Kenmore 721.8506 Series Use & Care Manual page 12

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Amount of Food
• If you increase or decrease the amount of food
you prepare, the time it takes to cook that food
will also change. For example,
if you double a
recipe, add a little more than half the original
cooking time. Check for readiness and, if
necessary, add more time in small increments.
Starting
Temperature
of Food
*The lower
the temperature
of the food being
put into the microwave
oven, the longer it takes
to cook. Food at room temperature
will reheat
quicker than food at refrigerator
temperature.
Composition
of Food
*Food with a lot of fat and sugar will heat faster
than food containing
a lot of water. Fat and sugar
will also reach a higher temperature
than water in
the cooking process.
*The more dense the food, the longer it takes to
heat. "Very dense" food, like meat, takes longer to
heat than lighter, more porous food, like sponge
cakes.
Size and Shape
• Smaller pieces of food will cook faster than larger
pieces. Also, same shaped pieces cook more
evenly than differently
shaped pieces.
• With foods that have different thicknesses,
the
thinner parts will cook faster than the thicker
parts. Place the thinner parts of chicken wings and
legs in the center of the dish.
Stirring and Turning
Foods
*Stirring and turning
foods spreads heat quickly
to
the center of the dish and avoids overcooking
at
the outer edges of the food.
Covering
Food
Cover food to reduce splattering,
shorten cooking
times, and keep food moist.
You can use any covering that tets microwaves
pass
through. See "Getting to Know Your Microwave
Oven" for materials
that microwaves
will
pass through.
Releasing
Pressure
in
Foods
*Several
foods (for example:
baked potatoes,
sausages, egg yolks, and some fruits) are tightly
covered by a skin or membrane.
Steam can build
up under the membrane
during cooking,
causing
the food to burst. To relieve the pressure and
to prevent bursting, pierce these foods before
cooking with a fork, cocktail
pick, or toothpick.
Using Standing Time
• Always allow
food to stand, either in or out of
the oven, after cooking power stops. Standing
time after defrosting
and cooking allows the
temperature
to evenly spread throughout
the
food, improving the cooking results. For inside
oven standing time, you can program
" 0 " power
second stage of the cooking cycle. See Two-Stage
Cooking.
• The length of the standing
time depends on how
much food you are cooking and how dense it is.
Sometimes it can be as short as the time it takes
to remove the food from the oven and take it to
the serving table. However, with a larger, denser
food item, the standing
time may be as long as 10
minutes.
Arranging
Food
For best results, place food evenly on the plate. You
can do this in severat ways:
*If you are cooking several
items of the same
food, such as baked potatoes, place them in a
ring pattern for uniform cooking.
• When cooking foods of uneven
shapes or
thickness,
such as chicken breasts, place the
smaller or thinner area of the food towards the
center of the dish where it will be heated last.
•Layer thin sllcesof meat on top of each other.
•When
you cook or reheat whole
fish,score the
skin - this prevents
cracking.
• Do not let food
or a container
touch
the top or
sides of the oven.
This will
prevent
possible
arcing.
Arcing
is a spark
that
can cause
damage
to the
oven
interion
12

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