Trying to figure out the gas oven....
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Yes, the English version, or the Lithuanian one, would be best!
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I can't do the Lithuanian one, but I will make a new thread w title
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Glad your oven is working well.
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Yep! I made about 60 chocolate chip cookies, and Mr SK made his pumpkin mochi cake, although we won't know how it is until tomorrow.
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Not sure if this applies to gas ovens too, but I notice that on electric ovens, when using the ābakeā function, usually both the upper and the lower elements heat up during pre-heating, and the upper element will shutdown after the target temperature is reached.
The one time you want to be mindful of which heating element/burner heats up is when youāre following instructions that tell you to heat something ācovered,ā and the ācoverā maybe made of material that cannot withstand direct high heat. I found out the unpleasant way that āpre-heatingā instructions need to be observed because during pre-heating the heat also comes from the upper element and the direct heat from above ruined the ācoverā and the food underneath it. Silly me!
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@Axtremus yikes! Good tip, thank you!
I havenāt used it enough to be certain, but I think that with this oven, the top burner only comes on when you set it to broil.
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I really like convection. It speeds up the cooking process. But I know itās not supposed to be good for baking.
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@Quirt-Evans I think if you take the time to learn about it you may find itās great for baking.
But it will take quite an investment in time.
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I read and watch a fair bit online about convection when I first started this thread. One bit of advice with convection for baking was to only use the convection fan when the recipe called for it, bc otherwise you might end up with the top burned. Another video said thst European ovens almost always have convection fans, so the recipes are all written with convection in mind, whereas they're less common in the US, so recipes donāt expect the baker to use one and are written accordingly.
One other video I watched was about baking.. not a pie but something like it, a pastry where you fold the dough up around a fruit thing that has a lot of moisture. (Canāt remember what it was called). Anyway, she said that at the very end of the baking cycle, she turned on the convection fan to make the top crispy and give it a bit more color. That was interesting.
They all made baking look so easily, btw, but I know the truth!
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Sounds like a galette or crostada?
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Could be, I didn't recognize the name so I think that's why I don't remember it.
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oh yeah, it looks like this except maybe with a little more of the top dough folded over but the fruit visible, as here: