woodfired oven

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Dr Tony Balls wrote:gnangle wrote:get some steam going, this steam is super important since the steam is what inflates the risen dough (the yeast and lactobacilli do all the ground work) but the steam is what inflates. FYI theres a pretty good Ken Forkish book I have where he recommends baking loaves inside of preheated dutch ovens with lids on to maintain a steamy environment around the loaf.I do this. It works great!
Redline wrote:Not Crap. The sound of death? The sound of FUN! ScrrreeEEEEEEE

woodfired oven

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gnangle wrote:get some steam going, this steam is super important since the steam is what inflates the risen dough (the yeast and lactobacilli do all the ground work) but the steam is what inflates. FYI theres a pretty good Ken Forkish book I have where he recommends baking loaves inside of preheated dutch ovens with lids on to maintain a steamy environment around the loaf.

woodfired oven

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I've been thinking about doing this as well, though more of a bread oven than pizza oven. Will probably take me a few years to get my shit together though. Thanks for the encouraging report.
steve albini
Electrical Audio
sa at electrical dot com
Quicumque quattuor feles possidet insanus est.

woodfired oven

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my wife and our contractor friend built a nice wood-fired pizza oven on our back deck. Steve, did you see that when you came by my place that one time?We have 3-4 pizza nights a year, and my wife has a process.1. fire the oven, get it nice and hot, and do our pizzas.2. once the temperature has dropped, but in a few loaves of bread that have been pre-prepared and are ready to go.3. once the temperature has dropped more, put in a dutch oven with tomorrow night's dinner, or a big pot of beans, or both, and let that slow cook overnight with the dissipating heat. In short, if we fire it up, we like to get usage out of the whole heat dissipation cycle.

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