Ooking, Ints – Southbend GFS35 User Manual
Page 16
C
OOKING
H
INTS
GFS S
ERIES
T
UBE
F
RYERS
P
AGE
16
O
PERATOR
’
S
M
ANUAL
1182026
REV
2
COO
K
IN
G H
INT
S
Frying Don’ts
•
Don’t turn on the fryer with no shortening in the frypot.
•
Don’t fill the frypot above the line on rear of frypot.
•
Don’t allow oil in frypot to fry down to the point where there is insufficient oil in which to fry a full load.
•
Don’t have heat on tubes when they are not entirely covered with frying oil.
•
Don’t allow oil in frypot to be heated above 375
°
F and never turn thermostats to 400
°
F or over, even
when bringing up the temperature.
•
Don’t allow unnecessary moisture or breading materials to get into frypot.
•
Don’t allow oil in frypot to remain at frying temperature for long periods of time without frying taking
place.
•
Don’t overload frypot with food to be fried.
•
Don’t pack the food too tightly in the baskets.
•
Don’t add foreign oils to frypot such as bacon, beef drippings, or waste oil.
•
Don’t fry bacon in frypot.
•
Don’t salt food over or near the frypot.
•
Don’t allow visible burned particles to remain floating in frypot.
•
Don’t allow exhaust stack accumulations to drip back into the frypot.
Performance
Typical Production
Model GFS35
Model GFS45
Model GFS65
Potatoes — Raw to Finished
65-70 lbs. per hour
100-105 lbs. per hour
115-120 lbs. per hour
— Blanched to Finished
280-285 lbs. per hour
320-325 lbs. per hour
355-360 lbs. per hour
Chicken — Raw to Finished
40-45 lbs. per hour
50-55 lbs. per hour
55-60 lbs. per hour
— Blanched to Finished
80-85 lbs. per hour
95-100 lbs. per hour
105-110 lbs. per hour