Cadco Convection Oven XAF 113 User Manual

MANUAL Convection Ovens Instruction Manual  
Quarter Size Model  
Model XAF-103:  
Quarter Size/3 Shelves  
120 Volt  
Half Size Models  
Model XAF-113:  
Half Size/3 Shelves  
120 Volt  
Model XAF-133:  
Half Size/4 Shelves  
208-240 Volt  
Full Size Models  
Model XAF-183:  
Full Size/3 Shelves  
208-240 Volt  
Model XAF-193:  
Full Size/4 Shelves  
208-240 Volt  
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I. INSTRUCTION FOR THE INSTALLER  
Congratulations! You have just purchased a new Cadco LineChef Manual Convection Oven. Let’s go over  
some of the basics before you start using your new oven.  
TM  
1. DATA PLATE  
2. CERTIFICATION  
2.1 The “CSA” mark on our data labels and on our user manual refers to the following listings:  
Certifications are listed under UNOX S.p.A., CSA file #202281, including XAF series oven models  
2831-03  
2831-83  
HEATERS-Cooking and Liquid - Stationary Type  
HEATERS-Cooking and Liquid-Stationary Type-  
Certified to U.S. Standards  
Class Number:  
Class Number:  
DESCRIPTION:  
DESCRIPTION:  
TO THE REQUIREMENTS OF UL 197 (8th edition)  
2.2 The “NSF” mark refers to listing including XAF series oven models under UNOX SPA for NSF/ANSI  
STANDARD 4: Commercial Cooking, Rethermalization and Powered Hot Food Holding and Transport  
Equipment  
3. INSTALLATION - PRELIMINARY OPERATIONS  
All electrical connections and installation operations must be done by qualified personnel, and comply  
with all existing codes.  
3.1 CHECK THE LOCATION OF INSTALLATION  
Verify the overall measurements and the exact position of the electrical and water connections (where  
applicable) before installing the oven. Refer to the illustrations in  
the separate “technical data” document for your model.  
3.2 FEET ASSEMBLY  
You will find the feet packed inside your oven’s cooking cavity.  
The feet must be used when your oven is in operation. Never use  
your oven without its feet properly installed. Assemble the feet as  
shown. (Full size models now come with tall feet that screw into  
place; all other models come with shorter feet that pop into place.)  
3.3 POSITIONING  
Place your oven so the back and sides can be easily reached. This will make the electrical connections  
and any servicing points easily accessible. Your oven is not designed for built-in applications or for side  
by side positioning. Cadco suggests you leave a minimum distance of 4” between the back of the oven  
and the wall to allow for the escape of moisture. The oven must be placed upon a support, a stand, or on  
top of a counter made of non-combustible material. Never install the oven directly on the floor. If the  
oven is placed near walls, dividers, kitchen cabinets, decorated edges or drapes, they must be made of  
non combustible material.  
3.4 REMOVE THE PROTECTIVE FILM  
Carefully remove all the protective film from the external walls of your oven. Be sure to remove any  
residual glue left on the outside of the oven with an appropriate solvent.  
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4. INSTALLATION  
4.1 ELECTRICAL CONNECTION  
Connection to the electrical power source must be done according to all state and local codes. Before  
connecting your oven, make sure that the voltage and the amps comply with those stated on the data plate  
of your oven. Avoid using patch cords and multiple jacks.  
The appliance must be placed so that the connection plug to the outlet can be easily reached.  
When the appliance is in operation, the power supply voltage must not diverge from the value of the  
nominal voltage, written on the technical data plate, by more than + or – 10%.  
Ovens are equipped with cordset and NEMA plug (single phase; 120V or 208-240V, depending on oven  
model.) It is sufficient to insert the plug in the proper outlet (the outlet must be suitable for the plug  
assembled on the oven.)  
II. INSTRUCTIONS FOR THE USER  
Never allow grease splatters or spills to collect on the inside walls, floor, or ceiling of your oven. A  
simple cleaning with soap and water is usually enough to keep your oven spotless and in “like new”  
condition for years. Your oven should never be cleaned with a water hose or anything more powerful  
than a spritz bottle. For tougher cleaning and built up grease, we suggest using Foam Plus® from  
Discovery Products Corporation (Tel. 877.822.8500.)  
