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Throughout this manual, features and appearance may vary from your model.
Using the surface units.
In a quiet kitchen, you may hear
slight
clicking
sounds during cooking,
indicating heat settings selected are being
maintained.
Switching heats to higher settings always
shows a quicker change in temperature
than switching to lower settings.
Surface Cooking Controls
Your surface units and controls are designed
to give you a variety of heat settings for surface
unit cooking.
At both
LO
and
Hl
positions, there is
a slight niche so control
clicks
at those
positions;
Hl
marks the highest setting;
LO
, the lowest setting.
How to Set the Controls
Push the control knob in.
Turn either clockwise or
counterclockwise to desired
heat setting.
Control must be pushed in to set only
from the
0FF
position.
When control is in any position
other than
OFF,
you can turn it without
pushing in.
Be sure you turn control to
OFF
when
you finish cooking. An indicator light
will glow wen
ANY
surface unit is on.
A Burner On indicator light will glow
when any surface unit is on.
Heat Setting Guide
Hl
—Quick start for cooking; bring water
to boil.
MEDIUM HIGH
—Fast fry, pan broil;
maintain fast boil on large amount
of food.
MED
— Saute and brown; maintain slow
boil on large amount of food.
MEDIUM LOW
-Cereal; maintain serving
temperature of most foods.
NOTE:
LO
— Cook after starting at HI; cook
with little water in covered pan. Use to
steam rice.
At
Hl
or
MEDIUM HIGH
, never leave
food unattended. Boilovers cause
smoking; greasy spillovers may
catch fire.
At
LO
, melt chocolate, butter on
small unit.
Cooking Tips
Use medium- or heavyweight
cookware. Aluminum cookware
conducts heat faster than other
metals. Cast-iron and coated cast-iron
cookware is slow to absorb heat,
but generally cooks evenly at low or
medium heat settings. Steel pans may
cook unevenly if not combined with
other metals.
Do not overfill cookware with fat
that may spill over when adding food.
Frosty foods bubble vigorously. Watch
foods frying at high temperatures.
Keep range and hood clean from
accumulated grease.
To conserve the most cooking energy,
pans should be flat on the bottom,
have straight sides and tight-fitting
lids. Match the size of the saucepan
to the size of the surface unit. A pan
that extends more than an inch
beyond the edge of the drip pan
traps heat, which causes “crazing”
(fine hairline cracks) on porcelain,
and discoloration ranging from blue
to dark gray on chrome drip pans.
1
2
1
2
2
1
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
OFF
LO
HI
Medium
low
Medium
high
5