Hi everyone,
My name is Janine and I am an American living in Masindi, Uganda which is fairly rural Africa. I have been enjoying reading many people's posts in this forum and want to try to build a basic wood-fired oven. The big challenge here is that most of the recomended materials are not available locally--no refractory cement, no firebrick, fancy tools etc. Here you may build an entire house using only tools such as a machete, a hoe, trowel and shovel. On the plus side, I am getting used to fixing things that break so that doesn't scare me and even a basicly workable oven would be a blessing--I have been without any sort of oven (not counting my dutch oven or my pan-on-pan homemade charcoal "oven") and I really miss breads and baking. Yesterday I was able to use a friend's propane oven and I baked french bread, sesame breadsticks, garlic herb foccacia and braided challa (spelling?). It was a great day off! Anyways, building an oven will be a real challenge but I would like to have an outdoor oven. I'm sure what I'll get won't be up to the standards of what I am hearing about, but I hope I can do something that will be able to get me some loaves of bread....
PS-- I considered making an adobe oven such as what I believe is called a "horno," but the latrine coverage in this country only around 60 percent so the soil is not exactly clean. Yes, locals build stoves out of mud and animal dung but dung is really not something I want (human or animal) near my food, even if the heat of the fire would sterilize any pathogens--the idea makes me lose my appetite. So I'm looking at cement even if it will crack or degrade quickly. Hoping for the best
My name is Janine and I am an American living in Masindi, Uganda which is fairly rural Africa. I have been enjoying reading many people's posts in this forum and want to try to build a basic wood-fired oven. The big challenge here is that most of the recomended materials are not available locally--no refractory cement, no firebrick, fancy tools etc. Here you may build an entire house using only tools such as a machete, a hoe, trowel and shovel. On the plus side, I am getting used to fixing things that break so that doesn't scare me and even a basicly workable oven would be a blessing--I have been without any sort of oven (not counting my dutch oven or my pan-on-pan homemade charcoal "oven") and I really miss breads and baking. Yesterday I was able to use a friend's propane oven and I baked french bread, sesame breadsticks, garlic herb foccacia and braided challa (spelling?). It was a great day off! Anyways, building an oven will be a real challenge but I would like to have an outdoor oven. I'm sure what I'll get won't be up to the standards of what I am hearing about, but I hope I can do something that will be able to get me some loaves of bread....
PS-- I considered making an adobe oven such as what I believe is called a "horno," but the latrine coverage in this country only around 60 percent so the soil is not exactly clean. Yes, locals build stoves out of mud and animal dung but dung is really not something I want (human or animal) near my food, even if the heat of the fire would sterilize any pathogens--the idea makes me lose my appetite. So I'm looking at cement even if it will crack or degrade quickly. Hoping for the best
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