1. INSTRUCTIONS FOR THE OPERATOR  
You will find important information about maintaining and operating your new oven in this manual.  
Please read the manual and become familiar with your new oven before you begin to operate it. Keep the  
manual in a safe place and make sure everyone reads it before operating the oven. Please use only Cadco  
authorized service centers and always require quality UNOX-OEM parts. Failure to comply with these  
standards can compromise safety and will void your warranty.  
2. NOTES FOR USE  
Your Cadco oven was designed to cook food and must be used only for that specific purpose. Any other  
use may void your warranty. The oven allows you to work between 175ºF and 500ºF. It is suggested that  
you allow about 2-3” between trays for proper air circulation during the cooking process.  
Use your Cadco oven for:  
Baking all types of bread and pastry, both fresh and frozen.  
Cooking any meat, fish, or fowl.  
Rethermalizing any cooled or frozen cooked foods.  
Cooking (not steaming) any kinds of vegetables.  
Please avoid salting your food products while they are inside the cooking cavity. Salt is very corrosive  
and may, over time, damage the interior of your oven.  
3. CONTROL PANEL  
TIME  
TEMPERATURE  
PILOT LIGHT  
3.1 TIME DIAL  
To operate your oven, you must first turn the time dial clockwise to the time you  
choose, from 0 to 120 minutes (if you’re facing the oven, it is the dial on the left  
side of the control panel).  
You may also turn the time dial counterclockwise and click the dial over to  
operate the oven continuously, until you manually turn the knob back to “0”.  
Whether you have chosen to set an actual time, or have set the time dial for  
continuous “on”, the internal light will turn on and the fan will begin spinning.  
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3.2 TEMPERATURE DIAL  
The cooking temperature inside the cooking chamber is set by the temperature  
knob (if you’re facing the oven, it is the dial on the right side of the control  
panel).  
Turn the dial clockwise and set your desired temperature. At this time the green  
pilot light, located just to the right of the temperature dial will turn on. This  
indicates that the oven is preheating.  
Always preheat oven before placing food into it.  
Please note: the green pilot light will fluctuate on and off throughout the  
cooking cycle. This indicates that the heating element is turning on and off to  
help keep the actual temperature within 5-10 degrees of the set temperature.  
4. DOOR & FANS (FULL SIZE MODELS XAF-183 & XAF-193 ONLY!)  
Fans stop automatically when oven door is opened.  
Convection fans reverse direction approximately every 2 minutes for even baking.  
5. CLEANING THE OVEN  
WARNING: Before starting any maintenance or cleaning operation, it is necessary to disconnect  
the electrical power supply and wait for your oven to cool down.  
5.1 BEFORE USING THE OVEN  
Clean the metal parts with hot soapy water and rinse thoroughly.  
With the cooking cavity empty, heat the oven for about 30 minutes at a temperature of 350°F to “burn  
it in”.  
Never wash the cooking chamber with acids, abrasives, or aggressive detergents.  
5.2 CLEANING THE COOKING CAVITY  
Make sure to wipe up any and all spills as they occur.  
At the end of the day (or as needed), clean the cavity using only proper products.  
Never clean the stainless steel with acids, caustic detergents, abrasives or any products containing  
chlorine.  
5.3 CLEANING THE OUTSIDE OF YOUR OVEN  
Wipe up spills, as they occur, with a damp cloth.  
Never use a spray of water to clean the outside of your oven. This may damage the electrical  
components and void your warranty.  
6. TURNING OFF IN CASE OF BREAKDOWN  
If you encounter any kind of problem while your oven is in operation, or if you notice anything out of the  
ordinary, follow these steps:  
Unplug your oven immediately.  
Consult Cadco, Ltd. at 877-603-7393 (Toll-Free)  
Failure to do so may result in a hazardous condition and void your warranty.  
III. COOKING PRINCIPLES  
1. COOKING MODES  
CONVECTION COOKING  
Food products bake in hot, moving air. This moving air removes the cool air barrier between the cool  
food being cooked, and the heat of the oven chamber. It also helps your food products to cook evenly  
and quickly. Foods cook faster with convection.  
