the pan will have to be on a different shelves but they might have to cook longer and what are u cooking it is alot easyer to anser the ?
If your pans are large and cover the entire shelf, it would probably not work because the heat would not be able to circulate well. But if the pans are small, yes, you can bake two. I usually increase baking time about 10 minutes for every one hour and it works well for me.
No problem. I do it often, especially when making a casserole dish (say lamb). I often bake parcels of another meat (say chicken) at the same time as the casserole.
Yes. In a convection oven the quantity of food being cooked - unlike in a microwave - doesn't much affect the cooking process. So, you could cook a roasting joint of meat, with a pan of vegetables sizzling away on another shelf, and an apple pie on a lower shelf.
Bon appetite!
In a standard oven as long as you can scatter the two pans so each has open heat from the oven bottom you can cook them at the same time. You have problems if you place 2 pans one over the other because the bottom one will grab the majority of the heat and cook faster while the top one will cook quicker around the edges but the middle and bottom will remain uncooked.
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I try to put the pan most likely to sizzle and splatter on the higher shelf, with the other - say, a pie or casserole - on the lower shelf. This avoids having to scrub the bottom of the pan on top. Rectangular dishes, longer than they are wide, are great for cooking two at once and allow for better circulation, but most modern ovens are fan-forced, so whichever pans you use should work okay.
Cakes and other dishes that need to rise are probably best cooked alone, or at least with other sweet dishes. Savoury dishes are fine cooked together because you don't risk transfer of savoury flavours to your cake.
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Yes you can, just make sure to set two different timers if they require different amounts of time in the oven. No need to adjust the temperature. I have done this before and both dishes have come out perfectly.
Anwer 1
NO, you just lower the temperature about 100 degrees and it will be just peachy.
Answer 2
Although it is probably correct in essence, the above answer is implausibly precise. Without knowing a great deal more information like the size and heat output of the oven, kitchen air temperature, oven insulation rating, the masses of the two cakes and so on, the best that can probably be said is that cooking time will be increased only by the (probably) insignificant amount of time it takes the oven to heat the mass of the additional cold air entering it (due to your having to hold the oven door open longer) and the mass of the second cake to its final temperature.
No, one oven cannot bake at two different temperatures in the same space. Some stoves are made with two separate ovens, which could be used to bake at different temperatures at the same time.
yes you can but the flavours might get slightly mixed and therefore I would not recommend it
Depending on the size of the dishes, yes, three different dishes can bake at one time. All three dishes must require the same temperature, although they might be finished at different times. There also must be enough room in the oven to hold all three dishes with several inches of space around each.
you bake it at 350o and for at least 45 minitues
350°
depends on what you are trying to bake and what temperature the oven is set to
Yes. You can bake it at any temperature you wish
I wouldn't do that. baking dishes are cheap -fling it out and get asnother.
One method is to use the lower temp as the set point and add additional time for the item that needs the higher temp. Another method is to average the two temps and and watch both items closely. Anytime you add another item to the oven, it is going to slow down the cooking process for the other, that is unless you are using a convection oven.
There are several different recipes and types of no-bake fruit cake, but in general, they should be refrigerated. In many no-bake desserts, the ingredients will not hold together indefinitely at room temperature.
Sausages must be heated to 160 degrees Fahrenheit or 72 degrees C. The Food Code says 160º F (72º C) and this temperature we adopt as the recommended temperature for cooking meats. McDonalds also cook hamburgers to this temperature.
350 should be fine.
350