How to warm plates before serving?

How to warm plates before serving? - Small Middle East tea glass on ceramic saucers placed on wooden shelf in cozy cafe

I realize that serving on warmed dishes is preferable to serving on cold/room temp dishes, so as not to leach the heat out of your freshly-cooked food.

How can I warm my plates?

I have two kinds of dishes: ceramic (cheapo from a department store) and Noritake china (circa 1955-60).

Neither says "oven safe" on the bottom, but would a warm oven do the trick? Or microwaving? Or a hot water bath?

I'm not sure how to achieve warmed plates, but I'm tired of eating cold fish.



Best Answer

We do this regularly with regular dishes and fine china. Neither say "oven safe". My mother has also done it for years. The process is fairly simple:

  • Put our oven on it's coolest setting (about 175°F or 80°C, I think)
  • Wait for it to reach temperature
  • Turn it off
  • Put dishes in and close the oven. We just stack the dishes. As Joe points out, they'll warm faster if you don't stack them. However, I usually do this when I've got 6-8 dishes, so stack is easier.

Be careful when taking the dishes out. They'll be hot. We've never had a problem with dishes using this method. However, if you don't think your dishes will stand getting hot, use your own judgement as there's a wide variety of quality and materials used in place settings.




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How to warm plates before serving? - Unrecognizable woman serving delicious pasta with meatballs to man during dinner
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How to warm plates before serving? - Smiling woman wearing warm vest and hoodie serving baked dish during holiday party at big table under garlands and evergreen trees beside



Quick Answer about "How to warm plates before serving?"

To warm plates for serving, stack them in an oven for 15 minutes at the lowest oven temperature, like 150 to 200 F. You could also use a warming drawer or toaster oven, if large enough. Alternatively, you can warm the plates in the microwave for one to two minutes.

How do you warm dinner plates?

Editor: Bart, it's not absolutely essential that plates be warmed before serving food, but it's a nice touch. It helps keep food warm longer on the plate, and it's especially helpful for things like pasta that tend to get cold quickly.

Should you warm plates before serving?

In a nutshell, don't use your microwave to warm plates. Very briefly, microwave ovens work by emitting microwave energy into the oven. This in turn agitates water molecules in the food or drink in the oven. The friction of those molecules creates heat and \u2013 hey presto \u2013 hot food is the result.

Should you warm plates in a microwave?

Plates and serving dishes can be warmed before use in an oven or warmer trolley at a temperature of no more than 100\xb0F/Gas Mark 3. Tableware with gold or platinum trim must not be used in a Microwave. Fine bone china should not be used for cooking purposes.




More answers regarding how to warm plates before serving?

Answer 2

Another few ways I do this, depending on what else is going on:

  1. If I have just a couple plates, I may do it in the toaster oven, or even just set them on top of an already hot toaster oven
  2. Pour a little boiling water in each bowl, then drain and wipe just before serving.
  3. Pour a little cold water in each bowl and microwave for a couple of minutes

Answer 3

"Oven safe" refers to using them to cook rather than to whether they can be warmed. Be careful putting cold dishes in a warm oven though. I'd put them in a cold oven and turn the oven on its lowest setting. Watch the temperature using an oven thermometer. When it reaches the desired temperature (125-175F) turn the oven off. Don't trust the oven's thermostat. Don't use a preheat or quick preheat cycle if your oven has that.

Answer 4

You can buy microwave plate warmers - you stack the plates with them layered between and nuke them for a couple of minutes.

Answer 5

My new Samsung stove has a warming drawer. Keeps food warm on the plate and preheats plates as well. 3 settings of temperature: low, med, high.

Update: the model is FE710DRS 5.9 cu. ft. Electric Flex Duo Range bought from Sears in Canada last year.

Answer 6

I use the proof setting for my oven which is 100F. I didn't even realize I had a dough proof setting until I reread the manual and suddenly saw it. So I just set the oven for 100F which I'm cooking and it is the perfect temperature as I'm sure my dish washer is hotter than this and is still safe for plates.

Answer 7

In my part of the world, dishes are often kept in cabinets that may be hung on an exterior wall. That can make your plates pretty cold during the winter, and putting hot food on them results in a cold meal very quickly. If you're just cooking for a couple people, running plates under hot tap water for a few seconds takes the chill off them. They won't get really hot this way, but at least they won't make your food instantly cold.

Answer 8

I do this the way my parents have always done it, by putting some water onto each plate, stacking them and then putting them into the microwave for 1-2 minutes. Even with 4-6 plates this technique seems to work fine.

I've not used this technique for fragile plates, but our normal plates (both thin and thick) work fine this way.

I presume this would work in a similar way to oven technique, except if you're cooking for a party you're more than likely going to be using the oven for cooking some of the meal, which would leave little/no room for plates, and may be too hot. Not to mention that using an oven for this kind of thing would be quite a waste of energy (IMO)

Answer 9

Put them in the bottom of the oven on the lowest setting for a few minutes. If it's a fan oven preheat to the lowest setting, then turn it off and let the plates heat for a few minutes.

If you're currently using the oven and you have a grill or another oven above the one you are using you can use that as long as they don't touch the base of the unit. ()you can proof bread this way too).

Answer 10

I just stack a few plates in the sink and run hot water over the top for a minute or two. The water clings to the sides as it goes down so it reaches every plate. I'm actually a little perplexed about why this isn't already mentioned somewhere on here yet -- it's easy, no chance of spilling water anywhere, and quicker than heating up the oven.

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