CONVECTION & HUMIDITY  
Adding humidity while baking helps many products retain moisture. In some cases, such as with Pate  
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Choux, the product will gain in volume.  
Moisture also makes the heat seem hotter (similar to a humid day) and products may cook a little  
faster.  
2. COOKING VARIABLES  
TEMPERATURE  
The exact setting of your oven temperature assures proper cooking of your food, both inside and outside:  
ƒ
Too low – your food cooks too slowly and will dry out.  
Too High – your foods burns and cooks unevenly.  
ƒ
If you are new to convection cooking, Cadco suggests setting your LineChefTM Convection Oven to a  
temperature of about 30ºF - 50ºF lower than what you would have set it at in a conventional oven. Let  
the food tell you what it needs; if it browns too fast, turn the oven temperature down.  
TIME  
The higher the temperature the quicker your foods will get done.  
The quicker foods (especially protein products) cook, the more moisture they tend to lose.  
Most bakery products can take high temperatures better than protein products.  
HUMIDITY  
The more humidity in the cooking cavity, the harder it will be for your food products to brown.  
QUANTITY OF FOOD  
One piece of chicken will take less time to cook than 2 or 3 pans of chicken. That’s “Mother Nature”  
pure and simple. Convection cooking is fantastic, but it’s NOT magic.  
Overloading the oven can result in uneven cooking.  
Avoid placing baked goods touching each other on the pan before baking.  
3. USE OF WIRE GRIDS AND SHEET PANS  
It is recommended to use wire grids for meat items. This will elevate your food items and allow air to  
circulate all around during the cooking process. Place your wire rack in a sheet pan to collect the juice.  
This reduces clean-up time also.  
Use sheet pans for bakery items such as pastries, bread and rolls, and cookies.  
IV. MAINTENANCE  
1. ORDINARY MAINTENANCE  
All maintenance operations must be done only by trained qualified personnel.  
Before starting any maintenance operation, disconnect your oven from the electrical power supply and  
wait for it to cool down.  
The parts that need ordinary maintenance can be reached by removing the front control panel and the  
back of the oven.  
2. SPECIAL MAINTENANCE  
All maintenance operations must be done only by trained qualified personnel.  
Before starting any maintenance operation, disconnect your oven from the electrical power supply and  
wait for it to cool down.  
2.1 REPLACEMENT OF INTERNAL LAMP  
To replace the internal lamp:  
Disconnect your oven from the power supply system and let it cool down.  
Remove the side rails.  
Unscrew the glass cover and replace the lamp with an identical bulb.  
Screw the glass cover back on.  
Reassemble the side rails.  
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2.2 RESET THE SAFETY THERMOSTAT  
This oven is equipped with a manually resettable safety thermostat designed to protect the oven against  
overheating. If there is an intervention, it completely deactivates the oven to avoid permanent damage.  
To reset this device, remove the black cap positioned to the bottom of the  
back of the oven by unscrewing it counterclockwise, push the reset button  
under the cap, and replace the black cap.  
If the safety thermostat shuts your oven off, before turning your oven back  
on, be sure to check your entire circuit to verify that the total amps being  
drawn by all the appliances, lights, etc. on that circuit do not exceed the  
amps available on that circuit.  
V. OPTIONAL MANUAL CONVECTION OVENS ACCESSORIES  
XR190 Oven Stand (full size)  
(Note: Shorter oven feet must be used when placing oven on this stand.)  
Accommodates oven models: XAF-183, XAF-188, XAF-193 & XAF-195  
XR130 Oven Stand (half size)  
Accommodates oven models: XAF-111, XAF-113, XAF-115, XAF-133, XAF-115,  
XAF-130, & XAF-135  
XR621 Wheels Kit for Oven Stands (for all XR series stands)  
2 front wheels with brakes  
2 wheels without brakes  
GRF018 Oven Fry Basket (Full Size)  
2 ½ pound (approx.) capacity  
GRP825 Poultry Rack (Full Size)  
Holds a maximum of eight 3 pound birds  
FAKIROTM Heat Plates provide very fast baking times, up to 50% faster than traditional baking pans.  
