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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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I currently have an all gas oven and love cooking with gas on the stove.
However, I'm drawn to using electricity for my oven. What are some thoughts/experiences on this? PS The oven I am thinking of buying is the KitchenAid KDSS907SSS ...I like the stainless stell, the digital read-out and the 'InstaWok' feature that lets me use a wok. |
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On Nov 22, 1:26 pm, "Austin Powers" > wrote:
> I currently have an all gas oven and love cooking with gas on the stove. > > However, I'm drawn to using electricity for my oven. What are some > thoughts/experiences on this? > > PS The oven I am thinking of buying is the KitchenAid KDSS907SSS ...I like > the stainless stell, the digital read-out and the 'InstaWok' feature that > lets me use a wok. Maybe expensive electric ovens are OK, but cheap ones suck. My wife is a baker (couldn't cook an entree to save her life), and she insists on gas. --Bryan |
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"Austin Powers" wrote:
> > I currently have an all gas oven and love cooking with gas on the stove. However, I'm drawn to using electricity for my oven. � Why... do you have stock in your local electric utility company? > What are some thoughts/experiences on this? Your cost for oven energy use will rise about four-fold, and for no benefit derived whatsoever. Not to mention that you will need a 220 Volt - 60 Amp dedicated line installed, not inexpensive, can easily cost more than you pay for your new stove. The GE Profile gas range is available with a convection gas oven... just one model of many: http://tinyurl.com/32nle6 http://products.geappliances.com/App...KU=JGB915BEFBB Sheldon |
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![]() "Austin Powers" > wrote in message ... >I currently have an all gas oven and love cooking with gas on the stove. > > However, I'm drawn to using electricity for my oven. What are some > thoughts/experiences on this? > > PS The oven I am thinking of buying is the KitchenAid KDSS907SSS ...I like > the stainless stell, the digital read-out and the 'InstaWok' feature that > lets me use a wok. I don't like a gas oven for baking or roasting. Bread and roasts don't brown as nicely. Janet |
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"Bobo Bonobo(R)" wrote:
> > On Nov 22, 1:26 pm, "Austin Powers" > wrote: > > I currently have an all gas oven and love cooking with gas on the stove. > > > > However, I'm drawn to using electricity for my oven. What are some > > thoughts/experiences on this? > > > > PS The oven I am thinking of buying is the KitchenAid KDSS907SSS ...I like > > the stainless stell, the digital read-out and the 'InstaWok' feature that > > lets me use a wok. > > Maybe expensive electric ovens are OK, but cheap ones suck. My wife > is a baker (couldn't cook an entree to save her life), and she insists > on gas. > > --Bryan There are differences between gas and electric for sure. Electric ovens with typically hold a tighter temperature tolerance than gas ovens and gas ovens introduce humidity into the oven from the combustion that electric ovens do not. I don't believe either is a must have better than, certainly not the way the cook top burners are. Personally I have a dual fuel range with LP burners up top and electric convection main oven and electric side oven which seems to give me the best of everything. I've also used commercial double stack convection ovens in both gas and electric and not found much operational difference between them. |
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"Janet B." wrote:
> "Austin Powers" wrote: > > I currently have an all gas oven and love cooking with gas on the stove. > > > However, I'm drawn to using electricity for my oven. �What are some > > thoughts/experiences on this? > > > PS The oven I am thinking of buying is the KitchenAid KDSS907SSS ...I like > > the stainless stell, the digital read-out and the 'InstaWok' feature that > > lets me use a wok. > > I don't like a gas oven for baking or roasting. �Bread and roasts don't > brown as nicely. > Janet Nonsense... you were obviously a **** poor science student in JHS. Temperature is temperature, the same with either... and the moisture argument is myth. The only time condensation is present in a gas oven is when first lit, it's gone before 150F is reached. There is less water vapor produced and introduced from burning gas than their is coming off the cooking food itself... and in either case it all vents out anyway. So there is no more or less humidity present in a hot gas oven as in a hot electric oven. And gas ovens are actually more temperature accurate for the same reason gas top burners are more accurate, they are instant on and off... electric element temperature still heats after turned off from residual heat (anyone with an electric cooktop should know this) and tends to heat above the thermostat setting and then needs more time to reheat from off permitting the oven to cool... so the drift in either direction with electric is a bit wider, and that's with thermostat anticipators being equal for both.... but you're talking perhaps +/- 2 degrees, totally meaningless for cooking regardless of fuel type. If you have a problem with browning there is one reason and one reason ONLY, you don't know how to cook. Sheldon |
