A recipe from a British cookbook says to bake at Gas Mark 6. Your commercial kitchen has a fan-forced electric oven measured in Celsius. Before preheating, you need the fan-forced Celsius setting and a quick confirmation of what Gas Mark 6 means in standard Celsius.
1 What this calculator does
Converts oven temperatures between Celsius, Fahrenheit, Gas Mark and fan-forced (fan/convection) Celsius. Classifies the temperature as very slow, moderate, hot or very hot, and notes the key difference between fan-forced and conventional oven operation.
2 Formula & professional reasoning
Celsius to Fahrenheit: F = C x 9/5 + 32
Fahrenheit to Celsius: C = (F - 32) x 5/9
Fan-forced equivalent: Fan temp = Conventional C - 20
Gas Mark to Celsius (approx):
Gas 1=121C | Gas 2=149C | Gas 3=163C | Gas 4=177C | Gas 5=191C
Gas 6=204C | Gas 7=218C | Gas 8=232C | Gas 9=246C
Fan-forced (convection) ovens circulate hot air with a fan, distributing heat more evenly and efficiently. This makes them effectively 20C hotter than the stated temperature in conventional recipes -- a recipe written for a conventional oven at 200C should be baked at 180C in a fan-forced oven for the same result. Gas marks are an older British scale still found in traditional recipes. The conversion is non-linear at the extremes but follows a roughly linear relationship in the normal baking range.
3 Worked examples
⚠️ Illustrative example only — not clinical or professional instruction.
Gas Mark 6 = 204C conventional | Fan-forced: 204 - 20 = 184CCelsius: (375-32) x 5/9 = 343 x 5/9 = 190.6C conventional | Fan-forced: 190.6 - 20 = 170.6CFan-forced: 120 - 20 = 100C | Fahrenheit: 120 x 9/5 + 32 = 248F | Gas Mark: between 1/2 and 14 Sanity check
5 Common errors
| Error | Cause | Consequence | Fix |
|---|---|---|---|
| Using a conventional oven recipe temperature in a fan-forced oven without reducing | Not understanding the fan-forced temperature difference | Food overcooked, over-browned or dried out -- fan-forced efficiency means the set temperature is effectively 20C hotter than stated in a conventional recipe | For any conventional recipe in a fan-forced oven, reduce the temperature by 20C OR reduce the cooking time by 10-15%. Fan-forced is particularly efficient for roasting -- reduce both time and temperature for meats to avoid over-browning. |
| Trusting the oven dial without checking actual temperature | Assuming the dial is accurately calibrated | Inconsistent results -- the oven may be 25-40C hotter or cooler than the dial says | Use an oven thermometer. Place it at the level of the shelf you are baking on and preheat for at least 20 minutes before checking. Note the difference between the dial and actual temperature and adjust your settings accordingly. |
| Not preheating the oven sufficiently before baking | Putting food in before the oven reaches temperature | Especially critical for pastry, bread and cakes -- the initial burst of heat creates the structure and oven spring | Insufficient heat leads to dense, poorly risen products | Preheat for at least 20 minutes for a standard oven, 30 minutes for a commercial deck oven or when baking with a baking stone. Fan-forced ovens reach temperature faster than conventional but still benefit from a full preheat. |
| Using the same oven temperature for every recipe without adjustment | Defaulting to 180C for everything | Some products over or under-cooked -- delicate sponges need lower temperatures, pizzas need higher | Temperature is a key recipe variable for a reason. Slow roasts need 130-150C for collagen breakdown. Bread needs 220C+ for crust formation. Custard needs 140-160C to prevent curdling. Always use the recipe temperature. |
6 Reference & regulatory links
7 Professional workflow
Common tools used alongside this one: