Baking
tonight? Keep it efficient
Baking is quickly becoming a thing of the past as busy families rely on
fast food and pre-packaged “heat and eat” meals. But if you are one of those
“chefs” inspired by the all the cooking shows on TV, make sure that you are
baking efficiently.
Buying products that bear the Energy star label is a
surefire way to save electricity around the house. But the government doesn’t
require energy-efficiency labels for ovens. So it’s up to you to conserve
energy as you prepare your meals. Here’s how:
- Use
the microwave rather than the conventional oven whenever you can. Microwaves
use half as much energy as the oven and cook food faster.
- Preparing
a small meal? Cook it in a portable appliance like an electric frying pan,
grill or toaster oven. These small appliances eat up about two-thirds less
electricity than an oven’s broiler.
- Cook
as much of an oven-baked meal at once as possible. Variations in heat of 25
degrees in either direction will still brown your food nicely.
- Skip
pre-heating, especially when broiling or roasting.
- If
you need to rearrange your oven shelves, do it before you turn the oven on.
That helps you waste less heat by opening the door of a heated oven – and
it can prevent burns.
- Avoid
opening the door while your food is cooking.
- Wipe
up minor oven spills with a damp cloth and us the oven’s self-cleaning
cycle only for major messes. And when you need the self cleaner, run it
right after you prepare a meal when the oven is already hot.
- And
of course, never use an electric oven as a room heater or to dry damp
clothes.
Remember that it is especially important to use your oven
efficiently during hot weather because when heated air escapes from your oven
you are not only wasting the energy you are cooking with, you are also wasting
energy by making your air conditioning system work harder to cool the room you
are cooking in.
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