Microwave Ovens
are a hugely important part of every professional kitchen. As a standard microwave-only
oven they can perform essential functions such as safely re-heating frozen or chilled
food, which is at the heart of many menus in informal dining restaurants and pubs
or in room-service for hotels.
You can buy
Microwave Ovens
and
Combination Microwave Ovens
from caterstop.com.
Where they get much more versatile in when they become a
combination microwave oven.
The combination is the addition of convection hot air and a grill. This transforms
a simple re-heating cabinet into a multi-function cooking oven. Jacket potatoes
can be softened then crisped, pastry dishes can be reheated and crisped, in fact
almost all of the functions of a standard oven can be performed in the combination
microwave oven. The main limitation is of load capacity and the absence of steam
in a standard-size microwave oven. Although it is possible to buy a combi-oven which
incorporates microwave energy.
A general rule of thumb is that microwave only is for re-heating, combination microwave
ovens are for reheating and primary cooking.
There is a minority view among caterers that all microwave ovens are the same, the
only difference between commercial ovens and domestic ovens being the power and
price. This is completely untrue. There are clear cooking, construction and food
safety differences between microwave ovens designed for domestic use and those designed
for the professional kitchen.
Domestic microwave ovens are often low power, which means they will take far longer
to reheat, defrost or cook food than a commercial oven. While domestic ovens have
a power rating from 600 watts to 900 watts, commercial microwave ovens can be up
to 2000 watts. The term watts is a unit of measurement for the heating power of
a microwave oven.
The device which produces the energy waves which heat food in a microwave oven is
called a magnetron. Domestic microwave ovens usually just have a single magnetron
while commercial microwave ovens usually have two magnetrons which are built to
a higher specification, making them faster, more efficient and longer lasting.
Commercial Microwave Ovens
A
Commercial Microwave Ovens
are built to withstand hard use every day, while a domestic is designed to be used
just a couple of times a day, which repeated use of a domestic microwave oven can
lead to a loss of power with the associated food safety risks.
Microwave energy needs to be evenly spread around the oven cavity to ensure that
all parts of the food inside are safely heated. Where chilled or frozen food is
not thoroughly heated, harmful bacteria within the food is unlikely to be killed,
risking food poisoning. Many domestic microwave ovens use simple turntables to try
to distribute the microwave heat, while commercial microwave ovens have sophisticated
heat mixing systems in the oven cavity.
The casing of most domestic microwave ovens is painted mild steel which will chip,
corrode and cause food safety hazards. Most professional microwave oven have casings
made with hard-wearing stainless steel which is easy to keep clean and will not
corrode. Commercial microwave oven are likely to have far more sophisticated cooking
programmes, often push-button pre-sets, so staff can reheat properly and easily
every time. The oven cavity size on a commercial microwave is usually based around
the gastronorm system, making it easier to accommodate industry standard sized food
dishes.
Most commercial microwave ovens have a cavity space of half a gastronorm, but they
are also available in 2/3 gastronorm and full-size gastronorm.
Manufacturers group commercial microwaves into four power bands.
Light Duty Microwave Ovens
Light-duty microwave ovens will have a power ranging between 900 watts and 1100
watts. This is suitable for use where demands are light, such as a cafe, satellite
kitchen or petrol filling station.
Medium Duty Microwave Ovens
Medium-duty microwave ovens have a power rating of 1100 to 1500 watts, proportionately
more robustly built than a light-duty oven and suitable for restaurants where the
microwave is only in occasional use, busy cafes, pubs or leisure centres.
Heavy Duty Microwave Ovens
Heavy-duty microwave ovens are powered from 1500 to 1900 watts and the most popular
power range used in catering. Suitable for busy pubs, hotels, busy restaurants or
staff catering. Built to withstand hard and heavy use.
Extra-Heavy Duty Microwave Ovens
Extra heavy-duty microwave ovens are usually where large quantities of food are
needed to be reheated quickly rather than just individual portions. They can take
up to a full gastronorm tray. While all other power bands are connected to a 13amp
socket, this very heavy duty oven will need hard wiring into the mains.
While the general rule is the high the wattage the faster the food will be heated,
much beyond 2000 watts and food risks being burned on the outside before it is heated
on the inside.
Cleaning Microwave Ovens
Microwaves oven can become quite dirty with food debris during a service and a full
clean-down every day is essential to maintain food hygiene. Cleaning materials should
only be those recommended by the manufacturer.
Regular safety and maintenance checks in accordance with manufacturers' instructions
are vitally important with microwave ovens. Any slight drop in power output and
food will begin to be incorrectly re-heated, disappointing customers and presenting
a food safety hazard.
Looking after a microwave oven is not difficult and they are one of the more reliable
pieces of cooking equipment in the kitchen, but not without some look-after rules.
Regular and thorough cleaning is the No. 1 rule of microwave ovens. The intense
heat they put into food inevitably leads to some food spatter around the oven cavity.
If this is not wiped out regularly, but left, it will bake on with the heat of the
microwave energy and give an even greater cleaning problem.
Kitchen staff using a microwave oven should be trained to wipe off any spillage
or spattering as soon as the food item has been taken from the microwave. At the
end of shift the microwave needs a thorough wipe down with a detergent on a non-abrasive
cloth, then sanitising.
Non-abrasive cloths are very important, as the internal coating on the cavity of
a microwave oven is tough, but not resistant to constant scratching. If the internal
cavity walls become scored or damaged, then the repair might be so expensive that
it will call to question whether to repair or replace. Both questions would not
arise with careful use.
The exterior casing of a commercial microwave oven is usually stainless steel, but
there will also be plastic or toughened glass used in fascia panels and controls.
The exterior can withstand a tougher scrub, but if the oven exterior is regular
cleaned at the end of a shift there should be no need to.
Beyond regular cleaning and careful cleaning, there is little to go wrong with a
commercial microwave oven. Repairs are usually caused by operator miss-handling,
either rough cleaning or damage to door hinges and closures through constant slamming.
A microwave oven is like any item of kitchen equipment in that the door will prematurely
break down through slamming abuse. Staff should be trained to know that a positive
push closes the door of a microwave oven just as effectively as a heavy slam.
It is easy to think that the simplicity of operation of a microwave oven means there
is not the need for a high maintenance schedule as there might on kitchen equipment
using water and gas. Professional microwave ovens are relatively low in maintenance
costs, but they must never be excluded from the regular maintenance cycle. It only
takes a service engineer a few minutes to check for leakage of microwaves through
door seals, but it is a vital part of regular maintenance for staff safety and efficient
operation.
Take care not to operate the oven with little or no food in it - this will reduce
the life of the magnetron which is the component that produces the microwave energy.
To summarise;
Do - Clean regularly, but gently, Avoid letting food debris burn, Have the oven
regularly serviced, Train staff on the fire hazards, Allow for proper rear ventilation
Don't - Slam doors, Use metal containers, Scratch the insides, Use abrasive cleaners,
Run the oven without food