Wood burning oven
#1
Posted 02 April 2010 - 12:34 PM
#2
Posted 02 April 2010 - 01:07 PM
I've been researching a new outdoor pizza / bread brick and stucco oven, and have found the Alan Scott Ovencrafters guide books to be wonderful. There's a lot of discussion about the shape, height to width ratio, fuel considerations, etc
Warren Buffett
#3
Posted 02 April 2010 - 01:14 PM
I've been researching a new outdoor pizza / bread brick and stucco oven, and have found the Alan Scott Ovencrafters guide books to be wonderful. There's a lot of discussion about the shape, height to width ratio, fuel considerations, etc
Thanks RP. That's a good site.
#4
Posted 02 April 2010 - 01:55 PM
#5
Posted 02 April 2010 - 02:21 PM
[M]ost of the pastas hover around $25. This ought to be enough to buy bucatini that is cooked on both ends. -- Pete Wells on Caravaggio ( * review)
Tonight, there was a dessert of coconut, rhubarb, and black olive. Obvious in its execution how innovation and experiment, when introduced for their own sake, are annoying. --irnscrabblechf52, May 9, 2013
notorious stickler -- NY Times
deeply annoying and nitpicking -- Molly O'Neill, One Big Table
#6
Posted 02 April 2010 - 02:27 PM
send him over the Forno Bravo site. They have detailed plans and modular oven kits that make the project seem very doable.
#7
Posted 02 April 2010 - 07:13 PM
TioPacho.com
"I don't care to belong to a club that accepts people like me as members." -- Groucho Marx
#8
Posted 29 April 2010 - 12:56 AM
Indigenous volcanic mud, a low dome, constructed to maintain an 869 degree temperature. I'm guessing this will be a gas fired oven. I don't believe NYC is issuing any coal burning permits.
He declined to answer most questions about how he will build the dome — the right thickness and the correct mixture of “sand from the beach that absorbs the heat,” he said. And he forbids photography of that part of the construction.
He did allow that the oven “coupola” — the dome — will be more compact than most, “since the heat needs to be concentrated,” Mr. Coccia said. There is the relatively small mouth of the oven — a third the diameter of a garden-variety oven — to keep the heat from dissipating. Only the most skilled pizza-makers can push pies (no more than four at a time) in and out of the constricted space.
Five ton oven
Warren Buffett
#9
Posted 29 April 2010 - 11:32 AM
I actually bought mine yesterday, and it will take two weeks to get here, which will give my contractor time to get foundation built, etc.


#10
Posted 29 April 2010 - 12:32 PM
My new blog: http://newwalksinnew....wordpress.com/
#11
Posted 29 April 2010 - 12:42 PM
#13
Posted 29 April 2010 - 01:43 PM
I actually bought mine yesterday, and it will take two weeks to get here, which will give my contractor time to get foundation built, etc.
I'm really jealous. What size did you get?
A backyard oven my list of future projects. The oven jockeys for list position with a backyard sauna.
#14
Posted 29 April 2010 - 01:52 PM
I actually bought mine yesterday, and it will take two weeks to get here, which will give my contractor time to get foundation built, etc.
I'm really jealous. What size did you get?
A backyard oven my list of future projects. The oven jockeys for list position with a backyard sauna.
see if you were really ambitious you could do an all in 1.
Yeah I have a wood fired oven at the top of my list once I actually get my summer house situation settled. That and a Pool although I have been told the pool is a non-negotiable part of any plans.
#15
Posted 29 April 2010 - 03:19 PM
Did you have to find a specialist mason?
yes, I found the only one in this area who has experience installing these. I was lucky. Installation is 90% of the game with these ovens. You can't trust it to someone who has not done it before (kind of like brain surgery).