It takes as little as 4-5 minutes to bake a fresh Pizza on the FAKIROTM plate! The plates are manu-  
factured from alloys which provide superior heat storage and produce fast, even cooking of both top and  
bottom of the food product simultaneously. FAKIROTM plates are designed  
with burls on the lower surface of the plate, which intensify the heating  
action. (See models on next page.)  
TG450 FAKIRO™ Heat Plate (Full Size)  
For very fast baking times of pizzas, breads, etc.  
TG320 FAKIRO™ Heat Plate (Half Size)  
For very fast baking times of pizzas, breads, etc.  
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VI. Remove & Reattach Oven Door  
Open door  
completely  
as in Fig. 1  
Fig. 1  
Fig. 2  
Using a  
screw driver  
or other object,  
swing door  
safety lock  
down as shown  
in Figs 2 – 3 – 4  
Fig. 3  
Fig. 4  
With door completely down  
and door safety lock in its  
down position, move door in  
a closing direction  
until door safety lock  
stops the closing action  
as in Fig. 5.  
~~~~~~~~  
Hold door as shown in Fig. 6.  
Fig. 5  
Fig. 7  
Fig. 9  
Fig. 6  
Slightly lift and  
swing door  
out of unit  
as shown in  
Figs. 7 & 8  
Fig. 8  
For the door to be  
properly installed,  
the notch on the bottom  
of the hinge finger (Fig. 9)  
must be seated in  
the inner door hinge frame  
(Fig. 10)  
Fig. 10  
Reverse above procedure to attach door to oven - see Figs. 7 & 8  
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VII. COOKING GUIDE  
The first and most important step will be: Have your new oven hooked up to the proper power and (if  
applicable) water source. If there is any doubt about the proper power or the connections, have the oven  
installed by a qualified electrician according to your local codes.  
Use this cooking guide to help determine which time and temperature works best for your specific food  
items. If your specific product isn’t addressed, you will probably find something similar.  
You’ll find many helpful hints in this cooking guide. Our aim is to help you use your Cadco LineChefTM  
Digital Convection Oven to its fullest, rather than teach you how to cook.  
The Cadco LineChefTM Manual Convection Ovens work on the principle of moving air. This air move-  
ment removes the “Hot Spots” so we get very even browning, rapid preheats (10 minutes), and faster cooking.  
Here are some basic do’s and don’ts and guidelines for convection cooking:  
Use pans that have sides no taller than a common sheet pan.  
Preheat the oven to approximately 40º-50ºF above your baking temperature.  
After loading your product, remember to reset the oven to the desired baking temperature.  
If you notice uneven cooking, set the oven temperature down 25º-30ºF. Let the product tell you if it  
needs more or less heat.  
Aluminum foil can get pulled into the fan and cause damage.  
Don’t overload the oven.  
Maintain a minimum 2”-3” between the product being cooked and the next shelf. Remove shelves if  
necessary.  
Your Cadco Convection Oven is a powerful tool, so don’t hesitate to utilize its full capacity.  
Keep your oven clean. Wipe up spills as they occur. Never allow grease to build up on the interior of  
the oven, or collect on the bottom of the cooking cavity.  
Frozen products draw more heat from the oven and may require a longer recovery time.  
When roasting meats we suggest using a cooking rack to elevate the product and facilitate even  
roasting. Smaller cuts such as boneless chicken breasts, or seafood portions may be baked directly on  
the pan if desired.  
Lower temperatures will reduce shrinkage and save money with all of your roasted meat products.  
Higher geographical elevations will often affect cooking time and temperature parameters.  
Have fun and experiment with your new Cadco Convection Oven. Your times and temperatures will vary  
with the different products you prepare. Refer to this Cadco Cooking Guide for direction or contact the  
specific answers to your cooking needs. ***A FREE Video Demonstration DVD is available from Cadco to  
familiarize your employees with these ovens.  
We look forward to hearing from you,  
Loren Lippitt C.E.C.  
Cadco, Ltd.  
