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
115
Bottling cakes
Creamed, sponge and yeast dough mixtures are all suitable for bottling. Cakes will
keep for approx. 6 months.
Cakes made with fresh fruit are not suitable for long term storage, and must be
consumed within 2 days of being made.
Only use sterilised jars and accessories. The jars must be narrower at the bottom
than at the top (mason jars). 0.25l jars are the best for this purpose.
Jars must have a glass lid with a rubber ring and metal spring clamp to seal them.
Make sure that all the jars are the same size so that the preserving process is car-
ried out evenly.
Grease the inside of the jars with butter up to 1cm below the rim.
Sprinkle fine breadcrumbs inside the jars.
Fill the jars ¹/₂ to ²/₃ full with mixture (depending on recipe). Make sure the rim
stays clean.
Place the rack in shelf level2.
Place the open jars (all the same size) on the rack. The jars must not touch each
other.
Close the jars immediately after bottling by clamping the glass lid down se-
curely. Do not let the cakes cool down. If the mixture has risen above the rim, it
can be pushed back down into the jar with the glass lid.
The durations specified in the chart are guidelines only. We recommend selecting
the shorter duration initially. You can extend the duration if necessary.
Type of
mixture
Function Stage [°C] [%] [min]
Batter – 160 – 35–45
Sponge – 160 – 50–55
Yeast
dough
1
2
30
160
100
30
10
30–35
Temperature, Moisture, Duration
Conventional heat, Combination cooking + Conventional heat