#53
(M) The following correspondence is from a builder in the UK who asked that I post her correspondence here on this Forum:
(M) Dear Gessie,
Shall I publish your post along with your email address on Forno Bravo Forum? You might get more answers that way?
Ciao,
Marcel
(G) Yes please, it will be interesting to see what they say.
dellaview-arts@ntlworld.com
Regards
Gessie
Gessie Dellaripa wrote:
(M) The following correspondence is from a builder in the UK who asked that I post her correspondence here on this Forum:
(M) Dear Gessie,
Shall I publish your post along with your email address on Forno Bravo Forum? You might get more answers that way?
Ciao,
Marcel
(G) Yes please, it will be interesting to see what they say.
dellaview-arts@ntlworld.com
Regards
Gessie
Gessie Dellaripa wrote:
Marcel
(G) Thanks for the advice and the fornobravo website was very useful.
(G) Both my husbands grandparents were in farming in Molise region in Italy and they have used wood burning brick ovens. I am therefore relying on our parents memories of how it was built and used ect. (as our parents were young teenagers when they immigrated to the UK from Italy).Our parents have mentioned the following and we would be interested to know if anyone can relate to any of these points of if anyone has heard of this...
(G) The wood burning oven was not a perfect igloo shape but more of a tunnel shaped dome with a metal front opening. On one side of this dome was a little opening whereby they used to ligth a small fire on the inside of the side opening. The reason for this is that the smoke/fumes circulating from the fire/flames would help the bread colour evenly and have a crispier finish. Has anyone tried this or heard of this?
(G) Also they mentioned that once the cooking was complete and the fire was coming to an end wooden logs were placed in the oven so that the heat in the oven would 'season or dry' the logs so that when cooking re-commenced these same logs would be used to light a fire and because they were seasoned they would light up in less time and cooking could start quickly. Has anyone heard of this?
(M) Yes, I have heard of drying logs in the oven.(G) Thanks for the advice and the fornobravo website was very useful.
(G) Both my husbands grandparents were in farming in Molise region in Italy and they have used wood burning brick ovens. I am therefore relying on our parents memories of how it was built and used ect. (as our parents were young teenagers when they immigrated to the UK from Italy).Our parents have mentioned the following and we would be interested to know if anyone can relate to any of these points of if anyone has heard of this...
(G) The wood burning oven was not a perfect igloo shape but more of a tunnel shaped dome with a metal front opening. On one side of this dome was a little opening whereby they used to ligth a small fire on the inside of the side opening. The reason for this is that the smoke/fumes circulating from the fire/flames would help the bread colour evenly and have a crispier finish. Has anyone tried this or heard of this?
(G) Also they mentioned that once the cooking was complete and the fire was coming to an end wooden logs were placed in the oven so that the heat in the oven would 'season or dry' the logs so that when cooking re-commenced these same logs would be used to light a fire and because they were seasoned they would light up in less time and cooking could start quickly. Has anyone heard of this?
(G) We note that Fornobravo have used quality fire bricks for the cooking surface and that the bricks are fitted together on a thin layer of sand and fireclay and not mortared in place. We have however used ash instead of sand because ash is more of heat insulator. Has anyone heard of this?
(M) I have not, but that means nothing. However, what theme I've read about the cooking floor is that you want it to conduct heat so insulating bricks from one another sounds counter productive to me. FornoBravo also advocates no mortar between the hearth floor bricks.(M) PS I have heard of and seen pictures of "egg shaped" domes which resemble 1/2 of a hard boiled egg laid on the flat side. The "metal front" sounds like a metal door which several Forno Bravo members have employed. If you could amplify on your sentence: "On one side of this dome was a little opening whereby they used to light a small fire on the inside of the side opening." that would be helpful. I could not picture what you wanted to convey.
(G) Any help is greatly appreciated.
Regards
Mr 7 Mrs Della Ripa
UK
(G) Any help is greatly appreciated.
Regards
Mr 7 Mrs Della Ripa
UK
----- Original Message -----
From: Marcel
To: Gessie Dellaripa
Sent: Thursday, September 22, 2005 5:04 PM
Subject: Consider the Pompeii (igloo-round) oven site at Fornobravo.com
Dear Gessie,
Pay a visit to http://www.fornobravo.com/forum/index.php?
and, for more specific building instructions, go to http://www.fornobravo.com/pompeii_oven/oven_overview.html
Ciao,
Marcel
marceld@efn.org
From: Marcel
To: Gessie Dellaripa
Sent: Thursday, September 22, 2005 5:04 PM
Subject: Consider the Pompeii (igloo-round) oven site at Fornobravo.com
Dear Gessie,
Pay a visit to http://www.fornobravo.com/forum/index.php?
and, for more specific building instructions, go to http://www.fornobravo.com/pompeii_oven/oven_overview.html
Ciao,
Marcel
marceld@efn.org
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