Techniques – Panasonic THE GENIUS PREMIER NN-S569 User Manual

Page 17

Attention! The text in this document has been recognized automatically. To view the original document, you can use the "Original mode".

Advertising
background image

Bone and Fat: Both bone and fat affect cooking. Bones

may cause irregular cooking. Meat next to the tips of bones

may overcook while meat positioned under a large bone,

such as a ham bone, may be undercooked. Large amounts

of fat absorb microwave energy and the meat next to these

areas may overcook.

Quantity: Two potatoes take longer to cook than one pota­

to. As the quantity of the food increases so does the cook­

ing time.

When cooking small amounts of food such as one or two

potatoes, do not leave oven unattended. The moisture con­

tent in the food may decrease and a fire could result.

Density: Porous, airy foods such as breads, cakes or rolls

take less time to cook than heavy, dense foods such as

potatoes and roasts.

Shape: Uniform sizes heat more evenly. The thin end of a

drumstick will cook more quickly than the meaty end. To

compensate for irregular shapes, place thin parts toward the

center of the dish and thick parts toward the edge.

Size: Thin pieces cook more quickly than thick pieces.

Starting Temperature: Foods that are room temperature

take less time to cook than if they are refrigerator tempera­

ture or frozen.

Techniques

spacing: Individual foods, such as baked potatoes, cupcakes

and appetizers, will cook more evenly if placed in the oven

equal distances apart. When possible, arrange foods in a

circular pattern.

Browning: Foods will not have the same brown appearance

as conventionally cooked foods. Meats and poultry may be

coated with browning sauce, Worcestershire sauce, barbecue

sauce or shake-on browning sauce. To use, combine

browning sauce with melted butter or margarine; brush on

before cooking.

Piercing: Foods with skins or membranes must be pierced,

scored or have a strip of skin peeled before cooking to allow

steam to escape. Pierce whole egg yolks and whites, clams,

oysters, chicken livers, scallops, whole potatoes and whole

vegetables. Whole apples or new potatoes should have a

1

-inch strip of skin peeled before cooking. Score sausage,

frankfurters and hot dogs.

Covering: As with conventional cooking, moisture evaporates

during microwave cooking. Casserole lids or plastic wrap are

used for a tighter seal. When using plastic wrap, vent the

plastic wrap by folding back part of the plastic wrap from the

edge of the dish to allow steam to escape. Loosen or remove

plastic wrap as recipe directs for stand time. When removing

plastic wrap covers, as well as any glass lids, be careful to

remove them away from you to avoid steam burns. Various

degrees of moisture retention are aiso obtained by using wax

paper or paper towels. However, unless specified, a recipe is

cooked covered.

Shielding: Thin areas of meat and poultry cook more quickly

than meaty portions. To prevent overcooking, these thin areas

can be shielded with strips of aluminum foil. Wooden

toothpicks may be used to hold the foil in place.

Timing: A range in cooking time is given in each recipe. The

time range compensates for the uncontrollable differences in

food shapes, starting temperature and regional preferences.

Always cook food for the minimum cooking time given in a

recipe and ched( for doneness. If the food is undercooked,

continue cooking. It is easier to add time to an undercooked
product. Once the food is overcooked, nothing can be done.

Stirring: Stirring is usually necessary during microwave

cooking. We have noted when stirring is helpful, using the

words once, twice, frequently or occasionally to describe the

amount of stirring necessary .

Rearranging: Rearrange small items such as chicken pieces,

shrimp, hamburger patties or pork chops. Rearrange pieces

from the edge to the center and pieces from the center to the

edge of the dish .

Turning; It is not possible to stir some foods to redistribute

the heat. At times, microwave energy will concentrate in one

area of a food. To help insure even cooking, these foods need

to be turned. Turn over large foods, such as roasts or turkey,

halfway through cooking.

Standing Time: Most foods will continue to cook by

conduction after the microwave oven is turned off. In meat

cookery, the internal temperature will rise 5“F to 15“F (3“C to

8

°C) if allowed to stand, tented with foil, for 10 to 15 minutes.

Casseroles and vegetables need a shorter amount of

standing time, but this standing time is necessary to allow

foods to complete cooking to the center without overcooking

on the edges.

Testing for Doneness: The same tests for doneness used in

conventional cooking may be used for microwave cooking.

Meat is done when fork-tender or splits at fibers. Chicken is

done when juices are clear yellow and drumstick moves

freely. Fish is done when it flakes and is opaque. Cake is

done when a toothpick or cake tester is inserted and comes

out clean. Candy is done when it reaches the proper

temperature for each stage of crystallization.

- 1 5 -

Advertising
This manual is related to the following products: