Proof of a Frigidaire oven!!

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norgeway

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Apr 28, 2009
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mocksville n c
The Nurses at work have a covered dish supper on the weekends I work, so I usually get drafted into making biscuits or some kind of dessert, this week it is biscuits, look how even that old Frigidaire bakes!

norgeway++11-17-2012-14-33-16.jpg
 
I had a few too many...

For one pan, so I used Berthas old pan for the rest...Bertha was our neighbor who had the stove, she passed away this Summer at almost 102, when I went to get the stove, her biscuit pan was still in the drawer, I have eaten many good biscuits off of it when I was a child, she started housekeeping with it in 1935.

norgeway++11-17-2012-14-38-9.jpg
 
Show off LOL. (Just kidding). Yes Frigidaires were superior cooking machines as far as I'm concerned. I have no doubt Bertha is looking down just beaming with pride at what enjoyment you are derriving from using her range. I can relate. I've never been able to make a good biscuit from scratch and I've even tried your easy recipe.
 
Great Minds Think Alike....

....Hans, I have those West Bend canisters too, though mine are the silver aluminum color and not the copper-anodized.

I wasn't sure I'd like them when I bought them - I needed something in a hurry. But they've been the most satisfactory canisters I've ever owned.
 
Most any of the better electric ranges that supplied top heat during baking baked well and evenly. The Ropers and early 70s WP ovens did not use top heat during baking and therefore did not bake biscuits as well. The WP I had in an apartment had to be left on the Preheat setting during the 10 minutes of baking to decently brown the tops of biscuits. The preheat setting used both the bake and broil elements at full wattage.

Where Frigidaire ovens are real powerhouses is in their broiling. Each oven in my 61 has a 3700 watt broiler element and the other night when I broiled burgers in the short oven, I noticed pops being converted into flashes of flame. Among the ranges I have used, I have only seen that in Frigidaire ranges with sealed Radiantube broiling elements. The open coil broilers in my 54 Frigidaire are very fast and even also.

I remember users of gas ovens having to give cakes and pies a quarter turn once or twice during the baking process because of uneven flame making one side of the oven hotter. Then gas stoves got cheap and instead of using the heavy cast iron or steel plate above the burner, they used a thinner piece of steel that could warp and provide uneven heat distribution to the oven cavity which resulted in uneven baking. My mother's Crown had a heavy plate and a few minutes into the preheat there would be this big DUNG sound when the plate expanded. The thermal inertia of the plate often resulted in a piddle of water on the kitchen floor at the front corner of the stove where water vapor in the gas drained after condensing on that slab of metal in the early stages of preheating.
 
The "pops" might best be described as grease spatters.  When they hit the coil, they flare up.  This used to happen under the open coil broiler of my mom's '49 Westinghouse Commodore all the time.

 

Hans, those perfect results are really impressive.  My 2008 Electrolux Icon with "soft heat" hidden oven coil can't even come close to that kind of even baking.
 
In my 61 with pull 'n clean oven, I took two pieces of Heavy Duty oven foil and placed them in an L shape along the sides of the rack and covering the side walls up to the broiler element. There is air circulation behind them, but they catch splatters so there is less oven cleaning. The foil does not totally cover the rack where the broiler pan sits.

Those spatters make neat little "pow" noises that are sort of combination of explosion and ignition. I love neat noises. The little flashes of flame are fun, too.
 

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