the shiny foil pan reflects heat away from the
pie crust; the cookie sheet helps retain it.

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