Certified Executive Chef  
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Cookies  
Baking Temperature  
One of the most common items baked in your Cadco Convection Oven will be cookies. There are  
dozens of cookie manufacturers, and their products all have different baking characteristics. Most of the  
cookie recipes suggest a baking temperature of 325º - 350ºF. I have found that “Lower is better”. Over  
the years we have found that cookies bake best in a preheated oven at about 285º - 300ºF, assuming a  
1.5 ounce cookie from refrigerated/frozen dough. By baking at a lower temperature, they tend to remain  
higher after cooling and produce a more eye appealing finished product. Bake for about 12-18 minutes,  
depending on what you think is the perfect cookie.  
Variables  
Lower the temperature for larger cookies.  
Cookies bake from the outside in...so to make picture perfect cookies we have to consider two  
variables before we begin baking, in any oven, or we may not be happy with our results. These two  
factors come into play mostly when we make cookies from "scratch", (but they apply to all cookies):  
1. The temperature of the dough  
ƒ Room temperature dough will spread out more than frozen or refrigerated dough.  
ƒ The colder the dough, the less the cookie will spread / flatten out during baking.  
ƒ Dough baked from frozen produces a thicker, better-looking cookie than ones that are baked from  
refrigerated, or room temperature, which will spread out and therefore, have less height.  
2. The fat content of the dough.  
ƒ A higher ratio of fat to flour will make the cookie spread out more during baking.  
Cheesecake  
People generally love cheesecake and it’s not hard to make. Let’s start with a basic cheesecake batter:  
#3 cream cheese  
1 ½ cups sugar  
5 eggs  
lemon to taste  
2 cups Half and Half (approx.)  
This will make enough batter for a 10” springform pan.  
There are so many fun options for making cheesecake, such as:  
Substitute chocolate milk for Half and Half in a triple chocolate cheesecake.  
Orange juice for an orange cheesecake.  
Baileys Irish Cream.  
Cookie dough.  
Turtle cheesecake.  
Lemon poppy seed.  
Pumpkin…peanut butter…pistachio…what else?  
For my crust, I usually spray the inside of the springform pan with vegetable oil and dust it with graham  
cracker crumbs. There are endless options for crusts such as shortbread, brownie, or Ladyfingers, or my  
simple dusting of graham crumbs. It’s your choice.  
Bake in a 200ºF oven for 4 hours, then cool, cut and serve.  
Have fun with some imaginative sauces also:  
Walnut, caramel and chocolate chip sauce.  
Lemon sauce.  
Pear sauce  
Pistachio sauce.  
Cinnamon Squared² Sauce (cinnamon stick and candies).  
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Muffins  
15 minutes at 325ºF/ 20% humidity works well for most standard size muffins.  
For jumbo muffins set the oven temp at 300ºF/ 20% humidity and bake the muffins for 20 minutes or  
until a toothpick comes out clean.  
The more dense your batter is the longer your muffins will take to bake.  
Biscuits  
For the test we used a basic baking powder biscuit about 3” in diameter. Bake at 350ºF for 10-12  
minutes.  
Some suggestions:  
A simple glaze can be made of powdered sugar and water.  
Glaze while your biscuits are still hot.  
Try peanut butter, lemon poppy seed, cinnamon raisin, cheese and bacon, sour dough, and of course,  
good old buttermilk biscuits.  
Drop biscuits take about the same amount of time to bake and they are wonderful. Call me and I’ll  
share a family favorite with you.  
Biscuits can be so much fun to make and they are so easy that even kids can help make them. I remember  
Mom throwing biscuits together for breakfast when we were growing up. Hot, delicious and full of TLC,  
it just took her a few minutes, and I even got to help!  
Bread  
Large loaves (1 lb -1 ½ lb) baked in 30 - 40 minutes at 325ºF.  
We found that you can bake dinner rolls using the same method as you do for biscuits.  
Call and ask about “Butterflake Dinner Rolls” You’ll love them! (While you have me on the phone  
ask about sourdough starter. You’ll be amazed at how simple it is to make and to use.)  
Pies  
The variables for bakery products are endless, and pies are no exception. These are some of the things  
which will affect your cooking time:  
Amount of sugar in the crust.  
