76
4.1 Power tables
Power level
Cooking type
Use of level
(display combines the experience and cooking
habits)
Max power
Boost
Heat
quickly
Ideal to quickly increase the temperature of the food
up to fast boiling in the case of water or quickly heat
cooking liquids
8-9
Fry - boil
Ideal for browning, starting to cook, frying frozen
products, boiling rapidly
7-8
Brown - fry - boil - grill
Ideal for frying, keeping the boil, cooking and grilling
(for short times, 5-10 minutes)
High power
6-7
Brown - cook - stew - fry - grill
Ideal for frying, maintaining a simmer, cooking and
grilling (for average times, 10-20 minutes), preheating
accessories
4-5
Cook - stew - fry - grill
Ideal for stewing, maintaining a light boil, cooking (for
longer times). Stir pasta
Medium
power
3-4
Cook - simmer - thicken - stir
Ideal for slow cooking (rice, sauces, roasts, fish) in the
presence of liquid (e.g. water, wine, broth, milk),
stirring pasta
2-3
Cook - simmer - thicken - stir
Ideal for slow cooking (volume less than one litre: rice,
sauces, roasts, fish) in the presence of liquid (e.g.
water, wine, broth, milk)
1-2
Melt - thaw - keep warm - stir
Ideal for softening butter, gently melting chocolate,
thawing small products
Low power
1
Melt - thaw - keep warm - stir
Ideal for keeping small portions of freshly cooked food
warm or keeping the temperature of serving dishes
and stirring risotto
OFF Zero
power
Support surface
Hob in stand-by or off (possible presence of residual
heat from the end of cooking, signalled by H-L-O)
Summary of Contents for QHFB860P
Page 22: ......
Page 23: ......
Page 24: ...1x 1x 1x 2 8 m 4x 1x 1x 1x 1x 2x 1x 8x 4x 4x 1x 1x 4x 2x 3 5x9 5mm 1x ...
Page 25: ...KIT WINDOW ...
Page 26: ...A B ...
Page 27: ...min 50 min 500 min 40 min 40 1 N L A B ...
Page 28: ...1a 830 515 211 490 805 50 50 60 60 490 211 805 inst A P P 20 60mm ...
Page 30: ...1c 16 ...
Page 31: ...2 a b b ...
Page 32: ...2a 1 x 2 8 m inst A ...
Page 33: ...2b 1 x 2 8 m inst B ...
Page 36: ...5 4 4x OK ...
Page 37: ...6 x4 x4 x8 inst B ...
Page 38: ...7 ...
Page 39: ...e 7a 1 7a 2 7a 3 7a 4 BACK FRONT a b 1 a a b ...
Page 40: ...1 1 7a 6 7a 5 ...
Page 41: ... 600 45 490 60 50 211 550 189 488 89 227 455 7b ...
Page 42: ... 189 488 210 490 50 600 560 89 227 7b ...
Page 43: ... 7c ...
Page 44: ...8 ...
Page 45: ...9a 3 clack 600 9a 1 9a 2 2x 3 5x9 5mm clack ...
Page 46: ...e 9a 4 BACK FRONT a b 9a 5 9a 6 a a b ...
Page 47: ...1 9a 8 9a 7 1 ...
Page 48: ... 600 clack 9b 1 9b 2 9b 3 9b ...
Page 49: ...2x 3 5x9 5mm clack 9b 4 9b 5 ...
Page 50: ...e 9b 6 9b 7 BACK FRONT b a 9b 8 a a b ...
Page 51: ...9b 10 9b 9 2 1 2 1 2 ...
Page 52: ...10 94 227 55 218 1 2 3 900 ...
Page 53: ...11 3 60 441 26 50 R 10 475 5 40 5 ...
Page 54: ...12 13 H 2x X a X b L o r e m c H ...
Page 55: ...600 490 60 50 450 560 151 151 183 485 211 13a ...
Page 56: ...490 50 685 845 560 210 138 183 13a ...
Page 57: ...13b OK OK N1 E4 N3 N10 N2 E5 ...
Page 58: ...14 fig 17 fig 16 18 fig 15 ...
Page 59: ...15 16 b a a b ...
Page 60: ...17 17a 1 2 3 4 17 1 17 2 1 2 3 4 ...
Page 61: ...1 2 3 1 1 1 2 2 1 2 3 3 ...
Page 62: ...17b OK 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 4 ...
Page 63: ......
Page 64: ...4 3 2 1 2 3 1 2 2 2 3 4 4 3 ...
Page 65: ...17c 1 17c 1 17c 2 1 ...
Page 66: ...18a ...
Page 67: ...18b ...
Page 69: ...OK OK NO NO NO OK NO ...
Page 126: ...LIB0173376 Ed 12 20 ...