Information you need to know, About food, About microwave cooking – Electrolux TINSEB493MRR1 User Manual

Page 7

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7

About food

food

Do

Don't

Eggs,
sausages,
nuts, seeds,
fruits &
vegetables

Puncture egg yolks before cooking to

prevent “explosion”.
Pierce skins of potatoes, apples, squash,

hot dogs and sausages so that steam
escapes.

Cook eggs in shells.

Reheat whole eggs.

Dry nuts or seeds in shells.

Popcorn

Use specially bagged popcorn for

microwave cooking.
Listen while popping corn for the

popping to slow to 1 or 2 seconds or use
special

popcorn pad.

Pop popcorn in regular brown bags

or glass bowls.
Exceed maximum time on popcorn

package.

Baby food

Transfer baby food to small dish and heat

carefully, stirring often. Check temperature
before serving.
Put nipples on bottles after heating and

shake thoroughly. “Wrist” test before
feeding.

Heat disposable bottles.

Heat bottles with nipples on.

Heat baby food in original jars.

General

Cut baked goods with filling after heating

to release steam and avoid burns.
Stir liquids briskly before and after heating

to avoid “eruption”.
Use deep bowl, when cooking liquids or

cereals, to prevent boilovers.

Heat or cook in closed glass jars or air

tight containers.
Can in the microwave as harmful

bacteria may not be destroyed.
Deep fat fry.

Dry wood, gourds, herbs or wet papers.

Information You need To Know

About microwave cooking

Arrange food carefully. Place thickest areas

towards outside of dish.
Watch cooking time. Cook for the shortest amount

of time indicated and add more as needed. Food

severely overcooked can smoke or ignite.
Cover foods while cooking. Check recipe or cook-

book for suggestions: paper towels, wax paper,

microwave plastic wrap or a lid. Covers prevent

spattering and help foods to cook evenly.
Shield with small flat pieces of aluminum foil

any thin areas of meat or poultry to prevent

overcooking before dense, thick areas are cooked

thoroughly.
Stir foods from outside to center of dish once or

twice during cooking, if possible.
Turn foods over once during microwaving to speed

cooking of such foods as chicken and hamburg-

ers. Large items like roasts must be turned over

at least once.

Rearrange foods such as meatballs halfway

through cooking both from top to bottom and from

the center of the dish to the outside.
Add standing time. Remove food from oven

and stir, if possible. Cover for standing time

which allows the food to finish cooking without

overcooking.
Check for doneness. Look for signs indicating that

cooking temperatures have been reached.
Doneness signs include:

- Food steams throughout, not just at edge.
- Center bottom of dish is very hot to the

touch.

- Poultry thigh joints move easily.
- meat and poultry show no pinkness.
- Fish is opaque and flakes easily with a fork.

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