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Does anyone have much experience with steam ovens ?

Posted on 10/28/25 at 8:20 pm
Posted by lsu1987
Baton Rouge
Member since Dec 2005
460 posts
Posted on 10/28/25 at 8:20 pm
Redoing my kitchen and looking at new ovens. Granted, I didn’t even know that steam ovens were a thing in homes until we talked to the appliance store.

Does anyone have experience with pure steam ovens? What about the combination steam/convection ovens? They are all expensive as hell, but I think about utilizing it for the next 20 years.

Appreciate any end user feedback, suggestions and/or experiences with either pure steam or steam combo ovens.
Posted by r3lay3r
EBR
Member since Oct 2016
2386 posts
Posted on 10/28/25 at 8:41 pm to
They are used in commercial bakeries for bread baking. Edit: Not sure of other uses.
This post was edited on 10/29/25 at 4:31 pm
Posted by lsu1987
Baton Rouge
Member since Dec 2005
460 posts
Posted on 10/28/25 at 9:44 pm to
No actually they are used now in homes to cook meats, bread, fish, vegetable, etc. I’m wondering if anyone has experience with certain brands and what their experience has been?
Posted by cgrand
HAMMOND
Member since Oct 2009
46123 posts
Posted on 10/28/25 at 9:56 pm to
maintenance and repair nightmare. Think about it…you are dousing your oven with water every time you use it. If you want occasional steam stick a pan of water in there
Posted by jmarto1
Houma, LA/ Las Vegas, NV
Member since Mar 2008
37724 posts
Posted on 10/29/25 at 8:27 am to
Like Rational? I have plenty of experience with that brand
Posted by HueyLongJr
Member since Oct 2007
892 posts
Posted on 10/29/25 at 10:43 am to
Gives you a much wider range of cooking options and techniques. Steam (water) conducts heat better than air. You can create different textures (e.g. crusty bread) more easily, and you also get convection.
Posted by ruzil
Baton Rouge
Member since Feb 2012
18118 posts
Posted on 10/29/25 at 5:46 pm to
I have had them in my last two houses. I generally like the concept, but the problem is, there are not many sources (cooking guides) for steam ovens.

Great for warming leftovers and bringing day old bread back to life. I am told you can sous vide (sort of) in them, but I have had not much luck doing this.

I would get a double oven that you can air fry instead and I am sure this would cost you less money than having a steam oven.

I had a Thermador steam oven and also a GE Monogram steam oven. The Thermador was the better of the two, since they do have recipes on their site specific to their steam oven.

Posted by PerplenGold
TX
Member since Nov 2021
2209 posts
Posted on 10/29/25 at 6:04 pm to
20 yrs from a modern appliance? Not happening
Posted by lsu1987
Baton Rouge
Member since Dec 2005
460 posts
Posted on 10/29/25 at 7:21 pm to
Appreciate the response and feedback. Like I said, I knew nothing about steam ovens in home kitchens until about 2 weeks ago. I am going to go with an SKS double oven with steam and convection combo on the top oven. It can bake, roast, steam, sous vide, bake bread, etc.

I’ll find some recipes and guidance using AI. That’s where I did most of my research on this new technology
Posted by Nawlens Gator
louisiana
Member since Sep 2005
5941 posts
Posted on 10/29/25 at 7:58 pm to
I use an 8Qt. pressure cooker at 15 psig and 250 deg F.
Works great. Can't imagine a steam oven being a good idea.

Posted by sleepytime
Member since Feb 2014
3839 posts
Posted on 10/29/25 at 8:15 pm to
They are game changers if you are a serious home cook. You're yields on meat dishes will go up 10-20% compared to a regular oven and you can do all kinds of de of stuff regular ovens can't and do it better. I can't speak to the reliability of the home models but the commercial can be finicky if the cleaning and maintenance procedures aren't followed to a perfect T. Repairs on the commercial units can tearfully expensive.
One other thing to make avoid issues is use reverse osmosis filtered water so water scale isn't an issue.
Posted by lsu1987
Baton Rouge
Member since Dec 2005
460 posts
Posted on 10/29/25 at 8:29 pm to
Do some research on the new technology
Posted by lsu1987
Baton Rouge
Member since Dec 2005
460 posts
Posted on 10/29/25 at 8:31 pm to
Yes, I am definitely going to use filtered water to minimize scale, etc.
Posted by X123F45
Member since Apr 2015
29401 posts
Posted on 10/29/25 at 8:47 pm to
Pure no. But my LG has a water tank with a stram function that works quite well.

Edit:

quote:

SKS double oven


Jesus christ

And I thought my 4k double oven combo with upper microwave was a lot.
This post was edited on 10/29/25 at 8:49 pm
Posted by LSUDad
Still on the move
Member since May 2004
61745 posts
Posted on 10/29/25 at 11:12 pm to
quote:

They are used in commercial bakeries for bread baking. Edit: Not sure of other uses.



A friend of mine owns an old one in the city of White Castle. The only town Steam Bakerie. Been closed for years.
Posted by LSUDad
Still on the move
Member since May 2004
61745 posts
Posted on 10/29/25 at 11:16 pm to
Call Stanton’s on Sherwood Forest Blvd, ask for Kathy, get her opinion. She’ll steer you in the right direction.
Posted by Obtuse1
Westside Bodymore Yo
Member since Sep 2016
29906 posts
Posted on 10/30/25 at 5:28 am to
quote:

Like Rational?


I would LOVE to have a commercial Rational, they are literally the benchmark but the money you would spend just venting one would be eye-watering.

We have a Wolf combi-oven (plumbed) that we added to our wall oven stack a couple of years ago and we LOVE it. They are so versatile. Roasted foul is almost magical! Steamed/roast vegetables, boiled (steamed) eggs, roasted meast of all sorts, defrosting meat in no time without "cooking", reheating food is also great.

The good ones are not cheap but they are one of the "cheat codes" restaurants use. Back in a previous life working in commercial kitchens it was one of the tools that taught me chefs aren't magicians most of the time, they just have the proper tools to execute techniques that simply produce better results.
Posted by jmarto1
Houma, LA/ Las Vegas, NV
Member since Mar 2008
37724 posts
Posted on 10/30/25 at 8:32 am to
I can give you a few combi ovens that need some repairs. We decided to take them out of our stores due to costs of repairs. They aren't designed for our needs where we had them on 15 hours a day. If you get them repaired, cook what you need, clean, and turn them off they would be fine. I could even give you some of the cleaning tablets as those aren't cheap. We didn't need to vent them during install. We already had drains and installed a power box for them. I have a few large and small versions in storage around SELA and could arrange for you to pick them up. If you need an authorized repair service we used Heritage Service Group for them
This post was edited on 10/30/25 at 8:42 am
Posted by lsu1987
Baton Rouge
Member since Dec 2005
460 posts
Posted on 11/1/25 at 4:59 pm to
Appreciate it
Posted by lsu1987
Baton Rouge
Member since Dec 2005
460 posts
Posted on 11/1/25 at 5:02 pm to
Yeah I looked at the Wolf steam oven too. Very nice, but they are very proud of them ;-)
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