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Oh. That recipe came from here: Pane Pugliese Bread Suite It's the one from Boriani et al. It's pretty good for a bread with no biga used. If you buy King Arthur bread flour or Gold Medal bread flour, you shouldn't need the malt, since they already add that in the flour. I don't know about other brands. You can get the malt from here: King Arthur Flour home page
Thanks for the turkey info! I think I'm going to try a practice turkey before I go for the big one.
O.K. but I forgot to mention the brine on the night before,I got it from the foodnetwork.com Bobby Flay brined, herb roast turkey I did not follow the cooking and stuffing process to a t,.good luck
can anyone tell me how to place more insulation on the cooking floor ,can I place a compressed thin ceramic insulating blanket(1/4 inch) on my existing floor and place a layer of new firebrick, for more heat retention.The height of entrance is 13 1/2'' tall,the inside height of dome is 23 1/2'' it looks doable to me ,any thoughts out there. I'm trying to retain more heat in the dome ,made an error on placing vermiculite insulation layer under floor of the oven only and not the entrance and it is countersunk in the concrete slab the sidewall of the verm. insul. is touching the concrete, basically I built a slab with a circle of 50'' of vermiculite in the center of it at the same level did not leave a space between side walls of vermiculite and concrete,and placed the floor on top of that therefore the floor bricks are touching the concrete slab, during the summer I noticed the concrete slab was very warm during a 4-5 hour pizza party cooking of 25-30 pizzas is that normal or am I trying to create more work for myself by insulating the floor. thanks for your thoughts. Phil.
Concur with dmun on the quarter inch of insulation. I scanned your thread quicky (I've been away for awile). I don't think you loose too much heat from the floor into the entryway, even if that floor is not insulated underneath.
Mine is a similar setup. Rains here cause the entyway to get a bit damp. Three fires to pizza temps have yet to completely dry the outermost entryway bricks. They steam a bit, but I can easily cook pizzas and bread, with negligible negative results in heat loss. Certainly, I do loose heat from the floor due to this, but not so much that I'm going to modify the oven greatly to change it.
I have seriously considered adding an additional layer of half firebricks on top of the existing floor to improve the heat/cooking characterististics. The daunting task of cutting the bricks to fit the inside of the dome have dissuaded me so far.
GJBingham
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Everyone makes mistakes. The trick is to make mistakes when nobody is looking.
thanks for your response Dmun & gjbinham, ok then I guess I would like to keep more heat for a more prolonged time to your question dmun, the vrmcult insltn is 4 inches under the cooking floor,and gibinham yes the work of placing another layer of bricks on top of existing ,is far to much for close quarters,well maybe when I fill the dome enclosure with loose vermiculite(there is only a 1/2'' refrct. cement and 1''ceramic blanket on dome) and insulate the steel door it will improve heat retention. thanks you saved me money and WORK
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