Size of your pie tin and the amount of filling used.  
Butter or oil in the crust.  
Amount of shortening to flour.  
Your choice of canned or fresh filling.  
For test pies we used 9” pie tins with homemade apple filling. Our crust was made using a basic 3-2-1 recipe:  
3 parts flour  
2 parts shortening  
1 part (approx.) water  
With a little salt and a four finger pinch of sugar added  
The Cadco LineChefTM Convection Oven was preheated to 325ºF and the pies were baked for 45 minutes  
to an hour depending on the filling. The aroma coming out of the Cadco Training Center was fantastic!  
Pizza  
There are so many pizzas it’s hard to know where to start. The pizza we used for our tests were the 11”,  
frozen, self rising type from the grocery store. They were all baked at 350ºF for 8 - 20 minutes on  
FAKIROTM Heat Plates (see page 12), and our results were great on all of them. (The pizza  
manufacturers suggested a temperature of 400ºF for 20-30 minutes).  
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“Oven Fried” Chicken  
Let’s say that you want to serve fried chicken in your food service operation but you don't want all of  
the problems associated with a chicken program. You don't want to deal with an expensive breading  
program, the high insurance costs, constantly buying oil, employee training, the dangerous  
cleaning/filtering of French fryers, and the high cost of purchasing equipment. Cadco has the answer:  
how about "Oven Fried" chicken. We take cooked, frozen, browned chicken and season it with the  
seasoning(s) of your choice to produce the most delicious, unique chicken your customers have ever  
tasted...and it's all done in your oven in about 30 minutes. Your chicken goes from the freezer, to the  
oven, to the display case (and your customers) in less time than it takes to fry from raw.  
We suggest Pierce Super Chicken; lay it out in a Cadco Oven Fry Basket (Model GRF018/Full Size),  
and season the pieces with any seasoning of your choice. Then you simply bake it in the Cadco  
LineChefTM Convection Oven at 325ºF for 20 minutes and it's ready to serve. You can have Cajun, Lemon  
Pepper, Italian, TexMex, Smoky, Jamaican, or…Whatever flavor you want, “Oven Fried” Chicken!  
“Rotisserie Style” Chicken  
Tired of paying the grocery store to make those delicious rotisserie chickens for you? Once you make  
your own “Rotisserie” chickens, in your Cadco Convection Oven, you’ll never buy another cooked  
chicken from the store again (and I’ll bet your customers won’t either).  
You’ll need a baking sheet pan and a cooking rack to keep your chicken elevated during the cooking  
process. The cooking rack allows air to circulate all around the chicken, similar to a rotisserie. Cadco  
offers a Model GRP825 Poultry Rack (for Full Size ovens only) which holds a maximum of eight 3  
pound birds  
You can also place your chicken directly on the oven rack and let it drip into a pan below.  
Caution! Never allow grease to drip onto the bottom of the oven!  
Method  
Season a #3 chicken and place it on the cooking rack. (For options, see below)  
Preheat your LineChefTM Convection Oven to 325ºF.  
Roast the chicken for about 45 minutes. If a crispier product is desired, raise the temperature to about 350ºF.  
Cook chicken to an internal temperature of 180ºF.  
Stuffing the chicken will increase cooking time and it is NOT suggested.  
Options  
Slip slices of lemon under the skin on the breast before roasting.  
Italian sausage under the skin of the breast before roasting.  
Sun dried tomatoes, fresh herbs, under the skin before roasting.  
Spray the chicken with olive oil, season, and dust with mashed potato flakes before roasting.  
Save the chicken fat after roasting and chill it. Mix the fat, and a little stock, with left over shredded  
chicken, and season with salt and pepper, to make a spread on slices of French bread. Needless to  
say…this is NOT heart-healthy fare, but it sure is good.  
Truss the chicken before roasting for more even cooking and eye appeal. Call for my quick method of  
trussing a bird.  
Burgers  
Lay your ¼ pound frozen burgers out onto a sheet pan and season to taste. Place them into 350ºF oven  
for about 10 to 12 minutes.  
Hamburger should be cooked to an internal temperature of 165ºF to be safe according to HACCP  
guidelines.  
