
Most ovens cook food. The Wolf Convection Steam Oven does something more deliberate than that.
By combining steam and convection in a single appliance, it produces results that a standard oven simply cannot replicate — meats that stay genuinely juicy, vegetables with real texture and flavor, breads with the kind of crust and crumb that usually require a professional kitchen. And it does all of that with a level of automation that makes the process far more approachable than it sounds.
If you’re considering adding one to your kitchen, here’s everything you need to know.
A convection oven moves hot air for faster, more even cooking. A steam oven adds controlled moisture to protect texture, retain nutrients, and improve results across a wide range of foods. Combine the two, and you get an appliance that handles everything from delicate fish to roasted chicken to artisan bread — all in one cavity.
The Wolf Convection Steam Oven supports steam, convection, broil, and slow roast modes. That’s a meaningful range of cooking techniques in a single built-in unit.
And if steam feels unfamiliar, there’s no pressure to dive in immediately. The oven works perfectly as a standard convection oven from day one. You can incorporate steam gradually, as you grow comfortable with it — and that’s usually when the results start to speak for themselves.
The standout feature of the Wolf Convection Steam Oven is Gourmet Mode — and it earns that distinction.
Built into the oven is an Advanced Climate Sensor that reads the volume, shape, and consistency of whatever you place inside the cavity. Once it has that information, it automatically sets the exact time, temperature, humidity level, and cooking mode for the food you’ve selected. You choose the dish. The oven handles the rest.
No guesswork. No monitoring. No adjusting mid-cook. Just consistent, repeatable results — the kind that typically take years of experience to produce reliably by hand.
Beyond Gourmet Mode, the Wolf Convection Steam Oven is built with a thoughtful set of features that make it genuinely easy to use day to day:
The Wolf Convection Steam Oven is available in two cavity sizes:
Both are powered by a 1,750-watt recessed broil element and an 1,889-watt single convection system that maintains even heat and airflow throughout the cavity, eliminating cold spots entirely.
Wolf offers the Convection Steam Oven in two series — the M Series and the E Series — each with distinct design styles to match different kitchen aesthetics.
Professional — Bold, prominent pro handles and a heavier visual presence. Designed to pair naturally with Wolf’s pro-style ranges and appliances.
Transitional — A slimmer tubular handle and cleaner lines that bridge traditional and modern kitchen styles without committing fully to either.
Contemporary — A handleless design with a motorized door system for a seamless, minimalist appearance. Integrates cleanly into modern cabinetry and is available in both 24 and 30 inch widths.
Professional — The same pro handle styling as the M Series Professional, but with a wider viewing window for greater visibility into the oven cavity during cooking.
Transitional — A tubular handle paired with an edge-to-edge glass door for a clean, fully integrated look.
Wolf has made installation relatively straightforward, but there are a few things worth planning ahead.
Placement options: The oven supports both flush and proud installation. Flush sits even with the surrounding cabinetry; proud extends slightly from the wall. For flush installation, a 24-inch inset depth and a minimum one-eighth inch side reveal are required. The unit is also approved for under-counter installation.
Electrical: A dedicated 240/208-volt, 20-amp circuit with fixed connections is required. Plan for this early in your design process.
Plumbing: You have the choice of a plumbed or non-plumbed model. If you plan to use steam frequently, the plumbed version is the stronger long-term choice. One important note: this unit requires minerals in the water to operate correctly — do not connect it to a filtered water supply, and do not extend or reduce the drain tubing.
This appliance tends to resonate with a specific kind of buyer:
Homeowners who already use their main oven heavily and want a second cooking tool that genuinely expands what’s possible — not just a backup cavity. Cooks who care about moisture, texture, and repeatable results more than having the longest feature list. And those building a full Wolf kitchen who want their steam oven to integrate seamlessly with the rest of their suite.
“I’m not sure I’d use steam enough.” Most people find they use it regularly for foods they already cook — just with noticeably better moisture retention and significantly better reheating results. Leftovers reheated in a steam oven are a different experience entirely.
“I don’t want to deal with the plumbing.” You don’t have to. Wolf offers non-plumbed models that keep the installation simple and straightforward without sacrificing the core functionality.
“Why do I need this if I already have a Wolf oven?” Because it does a different job. It expands your cooking technique, frees up your main oven, and gives both appliances room to do their best work independently.
An appliance this capable really benefits from an in-person look — and ideally, a conversation with someone who knows it well.
At Atherton Appliance & Kitchens, we showcase Wolf’s convection steam ovens in live kitchen displays so you can experience the design, explore the controls, and ask the questions that matter to your specific kitchen and cooking style.
Visit our showroom or schedule a consultation to see the full Wolf lineup and find the configuration that fits your space and the way you cook.
Watch our video: Wolf Convection Steam Ovens — Watch This BEFORE Buying! (2026)
Atherton Appliance & Kitchens: Where performance, design, and everyday life come together.