I have always said that it's easy to cook bread in a pizza oven, and hard to cook pizza in a bread oven. Last night really solidified that thinking for me.
With the help of my two daughters (age 7 and 12), we baked 5 11" pizzas with nicely hydrated pizza dough (65% in Caputo Tipo 00 flour) in rapid succession. We baked them one at a time in our small barrel vault bread oven that had been fired for three hours using well-aged black walnut wood. At the start of the evening, the oven was above 700F in both the dome and on the floor. We had a good fire burning the whole time, in the back left corner of the rectangular floor.
Using an infrafred thermometer, I watched the oven drop in heat with each successive pizza. By the last pizza (sadly mine), the oven was:
500F on the floor between the fire and the pizza
400F on the floor above and below the pizza
325F on the floor on the far side of the pizza
525F in the dome
You just can't bake a good pizza at 400F -- my pizza stone is hotter than that. There are a lot of things you can't bake or roast at less than 400F.
My idea in posting this is to give a heads up to anyone who is considering different designs for their home brick oven. I have always thought that the difference between the Italian pizza oven and a barrel vault bread oven is much larger than most people would believe -- and this helps confirm that idea. I hear from a growng number of people who are unhappy with their Scott oven, and I think it is important that folks understand the differences.
Plus, it isn't just about pizza. If you want to bake, roast and grill at home, the Italian brick oven design has a lot of advantages.
James
With the help of my two daughters (age 7 and 12), we baked 5 11" pizzas with nicely hydrated pizza dough (65% in Caputo Tipo 00 flour) in rapid succession. We baked them one at a time in our small barrel vault bread oven that had been fired for three hours using well-aged black walnut wood. At the start of the evening, the oven was above 700F in both the dome and on the floor. We had a good fire burning the whole time, in the back left corner of the rectangular floor.
Using an infrafred thermometer, I watched the oven drop in heat with each successive pizza. By the last pizza (sadly mine), the oven was:
500F on the floor between the fire and the pizza
400F on the floor above and below the pizza
325F on the floor on the far side of the pizza
525F in the dome
You just can't bake a good pizza at 400F -- my pizza stone is hotter than that. There are a lot of things you can't bake or roast at less than 400F.
My idea in posting this is to give a heads up to anyone who is considering different designs for their home brick oven. I have always thought that the difference between the Italian pizza oven and a barrel vault bread oven is much larger than most people would believe -- and this helps confirm that idea. I hear from a growng number of people who are unhappy with their Scott oven, and I think it is important that folks understand the differences.
Plus, it isn't just about pizza. If you want to bake, roast and grill at home, the Italian brick oven design has a lot of advantages.
James
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