Try cooking your burgers at 250ºF for 15 to 20 minutes and notice how juicy they are. Browning is  
not as pronounced using the low temperature method, but the added flavor makes up for it.  
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Rare Roast Beef  
Rare beef is considered by most people to be 130ºF.  
The USDA states that full muscle beef when roasted to an internal temperature of 130ºF and  
maintained at that temperature for 121 minutes is considered safe to eat.  
Overnight roasting requires a roast that is 7 pounds or larger.  
Seasonings will penetrate the roast about 1/4” deep.  
We will give two examples of roast beef (Prime Rib and Roast Tenderloin):  
ƒ Both roasts will be cooked elevated on a roasting rack so we have air circulation all around during  
the roasting process.  
ƒ Both roasts will be cooked over a shallow sided pan to collect the pan juices for jus or gravy.  
Prime Rib (roast and hold method) -  
Hold your beef roast for at least 8 hours, and keep the internal roast temperature from going higher  
than 130ºF.  
Each hour of holding (between 100ºF and 140ºF) is equal to one day of ageing.  
Roast your 8 pound Prime Rib at 225ºF until your internal probe reads 100ºF.  
Set the oven for “Infinite/Continuous” time and 140ºF temperature. (You will notice that the lowest  
temperature on the dial is 175ºF on manual oven models, so you will have to “best guess” where  
140ºF is.)  
Roast Tenderloin (quick roast and serve method) –  
Preheat your oven to 400ºF  
Load the tenderloin in the oven and reduce the roasting temperature to 350ºF  
Roast the tenderloin to an internal temperature of 120ºF and remove from the oven. The roast will  
continue to rise in temperature.  
In about 10 minutes (130ºF) the tenderloin will be ready to slice and serve  
Jus  
Use your pan drippings to make jus. Many people say “I’m going to make some au jus”. This is  
incorrect and professionals will notice. Au jus means “with juice”. Prime Rib becomes “Prime Rib Au  
Jus” when you add jus to the plated Prime Rib.  
Use beef/veal/chicken stock to dissolve all that wonderful tasting brown gooey material in the bottom  
of your roasting pan. Some add a little red wine, some add tomato, and some make their jus to theme:  
Cajun, Southwest, Oriental…..you get the idea.  
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VIII. WARRANTY  
Cadco, Ltd. warrants all products (in the United States and Canada) to be free from defects in material  
and workmanship for a period of one year from date of purchase, unless otherwise noted below.  
Warranty does not apply in cases of misuse, abuse or damage from external service or repair attempts by  
unauthorized personnel.  
Copy of original invoice is required for proof of purchase date for warranty coverage.  
WARRANTY PERIODS:  
ALL OVENS:  
ƒ 90 day warranty on all light bulbs and gaskets. NOTE: These items are easily changeable on-site by  
user and do not qualify for service center warranty assistance. Call Cadco directly for warranty  
replacement of these items.  
LineChefTM MANUAL CONVECTION OVENS:  
ƒ 120 Volt Models (XAF-103, XAF-113): One Year Carry-in Warranty  
ƒ 208-240 Volt Models (XAF-133, XAF-183, XAF-193): One Year On-site Warranty  
WARRANTY PROCEDURES:  
The customer is responsible to ship or deliver Carry-in service items to a Cadco authorized service  
center, or directly to Cadco**, along with a copy of the original invoice or sales receipt for proof of  
purchase date, and a description of the problem.  
**If returning a unit directly to Cadco, Ltd. for warranty repair, please call us first for a Return  
Authorization Number. Return Authorization Number MUST be written on outside of carton to  
track the unit and avoid service delays.  
*If shipping the unit to Cadco or to a service location, be sure to pack it securely and insure it for its  
original purchase price. Cadco is not responsible for damage or loss of unit in transit to us or a service  
center.  
Please do not take your unit to the store where you purchased it for warranty repair. For the Cadco  
authorized US service agent nearest you, please contact:  
Cadco, Ltd., 145 Colebrook River Road, Winsted, CT 06098  
Tel. (860) 738-2500, Fax (860) 738-9772  
8/1/2007 RV05  
14  
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