My cooker has two ovens; the larger main oven with fan, and a smaller conventional oven.
I bake pumpernickel loaves in deep Pullman pans. I would far prefer to bake them in the small conventional oven without a drying fan, but if I put the pans on the lowest shelf position the top nearly touches the top heating elements - not good.
The pans would fit fine if I used a baking stone placed directly on the floor of the oven, but some people advise that the base of the bread will burn as it's too near the bottom elements. I am wondering if this is in fact true as I used to have a professional bakery with deck ovens - the stone bases were directly over the lower heating elements (though obviously the design had factored that in, where it hasn't in my small domestic oven; and I could adjust the top and bottom heat which again, I can't in my domestic oven).
Before I waste money on a baking stone that I can't use - can anyone share a positive experience of placing a stone directly on the oven base? Or could I place the stone on a trivet, again directly on the base of the oven?
I don't see why you need a stone if you are baking in pans. I don't think it would bring any benefit, even more so with a covered pan. Try removing the stone and see how that works.
TomP.
It can ruin the heating element depending on oven type, it also doesn’t allow proper air circulation. Many reasons not to do it.
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