What to look for in baking sheet
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36" df ranges that will hold a full professional baking sheet?
Comments (5)Hopefully Rhome will chime in, but let me briefly relay her Momogram experience in case she doesn't. Rome is a mother of 8 children who bakes all of her family's bread products, makes several pizzas on Friday nights over a couple of hours, and uses the oven for other meal cooking. She owned double Momogram ovens and found to bake very unevenly. She was very disappointed with the baking results and eventually had GE buy the ovens back. Then she moved onto Wolf. IIRC, an engineer she consulted said the oven technology wouldn't be able to bake evenly, or something of the sort. If you search the forum for her name and Monogram, you'll find many posts on the subject including from other unhappy members who bought Monograms around the same time who weren't as lucky to get GE to buy their ovens back....See Morebaking sheets
Comments (13)I used to have a mix of old cheapie baking pans, including "non-stick" (peeling off) aluminum and some darker (?Baker's Secret - I forget). I frequently burned cookies, or they would otherwise not turn out well (that was over 10-15 years ago; can't remember all details). Then treated myself to some of the Airbake cookie sheets (one came in a package with a perforated pizza pan which I like) and eventually also a couple heavy aluminum ones with sides. I love both of these types and although I am also more faithful remembering to use a timer, I think cookies have turned out much better.... the whole process seems much more enjoyable. Have often baked many many dozens of cookies at Christmas time, and loved having the nice big sheets that I could set up more than one at a time (at least 3, but nice to get ahead by a couple more when trying to get other things done at the same time too). If I (hand) wash them right away after being done with the lot - and scrape in between if needed - they're not too bad to wash, although need to be a bit careful not to get too much water in the airbake ones. I don't recall problems with inadequate browning/crusting, but prefer many cookies to be chewier rather than dry/crispier. I recently bought a "try me" half sized Chicago Metallic heavy duty pan for ~$10Cdn; the big ones are kinda pricey but apparently popular for commercial use. Label says dishwasher-safe which is great for the small size that fits. Curled under edges look like gunk or water could possibly get in, but hopefully not a big problem. I don't use parchment paper or Silpat (I think I saw that for close to $30Cdn for one sheet!?!); but might try the parchment after reading on the forum(s) how people save time by sliding the whole paper on to the cooling rack, etc....See MoreBluestar 30RNB and half sheet baking pans
Comments (7)Needinfo: I have had a 48" for over 4 yrs now. I have not had any service related issues, but I have had an excellent brief experience with their customer service. Since I have the original style door I emailed them asking for the new door design with the new hinges even tho I have never had a sticking hinge on mine. Within 20 minutes of sending the email they sent an email back saying a brand new door is on its way. They sent it to me in canada via UPS which I know from a lot of experience UPS rapes on their "brokerage fees" to bring things across the border. BS picked up all the costs. I still have not installed the new door but I intend to at some point. My original style door does get hot. Not hot where you can not stand in front of it, that is just ridiculous, but at high temps the door will get hot enough that I would not plant my hand on it and keep it their for more than a fraction of a second (kind of like a hot dark coloured dashbaord on a summer day). Also note that the handle never gets hot, and the only reason I even realized the door gets hot is because I intentionally started poking around after reading the fuss on here. Chairthrower:(love the nick. Lol). I will also confirm that you will fit two half sheets no problem. One half sheet also fits in the small oven on the 48"....See MoreBaking sheet pie
Comments (24)I also am really bad at making rolled pie crusts. Has anyone ever made a pat-in-pan pie crust for a sheet pan pie like these? I found this recipe, but it looks like it would have to be doubled for a 10 x 15 inch jelly roll pan. Although it states at the end that the recipe can't be doubled, I think they mean you can't use half of the recipe to roll out a top crust. Does anyone think this would work for a streusel topped slab pie? PAT-IN-PAN PIE CRUST (Makes pastry for a single-crust 8- or 9- inch pie) Ingredients: 1 1/2 cups plus 3 tablespoons all-purpose flour 1 1/2 teaspoons sugar 1/2 teaspoon salt 1/2 cup vegetable oil 3 tablespoons cold milk Directions: Place the flour, sugar, and salt in the pie pan and mix with your fingers until blended. In a measuring cup, combine the oil and milk and beat with a fork until creamy. Pour all at once over the flour mixture. Mix with a fork until the flour mixture is completely moistened. Pat the dough with your fingers, first up the sides of the plate, then across the bottom. Flute the edges. Shell is now ready to be filled. If you are preparing a shell to fill later, or your recipe requires a prebaked crust, preheat the oven to 425 degrees. Prick the surface of the pastry with a fork and bake 15 minutes, checking often, and pricking more if needed. VARIATION: For a 10-inch shell, use 2 cups all-purpose flour; 2 teaspoons sugar; 1 teaspoon salt; 2/3 cup vegetable oil; 3 tablespoons milk. "quote from cook book" Quick, crisp but tender, it needs no rolling out. I highly recommend this pie crust, especially if you think you can't make a good pie. This recipe can only be used for one-crust pies____you can't double the recipe and roll out a top crust. The mixture is just too tender to transfer from the pastry board or cloth to the pie. Teri August...See MoreRelated Professionals
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