Hello! My first post. I'm in the early planning stages of my bread/pizza oven in N.E. Wisconsin, and I have a couple of questions.
1) I will primarily use the oven to bake bread, but an occasional pizza party would be nice. I was going to go with an Alan Scott design, but I'll need to buy all my wood and I'm short on baking time, so I like the idea of an oven that heats up fast and can bake both bread (probably only 6-8 large loaves per firing, until my neighbors start asking for more bread!) and pizza. Do I need to make any adaptations to the Forno Bravo plans if I am going to be making mostly bread? For example, should I turn the firebricks on their side? Add 2" of mortar over the dome? Or 1/2" of mortar? Anything?
2) Our frost line is 4' deep. Is there a "standard" (and/or easy) method for anchoring the oven below the frost line? My initial thought is to use 4' sonotubes at the corners and center of the slab (5 in all), tied into the slab with rebar, but would I need more than that? Any suggestions? I called the local building code guy and he said there are no codes here for outdoor ovens and I don't even need a permit. I could perhaps just use an at-grade slab with some drainage under it, but there is a lot of heaving around here in winter and I would feel better if I go below the frost line. If I use sonotubes, I assume I would still need the 3" of pea gravel below the slab, yes?
Thanks!
Daren
1) I will primarily use the oven to bake bread, but an occasional pizza party would be nice. I was going to go with an Alan Scott design, but I'll need to buy all my wood and I'm short on baking time, so I like the idea of an oven that heats up fast and can bake both bread (probably only 6-8 large loaves per firing, until my neighbors start asking for more bread!) and pizza. Do I need to make any adaptations to the Forno Bravo plans if I am going to be making mostly bread? For example, should I turn the firebricks on their side? Add 2" of mortar over the dome? Or 1/2" of mortar? Anything?
2) Our frost line is 4' deep. Is there a "standard" (and/or easy) method for anchoring the oven below the frost line? My initial thought is to use 4' sonotubes at the corners and center of the slab (5 in all), tied into the slab with rebar, but would I need more than that? Any suggestions? I called the local building code guy and he said there are no codes here for outdoor ovens and I don't even need a permit. I could perhaps just use an at-grade slab with some drainage under it, but there is a lot of heaving around here in winter and I would feel better if I go below the frost line. If I use sonotubes, I assume I would still need the 3" of pea gravel below the slab, yes?
Thanks!
Daren
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