hmanvolfan
Volmeister extraordinaire
- Joined
- Oct 23, 2004
- Messages
- 104,533
- Likes
- 61,610
Samsung 5-Burner Freestanding 5.8-cu ft Convection Gas Range (Stainless Steel) (Common: 30-in; Actual: 29.75-in)
Item # 617237 Model # NX58H5600SS
Don't know how to link it on mobile.
My old one was white. Fridge and microwave are both stainless.
The broiler on top is essential. Had to sit on the floor to use my old one. Hated it. Also like the oversized burner in the middle. Not sure how much I'll use the griddle that came with it, but I'll use my cast iron grill pan.
My old one had knobs that turned off past LOW. This one is opposite. I was forever cutting off the burner when I tried to get the flame as low as I could.
The best advice I can give is to experiment with it until you get used to it. The manual will probably give you "too safe" suggestions. Better to follow than not.
True or not, if a recipe tells you 350 for 60 minutes for a regular oven, I would do 325 and start checking at 30 every 5 minutes. The convection versus a regular oven is like wind chill factor versus the temperature.
Whenever you can, use a low lip pan. The lower the lip the more of the circulated air, whatever you're cooking, will get. After you get used to it you'll figure out you can cook almost anything on a sheet pan. Like a whole chicken or roast. The air will crisp the outside quicker and retain more of the juices. Good grief. I'm getting excited just talking about. Ain't even my new toy. Pft.
Funny how you and Lima bean don't seem interested in the griddle as I would be. I use my griddle almost every time I use the grill. It's just not the same on electric. The flat top grill was always my favorite piece of cooking equipment in the restaurant anyway.
Well, hope you're enjoying it right now.
Or do I just put the chicken on the baking pan and pour the dressing over it and put it in the oven?
You'll love it!epper:
I think mine has Sabbath mode too. It's because you're not supposed to do work on the Sabbath, and turning on a stove is considered work.
We're not Jewish, but my daughter went to a med school associated with an Orthodox Jewish university. The med school is nonsectarian but had to comply with university rules. One was that vending machines were turned off on the Sabbath, so all the students would rush downstairs at 4:30 on Friday to load up on drinks and junk food in order to survive the next 24 hours. (Med students are rarely examples of healthy habits.)
Elevators at Cedars Sinai Hospital in LA keep the Sabbath, because punching buttons counts as work, so they run automatically during the Sabbath, stopping and opening at every floor. Riding is OK, just not operating them.
When my kids went to bar and bat mitzvahs back in middle school, the lady at the temple was Southern Baptist, so she was allowed to turn lights on and off and so forth.
Gut shabbos, y'all. :hi:
Far be it from me to knock any religion, but isn't the act of walking to the stove or elevator more 'work' than standing and pushing a button or turning a knob? My pharmacy school kid has decided he wants to be a Jew. His is not sectarian, either, being UT. I just told him 'But son.........BACON!!!' Need I say more? Anyway, glad he believes in something.
From what I read, it's more than just turning on the oven. It's preping and all the other stuff that is involved in cooking and eating. Even washing all the dishes.
There was also mention of other things too. Doesn't matter. It's just an extra option that no one even needs, not even those that would use it.
That's just ridiculous. Wow. I've never seen it on anything else.
