Operating instructions/Installation instructions
Table Of Contents
- Contents
- Warning and Safety instructions
- Caring for the environment
- Guide to the appliance
- Controls
- Using the appliance
- Description of functions
- Before using for the first time
- Settings
- Minute minder
- Main and sub-menus
- Energy saving tips
- Operation
- General notes
- Steam cooking
- Sous-vide (vacuum) cooking
- Further applications
- Reheat
- Defrost
- Mix & Match
- Menu cooking – automatic
- Blanching
- Bottling
- Bottling cakes
- Drying
- Prove dough
- Disinfect items
- Heat crockery
- Keeping warm
- Heating damp flannels
- Dissolve gelatine
- Decrystallise honey
- Melt chocolate
- Make yoghurt
- Cook bacon
- Sweat onions
- Extracting juice with steam
- Fruit preserve
- Skinning vegetables and fruit
- Apple storage
- Making eierstich
- Automatic programmes
- User programmes
- Baking
- Roasting
- Grilling
- Note for test institutes
- Cleaning and care
- Problem solving guide
- Optional accessories
- Service
- Installation
- Conformity declaration
- Copyrights and licences for the communication module
Further applications
101
Tips for reheating plated meals
- For fried or gratin dishes, useCrispy
reheating and for baked or boiled
dishes, useGentle reheating.
- UsingCrispy reheating ensures that
only food that was crispy before re-
heating stays crispy.
- The food should not exceed a height
of 2–2.5cm. Transfer taller food into
flat containers (e.g. stew) or slice it
into smaller pieces (e.g. roulades,
bakes).
- Only reheat pasta mixed into a sauce.
- Droplets of water may have accumu-
lated underneath the crockery. Dry
the droplets of water before serving.
Tips for cooking plated meals
- You can easily make a sauce from
the meat and fish stock: add 1tsp of
cornflour to the raw meat or fish be-
fore cooking. Stir the sauce with a
fork until smooth before serving. You
can also use 1tsp of mashed potato
powder (instant) or a pinch of guar
gum instead of cornflour.
- If cooking durations for different
foods are not the same, you can
compensate for this by changing the
size of the food: if the cooking dura-
tion is shorter, make the pieces larger
(e.g. large cauliflower florets). If the
cooking duration is longer, make the
pieces smaller (e.g. diced potatoes).
- You can also compensate for differ-
ing cooking durations with layering:
place food with a short cooking dura-
tion under a food with a long cooking
duration or put them together as a
small bake.
- To prevent the food from drying out,
prepare your dish with a sauce or
marinade. You can also use cheese
or bacon.