lordkenmore
Well-known member
It's been years since I used convection, and I never really had the chance to make the best comparisons.
That said, convection was more or less what I grew up with. My mother bought a Farberware tabletop convection oven ca. 1980 to replace a wall oven that had A)broken B)wasn't repairable (according to the repairman--this was before the Internet, and AW.org, of course!) and C)apparently had a dimension no longer supported. While the Farberware was an "easy fix", my mother grew to really like it, and said that she'd never go back to standard ovens again. Two points that interest me: the failed wall oven was probably pretty good (and my mother said years later that it had been in some ways the best oven she'd had to that point). Point #2: she wasn't much of a baker. She baked, but wasn't much of an enthusiast. She could keep a supply of cookies around, etc, but she wasn't like some people here who live in the kitchen.
When I first started baking, I used that Farberware, dropping the temperature 25 degrees IIRC. It seemed to work OK, but I had no standard for comparison, until the early 1990s, when I lived with a conventional range that had horrible ovens. I adapted--I had to--but it was painful, and I missed the Farberware.
Although I have to say that recent ovens I've used have been OK. But then most of my baking in recent years has been breads. Although I would be interested to try convection again.
That said, convection was more or less what I grew up with. My mother bought a Farberware tabletop convection oven ca. 1980 to replace a wall oven that had A)broken B)wasn't repairable (according to the repairman--this was before the Internet, and AW.org, of course!) and C)apparently had a dimension no longer supported. While the Farberware was an "easy fix", my mother grew to really like it, and said that she'd never go back to standard ovens again. Two points that interest me: the failed wall oven was probably pretty good (and my mother said years later that it had been in some ways the best oven she'd had to that point). Point #2: she wasn't much of a baker. She baked, but wasn't much of an enthusiast. She could keep a supply of cookies around, etc, but she wasn't like some people here who live in the kitchen.
When I first started baking, I used that Farberware, dropping the temperature 25 degrees IIRC. It seemed to work OK, but I had no standard for comparison, until the early 1990s, when I lived with a conventional range that had horrible ovens. I adapted--I had to--but it was painful, and I missed the Farberware.
Although I have to say that recent ovens I've used have been OK. But then most of my baking in recent years has been breads. Although I would be interested to try convection again.