Hidy! I need an outdoor oven primarily for bread baking. My wife and I have built a log cabin near Denison which is about an hour north of Dallas. Our property has a lot of trees and I'm a chain saw guy. Recently I acquired a chain saw mill and a bandsaw go to along with woodworking stuff. Building a cabin is a great way to get more tools than one had before.
Thanks to the Texas Cottage Law we can bake and sell bread at the cabin without a commercial kitchen. My two regular propane ovens simply do not heat up enough. Enter an outdoor oven. Yesterday I browsed thru the forum and was, as a friend from Georgia would say, 'blowed away' with the quality and quantity of info here.
Here's my plan:
1. keep my 30 quart Hobart mixer that nobody wanted to buy.
2. continue to focus on Italian breads with preferments
3. build a fire the night before
4. make doughs the next morning, build gluten etc.
5. rollout focaccia, ciabatta, hearth loafs, etc, place in proofing cabinet(s)
6. roll cabinet outside across deck to deck railing, hook cabinet to a winch lift, swing over railing and lower about three feet down to ground to roll to bake station/oven
7. bake, wrap, sell to fine folks coming to cabin and deliver later in day to those who won't pickup
8. have 6 scheduled bake days per month, two per week plus maybe an occasional festival
9. if successful with gardening in newly built 50' x 16' high tunnel, sell tomatoes
10. if successful with milled wood and woodworking, sell slabs and end tables, etc.
In the past I had been hesitant to build an oven because many you tube builders I see tend to be kinda experimental. Here y'all have an exact formula. It looks like a 42" Pompei is best although it's unclear how many bakes it takes to produce 50-100 loaves. I don't yet know if I need extra insulation to light the oven at night and bake the next morning. I wonder if Forno will sell a kit without the bricks that I can probably get locally at a more efficient $. There's a ton of other questions, I just can't think of them now plus I gotta go build some raised beds. Thanks for any and all input, need all the help I can get.
Steve
Thanks to the Texas Cottage Law we can bake and sell bread at the cabin without a commercial kitchen. My two regular propane ovens simply do not heat up enough. Enter an outdoor oven. Yesterday I browsed thru the forum and was, as a friend from Georgia would say, 'blowed away' with the quality and quantity of info here.
Here's my plan:
1. keep my 30 quart Hobart mixer that nobody wanted to buy.
2. continue to focus on Italian breads with preferments
3. build a fire the night before
4. make doughs the next morning, build gluten etc.
5. rollout focaccia, ciabatta, hearth loafs, etc, place in proofing cabinet(s)
6. roll cabinet outside across deck to deck railing, hook cabinet to a winch lift, swing over railing and lower about three feet down to ground to roll to bake station/oven
7. bake, wrap, sell to fine folks coming to cabin and deliver later in day to those who won't pickup
8. have 6 scheduled bake days per month, two per week plus maybe an occasional festival
9. if successful with gardening in newly built 50' x 16' high tunnel, sell tomatoes
10. if successful with milled wood and woodworking, sell slabs and end tables, etc.
In the past I had been hesitant to build an oven because many you tube builders I see tend to be kinda experimental. Here y'all have an exact formula. It looks like a 42" Pompei is best although it's unclear how many bakes it takes to produce 50-100 loaves. I don't yet know if I need extra insulation to light the oven at night and bake the next morning. I wonder if Forno will sell a kit without the bricks that I can probably get locally at a more efficient $. There's a ton of other questions, I just can't think of them now plus I gotta go build some raised beds. Thanks for any and all input, need all the help I can get.
Steve
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