Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Smart Home
  3. News

LG wants you to cook like the pros with its new line of ovens

Add as a preferred source on Google

I haven’t turned on my oven all summer, thanks to a slew of 90-plus-degree days, but along with fall weather comes fall food. Like pumpkin-spice everything, right? LG wants you to bake your pumpkin spice scones with its latest oven ranges, the ProBake line, which it says will make baking on multiple racks end up with more even results.

The ProBake ranges, both gas and electric, will be available in September. Some models have two cavities: a smaller, upper oven for quick meals and a larger, bottom one for your turkeys and such. Like other convection ovens, the ranges will have a fan that helps circulate the warm air throughout the cavity, but LG moved the heating element from the bottom of the oven to the back wall where the fan is located. This means the air that’s blowing around the food is already warm.

Recommended Videos

With that relocation, LG was able to up the oven’s capacity a bit, to 6.9 and 7.3 cubic feet, depending on the model. By comparison, its current double-oven range is 6.1 cubic feet. Moving the heating element also speeds up the cleaning setting, the EasyClean Express, taking just 10 minutes, according to LG. The ranges offer “users professional-grade technology designed for even cooking and more consistent results at home,” said David VanderWaal, vice president of marketing for LG, in a statement.

Commercial ovens often have similar setups, and high-end range-maker BlueStar incorporates it into its Platinum models, for example. However, those can cost close to $6,000. Meanwhile, the ProBake linke will retail for between $1,299 and $1,899. LG is making the technology more affordable for sure, and it will be interesting to see how it stacks up against higher-priced competitors when making all the cold-weather goodies.

Jenny McGrath
Former Senior Writer, Home
Jenny McGrath is a senior writer at Digital Trends covering the intersection of tech and the arts and the environment. Before…
Google Home Speaker (2026) review: Smarter and punchier, with a subscription pinch
Google's latest smart speaker pairs Gemini with better sound and deeper smart home integration. What's not to love without spending over a $100?
Sphere, Body Part, Finger

View at Amazon

Quick Recap

Read more
I tried to parody the most absurd AI products, but the tech industry beat me to it
The joke was supposed to be that every household object gets cameras, AI insights, and a premium tier. Apparently, that’s now a business plan
Imaginary AI products

I wanted to invent an AI product so silly that no founder could turn it into a seed round.

It had to solve a problem nobody had, collect far more data than the problem deserved, and turn normal behavior into an insight that sounded vaguely disappointed in its owner. Somewhere around the third feature, it would ask for a subscription.

Read more
LG SIGNATURE DLEX9900S dryer review: A massive, gorgeous dryer with one AI-sized asterisk
The LG SIGNATURE DLEX8900B is a beautiful dryer with a AI brain and plenty of capacity. Just be ready to pay a premium and take over from time-to-time.
LG SIGNATURE DLEX9900S dryer

View at LG

Quick Review

Read more