• Arrange food carefully. Place thickest areas towards outside of dish.
• Watch cooking time. Cook for the shortest amount of time indicated and add more as needed. Food
severely overcooked can smoke or ignite.
• Cover foods while cooking. Covers prevent spattering and help foods to cook evenly.
• Turn foods over once during microwaving to speed cooking of such foods as chicken and hamburgers.
Large items like roasts must be turned over at least once.
• Rearrange foods such as meatballs halfway through cooking both from top to bottom and from the
center of the dish to the outside.
• The ideal material for a microwave utensil is transparent to microwave, it allows energy to pass through
the container and heat the food.
• Microwave can not penetrate metal, so metal utensils or dishes with metallic trim should not be used.
• Do not use recycled paper products when microwave cooking, as they may contain small metal fragments
which may cause sparks and/or fires.
• Round /oval dishes rather than square/oblong ones are recommend, as food in corners tends to overcook.
• Narrow strips of aluminum foil may be used to prevent overcooking of exposed areas. But be careful don’t
use too much and keep a distance of 1 inch (2.54cm) between foil and cavity.
The list below is a general guide to help you select the correct utensils.
Cookware Microwave Grill Convection Combination*
Heat–Resistant Glass Yes Yes Yes Yes
Non Heat–Resistant Glass No No No No
Heat–Resistant Ceramics Yes Yes Yes Yes
Microwave–Safe Plastic Dish Yes No No No
Kitchen Paper Yes No No No
Metal Tray No Yes Yes No
Metal Rack No Yes Yes No
Aluminum Foil & Foil Container No Yes Yes No
* Combination: applicable for both “microwave+grill”, and “microwave+convection” cooking.
1. Door Safety Lock System
2. Oven Window
3. Oven Air Vent
4. Shaft
5. Roller Ring
6. Glass Tray
7. Control Panel
8. Grill Heater
PART NAMES
UTENSILS GUIDE
MICROWAVE COOKING PRINCIPLES
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