Oven rotisseries.

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mikael3

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I'm wondering if anyone has any experience with oven rotisseries. I think they were introduced in Frigidaire TOL models in 1955 or '56, and other models introduced them about the same time. It looks like maybe '55 to '75 were their heyday.

So, people must have been using them and they must have been somewhat popular. But do they really work? Do they make a mess? Even if they're fabulous, do you really find yourself using them a lot? Do you think a good counter-top model would do just as well? Or even better?
 
Even the countertop models need to be cleaned after use from the spattering that usually happens.

 

If I had an oven with a rotisserie, it would have to be self-cleaning.
 
My P-7 GE oven (circa mid 70's, I think) has a rotisserie motor and controls, but the skewer and support have been missing since at least 1997.

I did get a Baby George countertop rotisserie about 14 years ago. Once I fixed an internal wiring issue (hot shorted to chassis) I got some use out of it, and it wasn't that bad to clean. But once I got an outdoor gas fired rotisserie grill, I switched to using that instead.
 
Call me Mr. Rotisserie; I love these things!

My family has had a total of 3 General Electric Stoves with built-in rotisseries, each one of a different vintage and 1 of them was installed in a conventional wall oven, 1 in a self-cleaning oven, 1 was installed in the upper oven of an "up and down" unit where the panels were removable for cleaning in the lower P*7 oven. All of them worked so well and were such an integral part of our Family's cooking that for me, at this point, a rotisserie is not just desirable, it is indispensable. I have a couple of vintage Roto-Broils, but I would be much happier with one inside of my main oven. Unfortuntately, as the US appliance manufacturers have dumbed-down their lines, it is impossible to find unless one is willing to shell-out 4K or more on a Gaggenau or a Miele oven and put up with the equally expensive service. I am always looking for vintage GE wall ovens with this feature and with all the equipment intact. I have collected several rotisserie parts to have on hand when such an oven comes along.

 

I also have found a Vintage Caloric Ultramatic 40" stove with an oven and a side broiler compartment with a rotisserie and all the parts. Unfortunately I live in an area that doesn't have Natural Gas and I've been told by the local Propane supplier that they will NOT under any circumstances, convert my stove to work with propane without electric spark ignition. Poo on them. I think a fancy gas grill with one of those fancy radiant grids on the side to work the rotisserie would be great but I haven't been able to find anyone that owns one to tell me whether they work well or not.

 

Traditionally, rotisseries work with radiant heat from the SIDE of the meat that's spinning. One of the best rotiserries that I've even used was an antique model that wound up and ran on clock springs that you set up in front of a fireplace with a pan of water under the spit. The flavor was unbelievable because of the smoke from the wood fire. You can still find these and I believe somebody makes brand new versions of these.

 

As to your cleaning question, I never thought they made that much of a mess. On the GE rotisseries, you set the rotisserie armature on one of the model's broiler pans(they still made them with the holes in them for those parts way into the '90's) and put some water in the pan. You set the Oven Selector to "Rotisserie" and set the corresponding temperature dial to a range between 300 and 400 degrees. The broiler unit never got red when used this way. There wasn't a whole lot of spatter unless you were roasting something like a duck or a goose(which I did once and had my first scary kitchen fire; while I was panicking and flailing my arms, my Father walked by the oven, calmly, shut the oven door and put the fire out).

 

Rotisseries that are supposed to work directly over a heat source, such as the ones on cheaper grills and the Jenn-Air versions don't work very well. The grease that drips down from whatever is being cooked causes flare-ups and if you put a pan under the spit to catch the grease, you're defeating the system and always filling it with water as it boils away. Rotisseries always work best with remote radiant heat. Some old Caloric gas wall-ovens had a rotisserie accessory that was supposed to work inside the main oven, not the lower broiler oven. I'd be very curious to find out how that system worked.

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Rotisserie Cooking is great!

I had a Gibson CE30S9 Self Cleaning Range with a rotisserie installed. This was a 1978 Model. Two chickens on a Sunday we did many times. Worked like a charm.
 
If you can find a Farberware open hearth rotisserie broiler it cooks very well and with almost no mess. Our Farberware rep used to put hers in the middle of her holiday table to cook the turkey before the guests arrived and had no mess on the tablecloth. Water is placed in the drip pan below the heating element and everything except that aluminum pan goes into the dishwasher for cleanup.
 
I have one in my OkM but it's missing the parts that connect the "armature" to the motor, who knows when they went awol. When my parents moved into their current place the range that was there had a rotisserie as well, missing all parts & accessories (there was this switch we couldn't figure out and there was this noise, then we realized that it was the range) of course.
 
I have just two ranges with a rotisserie and neither are self-cleaning so I never tried the feature! One day I should but I hate cleaning ovens! 
 
I had a ronco then a baby george i love the darn thing. I make a rotisserie chicken every few weeks. Its my dream to find a range with one built in.
 
My '59 frigidaire CI has a rotisserie that has been used since it was new. No unusual mess, just great food. Noting like smelling a chicken on the rotisserie in the middle of winter to bring back memories of warm weather. Even though I avoid meat for the most part, sometimes I break down and do a chicken on the rotisserie...
 

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