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![]() "Sheldon" > wrote in message ... "Janet B." wrote: > "Austin Powers" wrote: > > I currently have an all gas oven and love cooking with gas on the stove. > > > However, I'm drawn to using electricity for my oven. ?What are some > > thoughts/experiences on this? > > > PS The oven I am thinking of buying is the KitchenAid KDSS907SSS ...I > > like > > the stainless stell, the digital read-out and the 'InstaWok' feature > > that > > lets me use a wok. > > I don't like a gas oven for baking or roasting. ?Bread and roasts don't > brown as nicely. > Janet Nonsense... you were obviously a **** poor science student in JHS. Temperature is temperature, the same with either... and the moisture argument is myth. The only time condensation is present in a gas oven is when first lit, it's gone before 150F is reached. There is less water vapor produced and introduced from burning gas than their is coming off the cooking food itself... and in either case it all vents out anyway. So there is no more or less humidity present in a hot gas oven as in a hot electric oven. And gas ovens are actually more temperature accurate for the same reason gas top burners are more accurate, they are instant on and off... electric element temperature still heats after turned off from residual heat (anyone with an electric cooktop should know this) and tends to heat above the thermostat setting and then needs more time to reheat from off permitting the oven to cool... so the drift in either direction with electric is a bit wider, and that's with thermostat anticipators being equal for both.... but you're talking perhaps +/- 2 degrees, totally meaningless for cooking regardless of fuel type. If you have a problem with browning there is one reason and one reason ONLY, you don't know how to cook. Sheldon Or, perhaps you're just an indifferent cook and can't tell the difference? Janet |
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![]() "Sheldon" > wrote in message ... "Austin Powers" wrote: > > I currently have an all gas oven and love cooking with gas on the stove. However, I'm drawn to using electricity for my oven. ? Why... do you have stock in your local electric utility company? > What are some thoughts/experiences on this? Your cost for oven energy use will rise about four-fold, and for no benefit derived whatsoever. For summer use consider your air conditioning bill. Fire consumes air -- and as a result it's always pumping hot gases into the kitchen. Electric consumes no air, produces no pollution in your kitchen. It will not fight your air conditioning nearly as much. (This is also true for electric burners, for the die hards who prefer them.) |
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![]() "HiTech RedNeck" > wrote in message ... > > "Sheldon" > wrote in message > ... > "Austin Powers" wrote: > > > > I currently have an all gas oven and love cooking with gas on the stove. > However, I'm drawn to using electricity for my oven. ? > > Why... do you have stock in your local electric utility company? > > > What are some thoughts/experiences on this? > The following text should have been quoted. It is not mine. It is Sheldon's. > Your cost for oven energy use will rise about four-fold, and for no > benefit derived whatsoever. This text is mine. > For summer use consider your air conditioning bill. Fire consumes air -- > and as a result it's always pumping hot gases into the kitchen. Electric > consumes no air, produces no pollution in your kitchen. It will not fight > your air conditioning nearly as much. (This is also true for electric > burners, for the die hards who prefer them.) |
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"NoTech RedNeck" wrote:
> "> > This text is mine. Were you HiTech you'd know how to trim posts. > > For summer use consider your air conditioning bill. �Fire consumes air - > > and as a result it's always pumping hot gases into the kitchen. �Electric > > consumes no air, produces no pollution in your kitchen. �It will not fight > > your air conditioning nearly as much. �(This is also true for electric > > burners, for the die hards who prefer them.) Do you really think cooking with electric negates the four-fold savings in energy costs compared with gas... not even close. And there is no pollution from gas cooking, cooking food in of itself is what produces major pollution... that's why intelligent folks use exhaust fans... wtf were you saying about burning up air... you'd produce a vacuum to match the one in your skull. And who cares... heat is heat regardless of fuel used... only utter morons, those with more dollars than brain cells, use their oven during hot summer periods... people with even a modicum of intelligence do heavy cooking outdoors, mostly with _gas_... some use charcaol but a relatively small minority. Hardly anyone has an outdoor electric grill, mainly because they are much too expensive to operate. Most people have electric cooking because mostly their living arrangements do not permit gas (apartments, condos, etc.), or they already have electric and choose not to expend the dollars to convert, and some miniscule proportion doesn't have the testicals to admit they're too cheap to convert so instead they claim they're ascared of gas.... which is utter foolishness because there are far more house fires and electricutions due to electric stoves than there are gas stoves that blow up... modern gas appliances are extremely safe, far safer than electric. I can't remember the last time I lit my oven during warm weather... it's the heat produced that negates A/C... you trying to say electric cooking produces no heat. duh Sheldon |
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