

A few ceramic dishes don't work well in microwaves so check before buying. If you've used convection, grill, or combination mode, you won't be able to put plastic microwave dishes in until it's cooled down, so pyrex or ceramic containers are good all round.
#WOLF CONVECTION OVEN MANUAL FULL#
From experience it seems like it can't handle the microwave on full power (it's an inverter model). It should be taken out on microwave-only mode. In ours, for any use with the heater element on (convection, grill or combination) there's a metal baking sheet that must be put on top on the turntable.
#WOLF CONVECTION OVEN MANUAL MANUAL#
The manual is likely to have recipes that will adapt. There is some variability in these so do try to track down a user manual for your model or a similar one from the same manufacturer. In particular, you want to be very sure if you're expecting microwave-only or convection-only if you accidentally end up with microwave+convection, it could be an unpleasant surprise. In all cases, it'll be best to just check the manual to be sure - you need to know what the modes are (and what the buttons on your microwave do), and what the rack and turntable are okay with. If your appliance has an actual combination microwave+convection mode, you'd need both oven safety and microwave safety. Note that this may mean you'll need to remove the rack (check the manual).

If you're in microwave mode, it's just a microwave, so everything has to be microwave-safe, but you don't have to worry about oven safety. You likely need to use the rack, and it's possible you need to remove the turntable (check the manual). If you're in convection mode, it's just a small oven, so everything needs to be oven-safe, but you don't have to worry about microwave safety. microwave+convection: heating with microwaves, also using the fan (and possibly a heating element, who knows).microwave: heating with microwaves, no fan.

