Top-of-Range Cookware

Aluminum: Medium-weight cookwme is nxommended because it heats quickly and evenly. Most fxxls brown evenly in an aluminum skillet. Minerals in fd and water will stain but will not harm aluminum. A quick scour with a soap-filled steel wool pad after each use keeps aluminum cookware looking shiny and new. Use saucepans with tight- fitting lids for cooking with minimum amounts of water.

Cast Iron: If heated slowly, most skillets will give satisfactory results.

Enamelware: Under some conditions, the enamel of some cookware may melt. Follow cookware manufacturer’s recommendations for cooking methods.

Glass: There are two types of glass cookware-those for oven use only and those for top-of-range cooking (saucepans, coffee and teapots).

Glass conducts heat very slowly.

Heatproof Glass Ceramic: Can be used for either surface or oven cooking. It conducts heat very slowly and cools very slowly. Check cookware manufacturer’s directions to be sure it can be used on gas ranges.

Stainless Steel: This metal alone has poor heating properties, and is usually combined with copper, aluminum or other metals for improved heat distribution. Combination metal skillets usually work satisfactorily if they are used with medium heat as the manufacturer recommends.

Using Your Oven

Electric Ignition

The oven burner and broil burner on your range are lighted by electric ignition.

To light either burner, push the button for the desired function and turn the SET knob until the desired temperature is displayed. The burner should ignite within 60 seconds.

Power Outage

CAUTION: DO N~ MAKE ANY ATTEMPT TKl

OPERATE THE ELECTRIC IGNITION OVEN DURING AN ELECTRICAL POWER OUTAGE. Neither the oven nor the broiler can be lit during an electrical power outage. Gas will not flow unless the glow bar is hot.

If the oven is in use when a power outage occurs, the oven burner shuts off and cannot be re-lit until power is restored.

Oven Shelves

\

The shelves are designed with stop- locks so when placed correctly on the shelf supports, they will stop before coming completely out of the oven and will not tilt when you are removing food from them or placing foo{on them.

When placing cookware on a shelf, pull the shelf out to the “stop” position. Place the cookware on the shelf, then slide the shelf back into the oven. This will eliminate reaching into the hot oven.

To remove a shelf from the oven, pull it toward you, tilt front end upward and pull shelf out.

To replace, place shelf on shelf support with stop-locks (curved extension of shelf) facing up and toward rear of oven. Tilt up front and push shelf toward back of oven until it goes past “stop” on oven wall. Then lower front of shelf and push it all the way back.

Shelf Positions

The oven has four shelf supports— A (bottom), B, C and D (top). Shelf positions for cooking are suggested on Baking and Roasting pages.

Oven Light

Use the switch on the control panel to turn the light on and off.

(continued nextpage

9

Page 9
Image 9
GE JGSP21GEP, JGSP20GEP manual Using Your Oven