A:AnswerThe Digital Countertop oven does feature a convection bake option. To register the product for warranty coverage, please follow the link provided below:
https://www.kitchenaid.com/
A:AnswerNo I don’t think so. It comes with one and it should be positioned in the upper slot. Due to the shape you could not fit another similar one below it (it would grate against the heating elements).
However, I have used the basket on top while also cooking more food under it on either on the wire rack or the shallow baking pan. Whatever goes beneath the basket would have to be of very limited height
A:AnswerI do not currently own this product but I am considering it after reading an article on it last night. It did stay in that article that you can proof bread in it.
A:AnswerSo, does that mean it’s not PFASs, Teflon, PFOA, PFOS, or PTFE (further questioning kitchen aid response)? Can the material used please be shared as I can’t find it anywhere.
Sorry, but some of these things can harm a bird and can even cause hemorrhaging in the lungs (according to bird health websites) and death after many uses and this is something I’d use all the time. What’s cleared as safe for humans isn’t always safe for birds. So, what is it exactly?
A:AnswerProposition 65 was enacted in 1986 in the State of California. It requires an updated list once a year of potentially harmful materials. Whirlpool/KitchenAid meets or exceeds all standards for safe materials, but our products do have cords, which causes them to make the list. Any time you have a cord, there is the potential for it to come in contact with something hazardous.
The warning in your Use and Care Guide is printed in order for Whirlpool Corporation to be in compliance with California state law. In the State of California there exists what is referred to "Proposition 65." Proposition 65 is the California Safe Drinking and Water and Toxic Enforcement Act of 1986. Any company that operates in California, sells its products in California or manufactures products that may be sold or brought into California is subject to Proposition 65. Since our products are sold in California, Proposition 65 applies to us.
Proposition 65 requires warning labels on any product that may contain or produce any of the 600-plus elements that the California Air Resources Board considers carcinogenic or a reproductive toxicant. These elements include lead (contained in the solder used to attach electronic parts to the printed circuit boards), brass, PVC and a multitude of other everyday elements and gas products burn fuels (natural gas or propane) that contain trace levels of chemicals on the list. This list also contains a wide range of naturally occurring and synthetic chemicals, including common household products, foods, drugs, dyes and solvents.
Whirlpool is committed to manufacturing safe and high quality appliances, as we always have done. Should any product contain or produce even the slightest amounts of chemicals on the list, even when accepted and regulated concentrations are not exceeded, Whirlpool will liberally warn consumers even though we fully comply with the Act.
A:AnswerI learned the hard way when using the air fry basket I needed to place a tray with tin foil under it to catch oils and food crumbs when cooking chicken wings.