Cookware tips, Flame size, How to select flame size – Hotpoint RGB747GER User Manual

Page 9: Top-of-range cookware, Wok cooking, Use of stove top grills

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How to Select Flame Size

Watch the

not the knob, you reduce heat.

The

size

a

burner should match the

cookware you

using.

FOR SAFE HANDLING

COOKWARE NEVER LET

THE FLAME EXTEND

UP THE SIDES OF THE
COOKWARE. Any flame larger than the bottom

the cookware is wasted and only serves to heat

the handle.

When boiling, adjust the flame so the circle it makes
is about 1/2 inch smaller than the bottom of the
cookware—no matter what the cookware is made of.
Foods cook just as quickly at a gentle boil they do
at a furious, rolling boil. A high boil creates steam
and cooks away moisture, flavor and nutrition. Avoid
it except for
the few cooking processes that need a vigorous boil.

When frying or warming foods in stainless steel,
cast iron or enamelware, keep the flame down
lower—to about 1/2 the diameter of the pan.

When frying in glass or ceramic cookware, lower
the flame even more.

Top-of-Range Cookware

Aluminum: Medium-weight cookware is
recommended because it heats quickly and evenly.
Most foods brown evenly in an aluminum skillet. Use

saucepans with

lids when cooking with

minimum amounts of water.

Cast-Iron: If heated slowly, most skillets will give
satisfactory results.

Enamelware: Under some conditions, the enamel of
some cookware may melt. Follow cookware

manufacturer’s recommendations for cooking methods.

Glass: There are two types of glass cookware-those
for oven use only and those for top-of-range cooking
(saucepans, coffee and teapots). Glass conducts heat
very slowly.

Heatproof Glass Ceramic: Can be used for either
surface or oven cooking. It conducts heat very

slowly and cools very slowly. Check cookware
manufacturer’s directions to be sure it can be used

on gas ranges.

Stainless Steel: This metal alone has poor heating
properties and is usually combined with copper,
aluminum or other metals for improved heat
distribution. Combination metal skillets usually work
satisfactorily if they are used with medium heat as the
manufacturer recommends.

Wok Cooking

recommend that you

use only flat-bottomed
wok. They are

at

your

retail store.

Do not use woks that have

support rings. Use of these
types of woks, with or
without the ring in place,

be dangerous. Placing the

ring over the burner grate may
cause the burner to work improperly resulting in
carbon monoxide levels above allowable current
standards. This could be dangerous to your health.
Do not try to

such woks without the ring. You

could be seriously burned if the wok tipped over.

Use of Stove Top Grills

Do not use stove top grills
on your sealed gas burners.

you use the stove top

grill on the sealed gas
burner it will cause
incomplete combustion
and can result in exposure
to carbon monoxide levels
above allowable current standards.
This can be hazardous to your health.

9

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